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nonuniformity การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Distortion corrections account for field nonuniformities of the scanner.
  • Their critics argue that the way they took account of this nonuniformity created a spurious correlation.
  • Such a twist would be seen today as a ripple of nonuniformity, perhaps as the axis represents.
  • The nonuniformities are often near brain sinuses such as the ear and plugging the cavity for long periods can be discomfiting.
  • To reduce this nonuniformity, inlet diameters can be varied, and various inserts can be added to minimize stagnant regions.
  • The approach portion of coat-hanger dies are longer than their T-shaped counterparts, further reducing any flow nonuniformity.
  • Reactors with large physical dimensions, e . g . the RBMK type, can develop significant nonuniformities of xenon concentration through the core.
  • Even within our own bubble, tiny random nonuniformities in the primordial raw material would cause the cosmos to look different from place to place.
  • The price is that there is a nonuniformity in certain expressions, because replacing annihilation with creation adds a constant to the negative energy particle number.
  • The limited high-resolution radar coverage of Titan obtained through 2007 ( 22 % ) suggested the existence of a number of nonuniformities in its crater distribution.
  • In other contexts, "'statistical assembly "'refers to the process of constructing a manufactured item which must be carefully specified to contain given amounts of nonuniformity within it.
  • In the liquid crystal display industry, moir?is often referred to by the Japanese word mura, which is roughly translates to " unevenness; irregularity; lack of uniformity; nonuniformity; inequality ."
  • Any nonuniformity, such as caused by a wave front in the air at T, causes a scattered light beam to evade the screen, K2 ( path a ), and reach the film.
  • While this is hard to generalize to more than one digit ( in a short length of time ), it does avoid any artifacts caused by nonuniformity and nonindependence of letter distributions in the English language.
  • Implosion of the secondary assembly is indirectly driven, and the techniques used in the interstage to smooth the spatial profile ( i . e . reduce coherence and nonuniformities ) of the primary s irradiance are of utmost importance.
  • After each amplifier module there was a spatial filter, which was used to smooth the beam by removing any nonuniformity or power anisotropy which had accumulated due to nonlinear focussing effects of intense light passage through air and glass.
  • The receptive field tends to favor movement ( such as a light or dark spot moving over the field, as in center-to-periphery ( or vice versa ) ), as well as contours ( due to their nonuniformity in the receptive fields ).
  • To slip from permissible nonuniformity at one end of the stream of commerce to permissible nonuniformity at the other end thus is to read the statute too casually and gloss over the congressional purpose, which expressly was to facilitate marketing in and transportation to " any and all markets in the current of interstate commerce ."
  • To slip from permissible nonuniformity at one end of the stream of commerce to permissible nonuniformity at the other end thus is to read the statute too casually and gloss over the congressional purpose, which expressly was to facilitate marketing in and transportation to " any and all markets in the current of interstate commerce ."
  • According to reviewer Lore Segal, " He has published poetry, criticism, essays, memoirs ( including an extended, sometimes hilarious meditation on learning to swim in middle age ) and . . . novels of an unsettling nonuniformity . " Among the many writers who influenced West's work, writes literary critic David Madden, were Jean-Paul Sartre ( direct prose, existentialism, alienation, self-definition ); Shakespeare ( language ); Thomas De Quincey ( involutes; that is " compound experiences incapable of being disentangled " ); Samuel Beckett ( word play, nonconforming fiction ); and T . S . Eliot ( the objective correlative, which West called " an emotional shorthand; a morse for the soul " ).