| 1. | The generally too high excitation energies of CIS or CISD are lowered.
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| 2. | Both these processes are believed to mediate the distribution of excitation energy between photosystems I and II.
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| 3. | The essential role of the buffer gas is to transfer to xenon atoms the necessary excitation energy.
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| 4. | For quantitative good energy differences ( excitation energies ) one has to be careful in selecting the references.
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| 5. | Each of these internal degrees of freedom are assumed to be frozen out due to their relatively high excitation energy.
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| 6. | Because of these excimer formations are unstable they disintegrate within a few nanoseconds converting their excitation energy to optical radiation.
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| 7. | The excitation energy within the compound nucleus is formed from the binding energy of the thermal neutron with the target nucleus.
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| 8. | Nuclear fissions in fissile fuels are the result of the nuclear excitation energy produced when a fissile nucleus captures a neutron.
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| 9. | Melanin is not a photocarcinogen, because it dissipates the excitation energy into small amounts of heat ( see photoprotection ).
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| 10. | Decreased excitation energy reduces photo-bleaching of a sample often making it the preferred system for imaging live cells or organisms.
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