In chemistry we talked about kinetics, and we had the Bunsens on to keep us warm. |
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As it turns out, the beauty queen, on leave from finishing a doctorate in chemistry, never wore the sealskin garment by Dolorosa Nartok. |
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Well I think really it began to falter when I went up to Oxford University to study chemistry. |
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In chemistry, thermodynamics refers to the transformations of energy associated with chemical reactions. |
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Improved water pressure means most of the chemistry department's needs can now be met by the mains supply. |
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Artists rely on the structure provided by laws of kinetics and pattern and chemistry as much as on chance. |
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A university without chemistry should be stripped of the title and redesignated a liberal arts college, which is all it is. |
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This reading is bolstered by Alexander's discussion of the reducibility of chemistry to physics, on which he is neutral. |
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Lithium aluminum hydride is an important reducing agent in organic chemistry. |
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Witness their enthusiasm for UFOs as opposed to scientific cosmology, for alchemy instead of chemistry, for urban legends instead of hard news. |
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Although it had led to the discovery of alcohol and the mineral acids, historians of chemistry view alchemy in general as fraudulent. |
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I think we had some good chemistry, you know, between the two of us right out of the box. |
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Metabasic rocks throughout the Moine outcrop display a tholeiitic chemistry comparable with modern mid-ocean basalts. |
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The bad blood between them melted away with the band's delight that the musical chemistry was intact. |
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He already has added to clubhouse chemistry and was instrumental in last weekend's series against the Cubs. |
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The film thrives on the chemistry between its two likeable leads, while the rest of the cast is funny and amiable. |
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This minor is designed for students majoring in another natural science who also may teach chemistry in secondary schools. |
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He did not restrict himself to studying mathematics, however, for he studied other topics such as astronomy, meteorology and chemistry. |
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In many ways this text also serves as an introduction to anatomy, zoology, nutrition, water chemistry and animal husbandry. |
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I think I should really go for the kiss tonight to see if we have any attraction as I don't want to lead him on if there isn't any chemistry. |
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While studying for your degree in chemistry it is possible for you to spend up to one year away from the University, as a sandwich year. |
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It will investigate global atmospheric circulation dynamics, meteorology and chemistry. |
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Clinical depression is generally thought to have a direct link to brain chemistry. |
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A professor of organic chemistry at the University of Pavia, and two colleagues from Milan offered thixotropy as an explanation. |
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Polymer chemistry is the field of study concerned with the production, classification, and modification of macromolecules or polymers. |
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This is a science in which biology, chemistry, physics, and computer science draw on one another and merge to become indistinguishable. |
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And physicists enjoy careers in engineering, chemistry, life sciences, and Earth sciences. |
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It is a first-tier journal for new methods and significant improvements in life sciences and chemistry. |
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Others continue their chemical education into graduate school in chemistry and life sciences. |
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The blinking of fluorescent lighting has done something detrimental to their brain chemistry. |
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The distribution, water chemistry, ecology, hydrology, limnology, and invertebrate and amphibian fauna of vernal ponds have been investigated. |
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The sexual chemistry between Wilks and Gray is palpable as they bounce ripostes off each other with wry wit and superb timing. |
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The overall goal was to introduce the students to both oral and written presentations of applied chemistry research. |
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Comparisons between linguistics and fields like history or chemistry give similar results. |
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He now worked on thermodynamics, publishing three papers on applications to physical chemistry and thermoelectricity. |
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She combines the methods of history, semantics, and semiotics to show how and why the formulae were first adopted in organic chemistry. |
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Polymeros described the chemistry that has existed between the two of them ever since they rowed together as club rowers. |
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Recorded in DIY lo-fi, they have better chemistry than when they debuted on the Sanddollars EP earlier this year. |
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This demo would be appropriate at the beginning of a general chemistry course or anytime when the law of conservation of mass is discussed. |
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I put my books on my lab table in chemistry, being careful not to knock over any of the glass beakers that were sitting out. |
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As her eyes scanned the chemistry lecture theatre her attention was drawn to the strapping, sporty-looking student at the other side of the room. |
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Bela and Ruby are not going to be love interests unless something spectacular happens with the chemistry and it makes sense for the storyline. |
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The two very sexy stars provide enough chemistry in this stylized thriller but the movie runs out of steam halfway through. |
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He studied physics as his main subject but took mathematics, astronomy and chemistry as minor subjects. |
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My second project is the investigation of the chemistry of rutherfordium in the gas phase. |
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The study of molecular and atomic structure is called quantum chemistry, or quantum mechanics. |
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This was the start of the systematization of analytical chemistry and the beginning of rationalization of the atomic mass of the elements. |
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He had no teaching obligations and undertook research in physical chemistry and atomic physics. |
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This does not mean, however, that chemistry, biochemistry or atomic physics are in some way giving us a false picture of reality. |
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It played a major role in the unification of chemistry, comparable to that of the great impact made by atomic theory in the previous century. |
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Granted, they don't exhibit white-hot chemistry, but it's suitably sweet without being too saccharine. |
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He became fast friends with Fred Gwynne, developing a chemistry that is obvious in The Munsters. |
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None of meitnerium's chemistry has been researched, but it should resemble other elements of group 9, like iridium. |
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By the mid-nineteenth century, advances in physics, chemistry, metallurgy, and ballistics were influencing the manufacture of weapons. |
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The girl, 14 at the time of the incident in May 1996, was injured when a test tube of ethanol boiled over during a chemistry class. |
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In this way, the weaker students can be assisted by the input from those who are fluent in medicinal chemistry and drug design. |
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Despite the 2000 withdrawal, Scotchgard is back on the market after reformulation to a more environmentally benign fluorine-based chemistry. |
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They discuss the scleractinian skeleton in detail, covering, in their words, its morphology, mineralogy, growth, and chemistry. |
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Her friend Gemma Douglas, 18, is sitting A-levels in media studies, English literature, chemistry and general studies. |
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As chemistry and chemical theories became more sophisticated, scientists were able to better identify and produce various materials. |
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His work in chemistry was aimed at establishing it as a mathematical science based on a mechanistic theory of matter. |
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He lectured on analysis, physics, mechanics, chemistry, and engineering topics. |
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Nanotechnology is an emerging engineering field that borrows from such areas as materials science, engineering, chemistry, biology and physics. |
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Like brazing and other joining processes, soldering involves several fields of science, including mechanics, chemistry and metallurgy. |
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They do have some chemistry, but the real issue is this maniacal boyfriend. |
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He jammed his fist into his baggy khaki pants, aware of the strange chemistry that floated in the air. |
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Among the high achievers was Hannah, who made the grade in physics, biology, chemistry, maths and general studies. |
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But what we learn in chemistry is that chiral objects cannot be distinguished by an achiral probe. |
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My old chemistry teacher used to lecture us lads about the virtue of having 31 ties, one for every day of the month, so they never wore out. |
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The Job Holder should be a graduate BSc or equivalent in an analytical chemistry or biological discipline. |
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Minton earned a bachelors degree from the University of Maryland, where he studied economics, chemistry, and mathematics. |
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Geochemistry involves studying the chemical make-up of rocks, the chemistry of water or any geological material. |
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A strange chemistry forms when the pair meets at the interview and Grey makes no bones about how boring the job will be. |
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My booksack is beside my right hip and, still tired and angry, yet adrenalized, I open it and pull out my only assignment, chemistry. |
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You might advance theories about lucky timing or mysterious audience chemistry, but Barnett modestly credits a more practical factor. |
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The unit has the raw talent and experience to compete with anyone and appears to have the best chemistry of any grouping. |
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A green chemistry example concerns the transfer of raw polymer resin into reactors. |
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After coating the glass with a silane reagent containing aldehyde groups, they used Schiff's base chemistry to immobilise the protein molecules. |
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In addition, alkyl groups may correspond to reagents and intermediates in organic chemistry. |
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After all, who would want to watch a show about the humdrum life of a high school chemistry teacher with decent health insurance? |
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The tests that are performed are a complete blood count, blood chemistry, prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, electrocardiogram, and chest x-rays. |
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Analytical scientists should be delighted, because it is not often that those who develop workhorse instrumental techniques are awarded the ultimate accolade for chemistry. |
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New scientific techniques which allow analysis of bone chemistry have shown that pre-historic man was not the solely meat-eating savage he is often portrayed. |
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The simple trick of leaving the destruction of bombs to the imagination while focusing on the strange chemistry between the two men is jarring and frightening. |
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If the chemistry department plans are approved the demolition of the existing single-storey building, along with the neighbouring water tower, could start this autumn. |
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As most of the glasses are rhyolitic in composition, the distinction is subtler, being based on small differences in bulk chemistry and volatile contents. |
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Their chemistry, which includes a recurring joke about ice fishing and a crazy, telephone-bashing encounter, is great fun. |
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Immediately, the musical and human chemistry of the quintet proved itself a winner, but there was always violence at their shows, mostly sparked by the singer. |
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Getting rid of malcontent Raul Mondesi should do a lot to help an uneven chemistry in the clubhouse, though Garry Sheffield remains a simmering pot. |
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He believes brain chemistry undermines his sense of free will and personhood and that psychology explains away love and altruism. |
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His first contribution to chemistry was an early version of atomic theory. |
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Further, this series assumes an understanding of basic chemistry, and a grasp of current basic atomic theory, such as the properties of protons, electrons, etc. |
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More diagrams and pictures are better when trying to explain difficult science to nonscientists and, let's face it, radiation chemistry is difficult science to understand. |
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In recent research, atmospheric scientists have been filling in holes in their basic knowledge about the ways that nature affects the chemistry of the atmosphere. |
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The skit features Julia Louis-Dreyfus as an island-hungry TV star customer and that unique brand of Cranston-Paul chemistry. |
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He was matchlessly unorthodox, brave, loving, generous, riotously funny, as well as shrewd and unsentimental, in a blend of human chemistry that is indeed irreplaceable. |
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Far from being homogenous, inhibitory interneurons are a diverse assembly of multiple subtypes that differ in their morphology, chemistry and physiology. |
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They guffawed that the EU might get the peace prize, but never the Nobel for economics or, indeed, for chemistry. |
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Although she's not attached to anyone romantically in real life, she could've fooled fans with her on-screen chemistry with her costar in the movie. |
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Anfinsen's work in the late 1960s demonstrated that understanding the chemistry of proteins was essential to understanding the function of ribonucleic acid in heredity. |
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As for me, I am entering my fourth year of university reading chemistry. |
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I saw the same with Jonah and Russell and their chemistry, and I immediately conceived of the film right there. |
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The ensuing high adventure is an energetic romp packed with plenty of explosions and near-death experiences that also works because of the chemistry of its stars. |
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Fromm took courses in rubber chemistry and came up with the idea to apply the knowledge to prophylactics. |
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Stars also have distinctive spectra, determined by their temperature, size, and, to a lesser degree, their chemistry. |
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The essence of chemistry is understanding and applying chemical reactions. |
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In addition, there is a large programme to fund research on a wide range of topics, including biology, physics, chemistry, agronomy, and human and social sciences. |
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As such, they allow us a peek at the chemistry before the planets and moons evolved into what we know them as today. |
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My unmarried survey respondents seem to understand that friendship is the basis of a good marriage even as they hold out for chemistry and thunderbolts and soulmates. |
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Lamproite is also a mantle-derived ultramafic rock that differs from kimberlite in bulk chemistry, being richer in silicon and poorer in aluminum and iron. |
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However, the numbers enrolling for chemistry, physics and maths degree courses are dropping and university science departments are threatened with closure. |
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Muslims made many discoveries in mathematics, chemistry, physics, medicine, astronomy and psychology. |
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Most chemists were not concerned with this detail because during the first half of the eighteenth century chemistry was not concerned with quantitative analysis. |
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I can only speak for my own specialties, organic and medicinal chemistry. |
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Kids are sitting paired off with each other at lab tables with Bunsen burners on tabletops along with test tube holders and other chemistry objects. |
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At the table-read for Sarah Marshall, Jonah and Russell had such amazing chemistry. |
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At Queens College, she met Gerry Goffin, a charismatic chemistry major who supplied the lyrics to her chords and melodies. |
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His descriptions of assaying, smelting procedures, refining, production of glass and other processes in metallurgy and geological chemistry were used for over two centuries. |
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It is the intention of this book to provide an overview of the behaviour of alicyclic compounds in the depth required for an undergraduate chemistry course. |
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Susli, the one-time chemistry grad student, started helping Lloyd and Postol with research into hexamine. |
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Johnson says she used her pain to dig deeper into her schoolwork and into her dual majors of chemistry and psychology. |
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She was the yin to Indy's yang, the pepper to his salt, and the chemistry between them was palpable. |
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And I think the chemistry that Jason and Jessica have stems from that innocence they both share. |
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High-level chemistry and physics went hand in hand with blue jeans and hard hats. |
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As a result of the breadth of such profound scientific questions, astrobiologists draw heavily on expertise in biology, chemistry, astronomy, and planetary science. |
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Children are being turned off chemistry and physics by the mad professors and pointy-headed boffins of popular mythology, according to a new study of attitudes to science. |
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The dynamic field of astrochemistry brings together ideas of physics, astrophysics, biology and chemistry to the study of molecules between stars, around stars and on planets. |
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Astrochemistry is a broad and interdisciplinary emerging field at the intersection of the traditional disciplines of chemistry, physics, and astronomy. |
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Analytical chemistry is that area of chemistry that develops methods to identify substances by analyzing and quantitating the exact composition of a mixture. |
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There are numerous excursions in scientific realms of chemistry, biology, meteorology, computer science, and most of all mathematics and philosophy. |
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No study in the history of physics, chemistry, biology or human anatomy and physiology has determined the concept of chi to be an accurate description of how the body works. |
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A few weeks ago when I was writing about saponification and soap chemistry, I was reminded of a simple phenomenon that demonstrates closed-shell foam formation. |
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The chemistry that was there in the first one was the reason we all bonded and stayed friends. |
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Luckily, the chemistry between the romantic leads feels real. |
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Can one infer, for instance that the nineteenth century discoveries in the fields of organic chemistry, electricity, or bacteriology were driven by free market capitalism? |
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Was it the promise of the almost tangible chemistry between the two? |
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Retorts are the most employed of any kind of distilling vessels in the practice of modern chemistry, having in England almost superseded the use of all others. |
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An indication of oxidation numbers or formal charge in Lewis structures and the resulting mesomeric structures is important in some branches of chemistry. |
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When asked why he and greenfield have such great chemistry on the show, he pauses. |
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The participants also learnt that tilling their land every season was a bad practice which led to poor yields as the soil's chemistry and physics were destabilised. |
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Throughout the 1990s, advances in chemistry led the materials solidify more quickly, thus making 3D printing more useful. |
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This revolving door concept hampered any chance of building sustained chemistry and camaraderie between the players and thereby undermined team play. |
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Certainly industrial chemistry was much more important than chemical warfare, rockets, jets, or atomic physics, which little influenced the course of the war. |
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The history of chemistry microcosmically demonstrates this trend towards disciplinary coherence. |
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One can prepare the organo-rare earth complexes by rather easy bucket chemistry. |
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Another ligand delivery reagent this time for the introduction of the 1,8-diazafluorene ligand, has been developed using diazo chemistry. |
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Those lovers, played by Vincent Perez and Rachel Weisz, are certainly easy on the eyes, but their romantic chemistry is tentative at best. |
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Current toys are made of a graceless material, the product of chemistry, not of nature. |
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The many chemistry based business on Teesside include Huntsman Tioxide plant at Greatham makes titanium dioxide. |
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He is largely regarded one of the founders of modern chemistry and is best known for the formulation of Boyle's law. |
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But Brian d'Arcy James and the hypertalented Sutton Foster find a sweet, goofy chemistry as an ogre and a princess. |
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Within the natural sciences, Edinburgh's medical also led the way in chemistry, anatomy and pharmacology. |
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Priestley turned down an opportunity to teach chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania. |
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Despite Priestley's reduced scientific output, his presence stimulated American interest in chemistry. |
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Seven of his students, including his son George Paget Thomson, also became Nobel Prize winners either in physics or in chemistry. |
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Much of his work in mathematical modelling of chemical processes can be thought of as early computational chemistry. |
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As it was not possible to read mathematics there at the time, Hawking decided to study physics and chemistry. |
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Dalton found that an atomic theory of matter could elegantly explain this common pattern in chemistry. |
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The faculty provides education and research in chemistry, informatics, physics, mathematics and telecommunications. |
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The following table is an educational guideline for the chemistry of fireworks. |
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Tighe was an agricultural theorist, and provided the younger man with a great deal of material on chemistry, biology and statistics. |
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The Saracens gave an entirely new face to pharmacy and chemistry. They introduced a great variety of salutary medicaments into Europe. |
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The band had a number of bass players during this period who did not fit with the band's chemistry. |
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Rubio was chosen because Khan thought that he had very good chemistry with the Cuban trainer. |
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Germany invested more heavily than the British in research, especially in chemistry, motors and electricity. |
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Even while working on chemistry, she was already thinking towards law and politics. |
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Jon Agar explores her career in chemistry and argues that her understanding of modern scientific research impacted her views as Prime Minister. |
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Correlation between the Hoy volcanics and the other two exposures has been proposed, but differences in chemistry means this remains uncertain. |
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The slag chemistry of the process is also controlled to ensure that impurities such as silicon and phosphorus are removed from the metal. |
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The importance of chemistry is indicated by the range of important scholars who actively engaged in chemical research. |
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Boyle is also credited for his landmark publication The Sceptical Chymist in 1661, which is seen as a cornerstone book in the field of chemistry. |
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He also pleaded that chemistry should cease to be subservient to medicine or to alchemy, and rise to the status of a science. |
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The study of their properties is known as organic chemistry and their study in the context of living organisms is known as biochemistry. |
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In inorganic chemistry, hydrides can also serve as bridging ligands that link two metal centers in a coordination complex. |
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Deuterium compounds have applications in chemistry and biology in studies of reaction isotope effects. |
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Cavendish, as indicated above, used the language of the old phlogiston theory in chemistry. |
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Homeopathy was developed prior to discovery of the basic principles of chemistry, which proved homeopathic remedies contained nothing but water. |
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In early 1881, he is a chemistry student with a number of eccentric interests, almost all of which make him adept at solving crimes. |
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The chemistry of the myrmicine genus Solenopsis is so aberrant that it reduces generalizations about ant venoms to the absurd. |
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Two years later, aged 22 and studying chemistry at the Berlin Academy, the third eldest brother, Rudi, committed suicide in a Berlin bar. |
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The discipline which is the ancestor of modern specializations like astronomy, biology, physics and chemistry was then called natural philosophy. |
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Lakes are also informally classified and named according to the general chemistry of their water mass. |
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Understanding and characterising river water chemistry requires a well designed and managed sampling and analysis. |
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Murdoch built a prototype steam locomotive in 1784 and made a number of discoveries in chemistry. |
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In addition to his mechanical work Murdoch also experimented in the field of chemistry and made a number of discoveries. |
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The chemistry of igneous rocks is expressed differently for major and minor elements and for trace elements. |
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The chemistry of its fossils is similar to that of fossilised vascular plants, rather than algae. |
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Lead tetraacetate and lead dioxide are used as oxidizing agents in organic chemistry. |
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The result is a profound change in physical properties and chemistry of the stone. |
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Sugar is added to control the ruthenium chemistry and to stop the formation of the volatile RuO4 containing radioactive ruthenium isotopes. |
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The chemistry of plutonium was found to resemble uranium after a few months of initial study. |
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The chemistry of caesium is similar to that of other alkali metals, in particular rubidium, the element above caesium in the periodic table. |
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Caesium fluoride enjoys a niche use in organic chemistry as a base and as an anhydrous source of fluoride ion. |
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In organic chemistry, a hydrocarbon is an organic compound consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon, and thus are group 14 hydrides. |
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In chemistry, Giulio Natta received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1963 for his work on high polymers. |
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If a zone undergoes a strong, vertical chemistry gradient with depth, it contains a chemocline. |
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British and German propellant charges differed in packaging, handling, and chemistry. |
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It plays a part in regulating the chemistry of our atmosphere and water supply. |
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For example, Robert Boyle studied pneumatic chemistry for a small portion of his career. |
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In physical chemistry, the name given to these intermolecular forces is van der Waals force. |
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This can involve sophisticated analytical chemistry focused on finger printing an oil source based on the complex mixture of substances present. |
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This process operates regardless of the origin of the parental magma to the granite, and regardless of its chemistry. |
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Factors such as the chemistry of the environment may have been responsible for changes. |
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Changes to the blood chemistry may lead physicians to mistakenly diagnose heart malfunction. |
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Stahl argued that phlogiston could explain combustion, a central concern of eighteenth-century chemistry. |
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It emphasizes the application of analytical techniques from physics, chemistry, and engineering. |
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Russian chemist Dmitry Mendeleev invented the Periodic table, the main framework of modern chemistry. |
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Aleksandr Butlerov was one of the creators of the theory of chemical structure, playing a central role in organic chemistry. |
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In chemistry, Dmitri Mendeleev, following the atomic theory of John Dalton, created the first periodic table of elements. |
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This period contained progress in surgery, medical chemistry, dissection, and practical medicine. |
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Although plants were the main source of medieval remedies, around the sixteenth century medical chemistry became more prominent. |
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John of Rupescissa's works in alchemy and the beginnings of medical chemistry is recognized for the bounds in chemistry. |
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However, in 2000, saccharin was later found to only be carcinogenic to rats due to their unique urine chemistry. |
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It applies mathematics, physics, and chemistry, in an effort to explain the origin of those objects and phenomena and their evolution. |
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Both of these fields represent an overlap of the disciplines of astronomy and chemistry. |
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The chemistry of cyanoacetylene, HC3N, can lead in aqueous solution to the prebiotic synthesis of pyrimidines. |
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Sherwood Rowland for their work in atmospheric chemistry, particularly concerning the formation and decomposition of ozone. |
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His main interests were in irrigation, fertilizers, famine relief, economic crops, and empirical observation with early notions of chemistry. |
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Understanding chemistry greatly aided the development of basic inorganic chemical manufacturing and the aniline dye industries. |
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The work of Justus von Liebig and August Wilhelm von Hofmann laid the groundwork for modern industrial chemistry. |
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In organic chemistry, there can be more than one chemical compound with the same composition and molecular weight. |
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Roebuck started medical practice at Birmingham, but devoted much of his time to chemistry, especially its practical applications. |
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Calcium hypochlorite is a general oxidizing agent and therefore finds some use in organic chemistry. |
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He wrote on human endeavours and aspects of life like death, metaphysics, geology, natural theology and chemistry. |
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The chemistry of aniline is rich because the compound has been cheaply available for many years. |
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Sake Dean Mahomed had learned much of Mughal chemistry and understood the techniques used to produce various alkali and soaps to produce shampoo. |
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And by alcoholic I mean a man whose chemistry craves alcohol and drives him resistlessly to it. |
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We have heard tales of couples with awesome sextual chemistry, but no sexual chemistry. |
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You may know a lot about chemistry man but you don't know jack about slinging dope. |
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She filled the chair of chemistry and toxology in the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, and became dean of the faculty. |
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Electron Microprobe analyses were conducted to determine the chemistry of Co-Ni-Fe sulfarsenides and arsenides. |
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Meanwhile, the ever-so-gorgeous Asin is an equal match as the convincing runaway bride sharing excellent chemistry with Khan. |
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Spartan, the chemistry computational software package released by Wavefunction, Inc. |
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Some procedures illustrate the value of alkyne chemistry and the emerging importance of alkyl metathesis reactions. |
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A huge X-ray microscope has revealed growth bands in plankton shells that show how shell chemistry records the sea temperature. |
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Relationship between water chemistry and the distribution of the endangered aquatic quillwort Isoetes sinensis Palmer in China. |
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If you are a lousy kisser, then you're going to be a failure at creating good chemistry between you and your date. |
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We interpret this behavior as being indicative of a complex autocatalytic oxidation chemistry. |
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In chemistry, pH is a measure of the acidity or basicity of an aqueous solution. |
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Its surface chemistry is very different from silica gel due to the presence of a high population of strong Lewis acid sites. |
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Not great chemistry though, as Librans can be too soft for straight-talking Capricorn. |
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The calculator uses linear programming to determine the least expensive recipe to charge a furnace to a given chemistry. |
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Steve Benight, one of Tm's scientific founders and a leader in the physics and chemistry of DNA hybridization. |
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Rodgers is a member of the board of trustees at Dartmouth College, where he graduated as Salutatorian with degrees in both physics and chemistry. |
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Elevational trends in defense chemistry, vegetation, and reproduction in Sanguinaria canadensis. |
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It also validates our chemistry technology in the successful develop-ment of a small molecule macrocyclic compound as a clinical candidate. |
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One can only congratulate the author for having provided this comprehensive presentation of macromolecular chemistry. |
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That might not sound all that blokey, but when you consider that it involves a lot of dangerous chemistry, you can breathe a sigh of relief. |
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Her work involves technologies in the fields of life sciences, chemistry, material sciences, nanotechnologies, data processing, and devices. |
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The vice chancellor announced that the AIOU will soon start BSc program with physics, biology, chemistry or mathematic as a major subject. |
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The UdeM and IRICoR medicinal chemistry component of this collaboration was carried out in IRIC's medicinal chemistry core facility. |
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The sessional talks and poster presentations covered the spectrum, from analytical to organic chemistry. |
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I was a chemistry major and not a biology major, and he expected students to brownnose him. |
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The second chapter is about the chemistry and biology of methamphetamine use. |
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Glycidyl carbamate chemistry combines the excellent properties of polyurethanes with the crosslinking chemistry of epoxy resins. |
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Hydroxyl radical formation via iron-mediated fenton chemistry is inhibited by methylated catechols. |
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Cavitation is an important factor in many areas of science and engineering, including acoustics, chemistry and hydraulics. |
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The chemistry of thiazoles dates back to 1879 when benzothiazole came into light. |
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His work also examined calcium aluminates and the chemistry and structure of the ferrite solid solutions of industrial clinkers. |
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They explain the chemistry behind common Karl Fischer, food and beverage titrations, and give practical advice for sample and reagent handling. |
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But Martin Grootveld, a professor of bioanalytical chemistry and chemical pathology, claims that should be changed. |
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Chemical pathology is a branch of medical science that is concerned with changes in body chemistry in disease conditions. |
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Chloromethane is employed as a methylation and chlorinating agent in organic chemistry. |
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Nano is critical to a number of fields, including physics, chemistry and engineering, Crone explains. |
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McClure is a treat as clueless, nebbishy Jack, creating an appealing chemistry with O'Malley's lovely, clear-eyed Betsy. |
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How did you and kit establish such great onscreen chemistry? |
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Some studies have shown that it could alter brain chemistry by changing the release of neurotransmitters and neurohormones. |
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This includes classical immunoassays as well as clinical chemistry and turbidimetric assays. |
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The patent applies to a novel, ultra-thin nitrocellulose surface chemistry that enables the detection of low-abundance proteins. |
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The Nobel prizes are given annually for achievements in chemistry, physics, medicine, peace, literature and economics. |
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Nobel Prizes are awarded for physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature, peace, and economic science. |
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Cartesian products based on this technology are experiencing rapid sales growth in the high throughput screening, functional genomic and combinatorial chemistry markets. |
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Galvanised by the onscreen chemistry between the two leads, Top Five is snappily scripted by Rock, who distributes the best lines and in-jokes among his cast. |
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The chemistry award went to Israel's Dan Shechtman for his discovery of quasicrystals, a mosaic-like chemical structure that researchers previously thought was impossible. |
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The chemistry between Trucks and Clapton convinced him to invite The Derek Trucks Band to open for Clapton's set at his 2007 Crossroads Guitar Festival. |
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Highlight of the chemistry and pharmacology of yaqona, Piper methysticum. |
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If your patients are edematous, you should evaluate the albumin level in the chemistry section of the patient's chart to see if the edema is due to decreased albumin levels. |
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The IOGH system uses a sodium hydroxide catalyst instead of a potassium hydroxide catalyst to control the chemistry of the end products created during the reaction process. |
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His subsequent experimental work focused on chemistry and pneumatics. |
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Asked once by a student whether he was anti-social, the chemistry and physics instructor Fay replied that he was completely asocial, Bradley said. |
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He's hysterical and disturbing as an ubernerdy chemistry professor who woos student Stella Stevens by concocting a potion that transforms him into a suave stud. |
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No is the translingual symbol for the chemistry element nobelium. |
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In 1773, aged fourteen, he attended Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he studied political philosophy, classics, mathematics, trigonometry, chemistry and history. |
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This may be seen as a mismatch between water chemistry and water biology with a tendency for the biological component to be more oligotrophic than the chemistry would suggest. |
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The work contains some of the earliest modern ideas of atoms, molecules, and chemical reaction, and marks the beginning of the history of modern chemistry. |
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Altering the chemistry of food proteins can improve such functional properties as solubility, viscosity, gelation, fat emulsification and foaming ability. |
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The horizontal rotor Express 4 Centrifuge provides a flat line separation for gel tubes in only three minutes, making it the instrument of choice for chemistry labs. |
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He attended Yorkshire College, his father's college, studying chemistry. |
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He was also introduced to the study of chemistry by Humphry Davy. |
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Obviously you can't have a love film without some soppiness but generally both Adaline and Ellis connected through wit, conversation and intelligence, as well as chemistry. |
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Gregory Watt, son of James Watt, visited Penzance for his health's sake, and while lodging at the Davy's house became a friend and gave him instructions in chemistry. |
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Henry delivered a course of lectures on chemistry, at Manchester, in which he showed the mode of producing gas from coal, and the facility and advantage of its use. |
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However, there are some controversies regarding this definition mainly because the large number of chemical substances reported in chemistry literature need to be indexed. |
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Details are provided for monitoring equipment and coating chemistry that were implemented on a machine experiencing severe chatter mark problems for the prior eight years. |
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Hydride transfer reagents, such as NaBH4 and LiAlH4, are widely used in organic chemistry, primarily in the reduction of carbonyl compounds to alcohols. |
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Tight control of ladle metallurgy is associated with producing high grades of steel in which the tolerances in chemistry and consistency are narrow. |
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Beers from Burton were considered of a particularly high quality due to synergy between the malt and hops in use and local water chemistry, especially the presence of gypsum. |
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In chemistry, Salimuzzaman Siddiqui was the first Pakistani scientist to bring the therapeutic constituents of the neem tree to the attention of natural products chemists. |
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In contrast, AVI's third-generation NEUGENE chemistry has been developed over the past 14 years to overcome the pitfalls of the other antisense backbone chemistries. |
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Which key concept in chemistry did Dmitry Mendeleyev help define? |
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