| 41. | After a few milliseconds, the energy of the shock front will no longer be great enough to heat the air into incandescence.
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| 42. | It was first used to analyze the elements in a substance heated to incandescence; each element gave off characteristic wavelengths of visible light.
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| 43. | The bulbs, retailing for about 10 pounds each, last 10 times as long and use 80 percent less electricity than standard incandescence.
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| 44. | Sheehy's stolidity makes it difficult for her to give a sense of Le Gallienne's flair, her incandescence on stage.
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| 45. | The bar's sign hung outside her front windows, and at night its metronomic blink lighted her walls with an eerie incandescence.
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| 46. | Having heated the materials to incandescence with a heat-torch, he wrote that he had seen bright, glowing, blue vesicles.
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| 47. | Bill Weld's intellectual incandescence has not been matched by the low-wattage staff and narrow-gauge railway that replaced Team Weld.
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| 48. | When I look out my windows, I stare out across to the city skyline _ a colorful and very starry display of manmade incandescence.
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| 49. | By the sheer force of his determination and the incandescence of his celebration, he won them over just as he had won over their man.
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| 50. | On June 6, 2008, British writer Adam Roberts released a review criticizing " Incandescence " for its awkward prose and weak characterization.
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