By tuning the length of the primary tubes, usually by means of resonance tuning, the rarefaction pulse can be timed to coincide with the exact moment valve overlap occurs.
32.
Through the mechanisms of compression and rarefaction, sound waves travel through the air, bounce off the pinna and concha of the exterior ear, and enter the ear canal.
33.
Additionally, the cycle of non-Newtonian way, which causes their viscosity to change with the rate of shear strain experienced during compression and rarefaction; again, this varies with frequency.
34.
If energy is deposited at a single point, it can radiate away in the explosive in all directions in rarefaction or expansion waves, and only a small volume is efficiently heated or compressed.
35.
The profiles for the metagenomes can be visualized and compared by using barcharts, trees, spreadsheet-like tables, heatmaps, PCoA, rarefaction plots, circular recruitment plot, and KEGG maps.
36.
Rarefaction waves and solidification fronts near the nozzle may turn it into a shrapnel of ice crystals and frozen droplets; you will need to put a lot of thought and effort into the nozzle design.
37.
Characteristics may fail to cover part of the domain of the PDE . This is called a rarefaction, and indicates the solution typically exists only in a weak, i . e . integral equation, sense.
38.
Rarefaction techniques are used to quantify species diversity of newly studied ecosystems, including human microbiomes, as well as in applied studies in community ecology, such as understanding pollution impacts on communities and other management applications.
39.
For some high intensity tone bursts, especially 500 1000 Hz, single ( e . g ., rarefaction ) polarity results in very large amplitude stimulus artifact, making it difficult to distinguish waves from artifact.
40.
He adduced common observations ( the wine stealer ) to demonstrate that air was a substance and a simple experiment ( breathing on one's hand ) to show that it could be altered by rarefaction and condensation.