The product of these is not in units of power and the ratio, known as magnetic reluctance, does not measure the rate of dissipation of energy so is not a true impedance.
22.
The dissipation of energy via internal conversion ( IC ) is so rapid that fluorescence is only observed from depopulation of the first excited singlet state to the lower-energy ground state ( S1 ?
23.
The shear modulus ( G ) of a " strong " gel exhibits a smaller dissipation of energy than " weak " gels, and the " strong " gel's G-values plateau for longer periods of time.
24.
Among many papers which Burbury contributed independently to the'Philosophical Magazine'were those'On the Second Law of Thermodynamics, in Connection with the Kinetic Theory of Gases'( 1876 ) and'On a Theorem in the Dissipation of Energy'( 1882 ).
25.
As much as 90 percent of a tire's rolling resistance can be attributed to hysteresis _ the dissipation of energy that occurs when the tread, sidewalls and carcass of a tire are deformed as the tire rolls.
26.
Some concepts of particular importance for non-equilibrium thermodynamics include time rate of dissipation of energy ( Rayleigh 1873, Onsager 1931, also ), time rate of entropy production ( Onsager 1931 ), dissipative structure, and non-linear dynamical structure.
27.
Obviously, this figure does not include the dissipation of energy through the chest wall, and is not scaled up for humans, but it is indicative that relatively small amounts of energy are required to reach the heart before physical damage is done.
28.
The system requires two conditions in proper balance : hysteresis, or the pumping of energy by the vibrating container into the brass balls, and the rapid dissipation of energy through the hard collisions some of the balls undergo as they are moved around.
29.
Majorly, quasars are known to exist in systems that are decoherent, the massive redshifts associated with them are seen in absorption lines, and in order to get systematic redshifts of any size a rather dense medium is needed to allow for the dissipation of energy through scattering.
30.
Insects, such as fruit flies and bees, detect near field sounds using loosely attached hairs or antennae which vibrate with air particle movement . ( Tympanal organs detect the pressure component of sound . ) Near-field sound, because of the rapid dissipation of energy, is suitable only for very close communication.