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Page "Semiconductor" ¶ 19
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holes and themselves
This is used to great effect in lace knitting, which consists of making patterns and pictures using such holes, rather than with the stitches themselves.
In turn, this leaves behind a localized positively-charged hole ( holes actually don't exist, the term is an abstraction for the location from which an electron was moved ; they have no charge in and of themselves ).
They frequently conceal themselves in deep holes or under the roots of trees, etc., and venture out to feed before returning quickly to cover.
The colony's daily routine is emerge from the nesting holes or roosting branches soon after dawn, preen and sun themselves for an hour, then disperse to feed.
Many ammonite shells have been found with round holes once interpreted as a result of limpets attaching themselves to the ammonite ’ s.
: "... crazy wooden galleries common to the backs of half a dozen houses, with holes from which to look upon the slime beneath ; windows, broken and patched, with poles thrust out, on which to dry the linen that is never there ; rooms so small, so filthy, so confined, that the air would seem to be too tainted even for the dirt and squalor which they shelter ; wooden chambers thrusting themselves out above the mud and threatening to fall into itas some have done ; dirt-besmeared walls and decaying foundations, every repulsive lineament of poverty, every loathsome indication of filth, rot, and garbage: all these ornament the banks of Jacob's Island.
In soft sandstone, the birds themselves excavate holes nearly a metre deep.
Winton presented BBC One's Saturday night entertainment programme Hole In The Wall, based on the Japanese original, where contestants in skin-tight Lycra costumes contort themselves to fit through oddly-shaped holes in a moving wall.
They have double fences, ditches, and loop holes, their houses sunk underground ; and as the great guns of the British are fired through their pa with so little loss to the rebels, it is supposed that they have large holes, in which they secure themselves.
Starting from a drilled or cored hole, a shaper with a boring-bar type tool can cut internal features that don't lend themselves to milling or boring ( such as irregularly shaped holes with tight corners ).
Arid zone species construct turrets or plug their holes with leaves and pebbles during the rainy season to protect themselves from flood waters.
He also left large holes in the work so that the performers could insert music of their choosing, thus " becoming composers themselves ".
In the 1980s, video tape trading and cable television paved the way for the eventual death of the NWA's inter-regional business model, as fans could now see for themselves the plot holes and inconsistencies between the different regional storylines.
Other critics have complained that while the show had an original and innovative storyline with beautiful visuals and appealing characters, the episodes themselves were poorly paced, undeveloped, and plagued with plot holes.
While most of the medals were not distributed with holes in them, Native Americans would often perforate the medals themselves so to be worn around the neck.
Seymour wades into the ocean and, placing the girl on a rubber raft, proceeds to tell her the whimsical tale – “ the very tragic life ” – of the bananafish: in their gluttony, they gorge themselves on bananas, and swollen too large to escape their feeding holes, die.
They are sympatric with Mandarin Ducks ( Aix galericulata ); though both relish the same insect larvae, they do not seem to compete for food, but perhaps for nesting holes ( which neither can excavate themselves ).
The holes themselves were reportedly built for guarding purposes.
Herdsmen rotate pastures, and they often construct watering holes or wells for themselves and their animals.
Of course black holes in proximity to each other will tend to move under the force of gravity, so the fact that the coordinate position of the puncture remained fixed meant that the coordinate systems themselves became " stretched " or " twisted ," and this typically lead to numerical instabilities at some stage of the simulation.
In fact, many of the holes are shorter than average, so professionals usually find themselves relying on their wedges to shoot low scores.

holes and don't
Note, 6 and 8 lock levers don't require holes for contacts.
" We don't want black holes ," Coverdell said.
While Hawking radiation is sometimes questioned, Leonard Susskind summarizes an expert perspective in his recent book: " Every so often, a physics paper will appear claiming that black holes don't evaporate.
The strings that don't make it to the next level represent characteristics left out of our abstractions, as do the holes without strings at all.
" If the beer don't get you, then the black holes must ", October 18, 1973.
* To create large-diameter holes, via milling in a circular toolpath, on small milling machines that don't have the power to drive large twist drills (> 0. 500 "/> 13 mm )

holes and move
As the probability that electrons and holes meet together is proportional to the product of their amounts, the product is in steady state nearly constant at a given temperature, providing that there is no significant electric field ( which might " flush " carriers of both types, or move them from neighbour regions containing more of them to meet together ) or externally driven pair generation.
Sandpits encourage the imagination and creativity of children by providing materials and space to build structures such as sandcastles ; use toy trucks, shovels, and buckets to move the sand around ; dig holes and bury objects, etc.
Because the base is narrow, most of these electrons will diffuse into the reverse-biased ( electrons and holes are formed at, and move away from the junction ) base-collector junction and be swept into the collector ; perhaps one-hundredth of the electrons will recombine in the base, which is the dominant mechanism in the base current.
One may also add to the crystal a small amount of an element having fewer electrons than the semiconductor, and the electron vacancies, or holes, so introduced will be free to move through the crystal like positively-charged electrons ; such a doped crystal is a p-type semiconductor.
Thus holes move toward the anode, and electrons toward the cathode, and a photocurrent is produced.
Edison claimed exclusive patent rights to his design of 35 mm motion picture film, with four sprocket holes per frame, forcing his only major filmmaking competitor, American Mutoscope & Biograph, to use a 68 mm film that used friction feed, not sprocket holes, to move the film through the camera.
Barriers indicated for electrons to move from emitter to base, and for holes to be injected backward from base to emitter ; Also, grading of bandgap in base assists electron transport in base region ; Light colors indicate depletion region | depleted regions
Camels trample the soil in the semiarid Sahel as they move to water holes such as this one in Chad.
Because there are no defined holes, this expansion does not affect the image, and the wires do not move horizontally.
In a siren, the stator is the crucial part which actually cuts off and reopens air flow pushed by the blades of the chopper as the blades move past holes in the stator known as ports, generating the siren's tone ( s ).
The piano keys move according to a pattern of holes punched in an unwinding scroll.
The Ramdozer is a bulldozer that can destroy obstacles by ramming them, and can easily move blocks to fill in holes, and TNT blocks to destroy larger obstacles.
The last move was to Île-Bizard, Quebec in 1959, where 45 holes were constructed by American golf course architect Dick Wilson.
The electric field is shown on the bottom, the electrostatic force on electrons and holes and the direction in which the diffusion tends to move electrons and holes.

0.587 seconds.