capillarity

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capillarity
capillarity (kæpɪˈlærɪtɪ) [ad. F. capillarité, f. L. capillār-is capillary + -ity.] Capillary quality; esp. that of exerting capillary attraction or repulsion. Also, capillary attraction.1830 Herschel Stud. Nat. Phil. 234 Capillary attraction, or capillarity as it is sometimes called. 1850 Daubeny A... Oxford English Dictionary
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Elasto-capillarity
Elasto-capillarity is the ability of capillary force to deform an elastic material. This provides a comparison between bending stiffness (elasticity) and surface tension (capillarity). wikipedia.org
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Sorptivity
In 1957 John Philip introduced the term sorptivity and defined it as a measure of the capacity of the medium to absorb or desorb liquid by capillarity. According to C Hall and W D Hoff, the sorptivity expresses the tendency of a material to absorb and transmit water and other liquids by capillarity. wikipedia.org
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CN107630094B - Molecular marker capable of ... - Google Patents
The invention relates to the technical field of animal molecular markers and application, in particular to a molecular marker capable of simultaneously predicting and identifying fineness counts and tortuosity characters of sheep wool and application thereof in predicting and identifying capillarity counts and tortuosity characters of Chinese merino sheep, and the molecular marker capable of ...
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undercloak
ˈundercloak, n. Building. Also under-cloak. [f. under-1 5 b.] The lower of two layers of building material used to form a watertight covering; spec. (a) the lower of two metal sheets whose edges form a joint on the flat; (b) a layer of material, usu. tiles or cement, laid under the outermost layer o... Oxford English Dictionary
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Capillary action through synthetic mesh
Capillarity is the result of cohesion of water molecules and adhesion of those molecules to the solid material forming the void. wikipedia.org
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intermolecular
intermolecular, a. (ɪntəməʊˈlɛkjʊlə(r)) [inter- 4 a.] Situated, existing, or occurring between the molecules of a body or substance. Hence intermoˈlecularly adv., between molecules.1843 Grove Contrib. Sci. in Corr. Phys. Forces (1874) 304 Believing that all electrical phenomena are intermolecular ch... Oxford English Dictionary
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Journal of Colloid and Interface Science
particular focus on colloidal materials and nanomaterials; surfactants and soft matter; adsorption, catalysis and electrochemistry; interfacial processes, capillarity wikipedia.org
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What is this woodlouse doing? I picked an apple from the ground, it was wet with dew and a woodlouse was stuck to it, with its back against the apple. When it got loose, it started flexing its "tail" like this for a w...
a number of adaptations, one of them being the ability to "pick up water from external sources via uropodal dipping, with the water moving upwards by capillarity
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Françoise Brochard-Wyart
A special mention for the Prix Roberval in 2007 for Capillarity and Wetting Phenomena -Droplets, bubbles, pearls and waves, co-authored with Pierre-Gilles Quéré) Capillarity and Wetting Phenomena -Droplets, bubbles, pearls and waves, References External links Françoise Brochard-Wyart at Google Scholar wikipedia.org
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Nanoconcrete
The increased volume of gel reduces capillarity in solid and porous materials. References Concrete wikipedia.org
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毛细现象水液面是不是球面的一部分?
G., Brochard-Wyart, F., & Quéré, D. (2013).Capillarity and wetting phenomena: drops, bubbles, pearls, waves. zhihu
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John Shipley Rowlinson
His works covered a wide range of subjects, including on capillarity (the ability of a liquid to flow in narrow spaces without the assistance of, or even His Molecular Theory of Capillarity also treats the topic's history in addition to its technical aspect. wikipedia.org
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Phase boundary
science, in physics and mathematics for almost two centuries, due partly to phase boundaries naturally arising in many physical processes, such as the capillarity wikipedia.org
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Paolo Casati
For example, they discuss how to determine the Earth's dimensions, floating bodies, the phenomena of capillarity, and also describe the experiment on the wikipedia.org
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