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Page "Thermodynamics" ¶ 16
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Such and intermediate
Such projects can benefit from EVM, as described for intermediate implementations, above, and Earned Schedule.
Such compounds share with better known semiconductors intermediate conductivity and a rapid variation of conductivity with temperature, as well as occasional negative resistance.
Such speculations were automatically premature and could not lead to anything constructive without an intermediate link which demanded the extension of 3-dimensional geometry to the inclusion of time.
Such names are formed by the initials of the cardinal directions and their intermediate ordinal directions, and are very handy to refer to a heading ( or course or azimuth ) in a general or colloquial fashion, without having to resort to computing or recalling degrees.
Such cartridges are known as " intermediate " cartridges.
Such a move is also called an intermezzo, intermediate move, or in-between move.
Such drivers may find it easier to include an intermediate step, where after having achieved the ideal angle for backing up they back up with the wheels straight until the rear end of the car is far enough back to allow them to make their final reverse turn.
Such a logic is intermediate if furthermore
Such breaks are not considered DNA damage because they are a natural intermediate in the topoisomerase biochemical mechanism and are immediately repaired by the enzymes that created them.
Such emergence of so many upgraded polytechnics, former vocational education and technical schools converted into more university-like institutions has caused concern where the lack of specialized intermediate technical professionals lead to industrial skill shortages in some fields, being also associated to an increase of the graduate unemployment rate.
Such files typically range from low resolution content for the web to HDTV and high-resolution digital intermediate files for cinema production.
Such intermediate requirements easily fall into the " mid-line " storage category.
Such rentals payable by lessees to lessors are treated as purchases of " services produced " by the leasing enterprises, and recorded either as intermediate consumption of renting enterprises, or as the final consumption of households or government.

Such and rate
Such aggregates include national income and output, the unemployment rate, and price inflation and subaggregates like total consumption and investment spending and their components.
Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP, but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth.
Such behavioral traditions may have evolutionary significance, allowing adaptation at a faster rate than genetic change.
Such a situation can occur when an amplifier is overdriven, resulting in clipping or slew rate distortion, when for a moment the output is determined by the characteristics of the amplifier alone, and not by the input signal.
Such elastic elements can release energy at a much higher rate ( higher power ) than equivalent muscle mass, thus increasing launch energy to levels beyond what muscle alone is capable of.
Such uplifting occurs on the island at a varying rate of between per year, with an average rate of per year.
Such sine wave clocks are often differential signals, because this type of signal has twice the slew rate, and therefore half the timing uncertainty, of a single-ended signal with the same voltage range.
Such societies recommend that patients with Barrett's esophagus and no cancer symptoms after two biopsies receive biopsies as indicated and no more often than the recommended rate.
Such findings appear to demonstrate that high caloric loads in excess of fat cells ' storage rate capacities lead to stress responses that induce an increase in leptin, which then operates as an adipose-derived inflammation stopgap signaling for the cessation of food intake so as to prevent adipose-derived inflammation from reaching elevated levels.
Such response of stress is independent of strain rate.
Such large litters may compensate for a high rate of infant mortality in the harsh environment.
Furthermore, recordings of acceleration allow researchers to quantify the rate at which an animal is expending energy in the wild, by either determination of limb-stroke frequency or measures such as overall dynamic body acceleration Such approaches have mostly been adopted by marine scientists due to an inability to study animals in the wild using visual observations, however an increasing number of terrestrial biologists are adopting similar approaches.
Such a flow rate allows easy food capture by the collar cells.
Such policy reforms, among others, have resulted in credible increase in the rate of return on investments.
Such autonomous citation indexing is not yet perfect in citation extraction or citation clustering with an error rate estimated by some at 10 % though a careful statistical sampling has yet to be done.
Such treatment is now avoided due to a high rate of AML transformation.
Such adverse reactions can often be controlled by slowing the infusion rate.
Such a point will be in the interior of the lens, and the rate at which one good will be traded for the other will be between the marginal rate of substitution of Octavio and that of Abby.
Such as when the press heats up during normal operation, thus evaporating water at a faster rate.
Such an exchange rate provided great profits for the military and party officials.
Such devices are very convenient in the manufacture of voltage-controlled oscillators For low-frequency VCOs, other methods of varying the frequency ( such as altering the charging rate of a capacitor by means of a voltage controlled current source ) are used.
Such adjustable rate reverse mortgages are still being offered, in programs that are adjusted on a monthly, semi-annual, or annual rate up to a maximum rate.

Such and atomic
Such secondary realizations were used and described as ' ET ', with an awareness that the time scales based on the atomic clocks were not identical to that defined by the primary ephemeris time standard, but rather, an improvement over it on account of their closer approximation to uniformity.
Such ultraflat substrates are common substrates for sample preparation for the atomic force microscopy.
See magneto-optical trap and Such uncertainties rival that of the NIST F-1 caesium atomic clock in the microwave region, estimated as a few parts in 10 < sup > 16 </ sup > averaged over a day.
Such a correction was observed, from which was concluded that the frequency of a moving atomic clock is altered according to special relativity.
Such data items are said to be non-decomposable or atomic.
Such hypernuclear atoms are generally studied for their nuclear behaviour, falling into the realm of nuclear physics rather than atomic physics.
Such measurements are much less precise than modern mass spectrometric measurements of atomic weights and molecular masses, and are of mostly historical interest.
Such forces may depend, for example, on the ratio of protons to neutrons in an atomic nucleus, or the relative amount of different kinds of binding energy in a nucleus ( see the semi-empirical mass formula ).
Such time dilation has been repeatedly demonstrated ( see experimental confirmation below ), for instance by small disparities in atomic clocks on Earth and in space, even though both clocks work perfectly ( it is not a mechanical malfunction ).
Such instruments are capable of an accuracy of about two parts per billion or 0. 002 mGal and reference their measurement to atomic standards of length and time.
Such a beam would be allowed to impinge on atomic hydrogen targets, in the field of a laser, which is meant to excite the bound proton-antiproton pairs into an excited state of protonium with some efficiency ( whose computation is an open theoretical problem ).
Such systems rely on two sets of atomic clocks: clocks aboard satellites orbiting the Earth, and reference clocks stationed on the Earth's surface.
Such energy locked into uranium is triggered for sudden-release in nuclear fission bombs, and similar stored energies in atomic nuclei are released spontaneously, during most types of radioactive decay.
Such predictions based on connectivity are generally considered plausible, but the physical outcome of the actual reaction is ultimately dependent on a number of factors that are practically impossible to predict to any useful accuracy ( solvent, atomic orbitals, etc.
Such decay presents itself as a problem for crystallographers who require that the diffraction intensities decay as little as possible, to maximize the signal to noise ratio in order to determine accurate atomic models that describe the crystal.
Such properties are directly related to the atomic structures of the substances.

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