Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Chemical element" ¶ 25
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

standard and state
This condition will undoubtedly continue until such time as a state uniform system of evaluation is established, or through mutual agreement of the local assessing officials for a method of standard assessment practice to be adopted.
For example Connecticut applies the following standard to review unpreserved claims: 1. the record is adequate to review the alleged claim of error ; 2. the claim is of constitutional magnitude alleging the violation of a fundamental right ; 3. the alleged constitutional violation clearly exists and clearly deprived the defendant of a fair trial ; 4. if subject to harmless error analysis, the state has failed to demonstrate harmlessness of the alleged constitutional violation beyond a reasonable doubt.
In thermochemistry, an element is defined to have an enthalpy of formation of zero in its standard state.
Another commonly used basic distinction among the elements is their state of matter ( phase ), solid, liquid, or gas, at a selected standard temperature and pressure ( STP ).
An admirer of Britain's New Liberal philosophy, Hughes campaigned on a platform to improve the state of New York's standard of living by moving it away from laissez-faire tradition and enacting social reforms similar to that which had been enacted in Britain.
* The state of the dead: The majority of standard scholarly Jewish and Christian sources today describe the state of the dead in terms identical or very close to the Christadelphian view.
At the end of 2006, BT ( the UK's former state owned monopoly phone company ) started offering BT Vision, which combines the digital free-to-air standard Freeview through an aerial, and on-demand IPTV, delivered over a BT Broadband connection through the Vision set-top box ( BT have chosen to deploy Microsoft's Mediaroom platform for this.
In standard state or STP, with the pressure at 1 atm and temperature at being 273. 16 K, the volume occupied by a mole of an ideal gas would be equal to 22. 414 L.
Enthalpies for chemical substances at constant pressure assume standard state ; exactly 25 ° C at 1 atmospheric pressure.
Although Finnish wages and standard of living could not compete with wealthy Sweden until the 1970s, the Finnish economy rose remarkably from the ashes of World War II, resulting in the buildup of another Nordic-style welfare state.
In the United States, standard line insurance companies are insurers that have received a license or authorization from a state for the purpose of writing specific kinds of insurance in that state, such as automobile insurance or homeowners ' insurance.
This concern has found expression in the standards for involuntary commitment in every U. S. state and in other countries as the " danger to self or others " standard, sometimes supplemented by the requirement that the danger be " imminent.
The idea of universal jurisdiction is fundamental to the operation of global organizations such as the United Nations and the International Court of Justice ( ICJ ), which jointly assert the benefit of maintaining legal entities with jurisdiction over a wide range of matters of significance to states ( the ICJ should not be confused with the ICC and this version of " universal jurisdiction " is not the same as that enacted in the War Crimes Law ( Belgium ) which is an assertion of extraterritorial jurisdiction that will fail to gain implementation in any other state under the standard provisions of public policy ).
The standard treaties and conventions leave the issue of implementation to each state, i. e. there is no general rule in international law that treaties have direct effect in municipal law, but some states, by virtue of their membership of supranational bodies, allow the direct incorporation of rights or enact legislation to honor their international commitments.
* The standard history of the state, though only through the Civil War, is Charles Gayarré's History of Louisiana ( various editions, culminating in 1866, 4 vols., with a posthumous and further expanded edition in 1885 ).
Although federal courts ' application of the Connelly rule has been inconsistent and state courts have often failed to appreciate the consequences of the case, Connelly clearly marked a significant change in the application of the voluntariness standard.
New Hampshire maintains a similar standard, but not a separate state grading scale.
More than one standard can be applied to any case based on multiple jurisdictions and numerous other factors in relation to complex state and federal law ; dependant on which jurisdiction and country one is in.
As it is constant, its value can be set to one by defining the standard state as being the solution containing the background electrolyte.
Practice on its conversion to national currencies varies from state to state ; in most states the conversion factor is based not on the market price of gold, but on an official price ( a remnant of the gold standard, frequently far below its market price today ).

standard and reference
The introduction of the United States Pharmacopoeia reference standard in 1952 and the redefinition and equating of the USP and international units of thyroid-stimulating activity have made it possible to compare results published by different investigators since that time.
For the most part, this discussion will be confined to results obtained since the introduction of the reference standard.
For galaxies ( which are of course themselves much larger than 10 parsecs, and whose overall brightness cannot be directly observed from relatively short distances ) the absolute magnitude is defined by reference to the apparent brightness of a point-like or star-like source of the same total luminosity as the galaxy, as it would appear if observed at the standard 10 parsecs distance.
Known as " Big Mac ", the encyclopedia became the standard baseball reference until 1988, when Total Baseball was released by Warner Books using more sophisticated technology.
Bush gave a standard stump speech making no specific reference to the university.
* Work in progress on new version of Bidi editing standard + reference implementation
* A standard reference for the mathematical formalism.
Mass-dependent differences in calcium isotope composition conventionally are expressed the ratio of two isotopes ( usually < sup > 44 </ sup > Ca /< sup > 40 </ sup > Ca ) in a sample compared to the same ratio in a standard reference material.
Notable works include Abu Bakr al-Razi's encyclopedia of science, the Mutazilite Al-Kindi's prolific output of 270 books, and Ibn Sina's medical encyclopedia, which was a standard reference work for centuries.
Since these properties are often used as reference values it is very common to quote them for a standardized set of environmental parameters, or standard conditions, which is typically a temperature of and a pressure of either or.
This French text is a translation of Hayashi Gahō's seven-volume Imperial chronology, first circulated in Kyoto in 1652 and reprinted in the early 19th century as a standard reference work for use by Tokugawa scholar-bureaucrats.
Portability was a problem in the early days because there was no agreed standard — not even IBM's reference manual — and computer companies vied to differentiate their offerings from others by providing incompatible features.
The 1966 standard provided a reference syntax and semantics, but vendors continued to provide incompatible extensions.
The preferred inertial motions are related to the geometry of space and time: in the standard reference frames of classical mechanics, objects in free motion move along straight lines at constant speed.
As a technical term, the " high " in High German is a geographical reference to the group of dialects that forms " High German " ( in the broader sense ), out of which developed standard High German ( in the narrower sense ), Yiddish and Luxembourgish.
Ibn al-Salah's ʻUlum al-hadith is considered the standard classical reference on hadith studies.
In practical terms, the equivalence of inertial reference frames means that scientists within a box moving uniformly cannot determine their absolute velocity by any experiment ( otherwise the differences would set up an absolute standard reference frame ).
Ruth Benedict made a distinction, relevant in this context, between " guilt " societies ( e. g., medieval Europe ) with an " internal reference standard ", and " shame " societies ( e. g., Japan, " bringing shame upon one's ancestors ") with an " external reference standard ", where people look to their peers for feedback on whether an action is " acceptable " or not ( also known as " group-think ").
A set of reference points are defined in the ISDN standard to refer to certain points between the telco and the end user ISDN equipment.
The reverse depicts an armed Roman soldier bearing a military standard in one hand and subduing a captive with the other, a reference to the military strength of the Roman Empire, and spells out VIRTVS EXERCITVS ROMANORVM, " the bravery / virtue of the Roman army ".

standard and element
In standard arrays, each index is restricted to a certain range of consecutive integers ( or consecutive values of some enumerated type ), and the address of an element is computed by a " linear " formula on the indices.
Carbon forms more compounds than any other element, with almost ten million pure organic compounds described to date, which in turn are a tiny fraction of such compounds that are theoretically possible under standard conditions.
The element forms diatomic molecules under standard conditions, called dichlorine.
* all the external entities used by these standard document types are referenced by simple attributes, declared with the CDATA type in their standard DTD ( such as the " href " attribute of an anchor " a " element, or the " src " attribute of an image " img " element, whose values are interpreted as a URI, without needing any catalog of public identifiers, i. e., known FPI );
The Dublin Core became ISO 15836 standard in 2006 and is used as a base-level data element set for the description of learning resources in the ISO / IEC 19788-2 Metadata for learning resources ( MLR ) -- Part 2: Dublin Core elements, prepared by the ISO / IEC JTC1 SC36.
* HTML element, a standard part of a HTML document
In a standard business model where goods and services are exchanged for a monetary compensation, pricing of the goods is a fundamental element of the marketing process.
Holmium is a relatively soft and malleable element that is fairly corrosion-resistant and stable in dry air at standard temperature and pressure.
Under standard conditions it is the lightest metal and the least dense solid element.
The AWMT paper did not describe any automatic search, nor any universal metadata scheme such as a standard library classification or a hypertext element set like the Dublin core.
A non-zero element of an ordered field F is infinitesimal if and only if its absolute value is smaller than any element of F of the form 1 / n, for n a standard natural number.
At standard temperature and pressure, two atoms of the element bind to form dioxygen, a very pale blue, odorless, tasteless diatomic gas with the formula.
The standard world championship race distance of 2, 000 metres is long enough to have a large endurance element, but short enough ( typically 5. 5 to 7. 5 minutes ) to feel like a sprint.
One way to do this is to first perform a standard binary tree search for the element in question, and then use tree rotations in a specific fashion to bring the element to the top.
Unlike the standard ordering ≤ of the natural numbers, the standard ordering ≤ of the integers is not a well-ordering, since, for example, the set of negative integers does not contain a least element.
The standard ordering ≤ of the positive real numbers is not a well-ordering, since, for example, the open interval ( 0, 1 ) does not contain a least element.
That exchange rate was maintained until 1971, when the United States abandoned the gold standard, which had been a key element of the Bretton Woods System, and imposed a 10 percent surcharge on imports, setting in motion changes that eventually led to floating exchange rates in 1973.

0.565 seconds.