We point to the mechanisms resulting in different types of bifurcations and show how they are influenced by noise. |
|
They give way to secondary branches and multiple bifurcations that reflect the path of dielectric breakdown within the soil-gravel horizon. |
|
At the park itself my run of bifurcations comes to an end as there are only three gates from which to choose. |
|
Since the gene genealogy is rooted, all the mutations and bifurcations are also time ordered from top to bottom. |
|
A writhing mass of white snow-snakes hissed, crawling from hidden cracks and crevasses in the bifurcations of the cave-rocks. |
|
Some bifurcations appear to join with those below to form a thin, filamentous network. |
|
Damage is greatest in arterial bifurcations, deviations, and constrictions where turbulence is intense. |
|
Note that this is not the complete bifurcation diagram, because bifurcations involving unstable or negative equilibria are not included. |
|
First alveolar duct bifurcations have been shown to be a primary site of deposition for particulate matter and gaseous pollutants. |
|
Enlarged avicularia on zooids at row bifurcations, on branch margins, and adjacent to ovicells are generally similar to those in M. auriculatum. |
|
Long, heavily calcified stenoses in tortuous vessels or at bifurcations and chronic total occlusions are less suitable. |
|
For this calculation, the polytomies in the tree had to be resolved into bifurcations by introducing minute branch lengths. |
|
They cover discrete and continuous time equations, linear models and linearization, qualitative analysis and phase space, bifurcations, and delay equations. |
|
The methods include the study of stable and unstable manifolds, bifurcations, index and degree, and construction of orbits as minima and minimaxes of action functionals. |
|
Because of the moderate preservation of the specimens, it is unclear whether all branching was originally via trifurcations or whether some bifurcations occurred. |
|
Reality always takes the upper hand on managerial desires and is able to introduce incredible bifurcations in a market or industry. |
|
They consist of small bifurcations some centimeters in size. |
|
Under constant population size, the most ancient coalescence times tend to be long relative to branches of the tree associated with more recent bifurcations. |
|
The Northern line, with its bifurcations and branches, is similar. |
|
To simplify the diagram, some nonsignificant bifurcations were removed. |
|
|
The overall morphology of the colony was not observed, but it is presumed to have been bushy based on the size and shape of the branches and branch bifurcations. |
|
It is the most common endobronchial lesion associated with HIV and has a characteristic red or purple macular or papular appearance often located at airway bifurcations. |
|
Experts use the nomenclature of the highway to describe them: there are spurs, bifurcations, and crossovers. |
|
Ecosystems are fundamentally resilient but tend to exhibit random or chaotic bifurcations over time. |
|
Topics include analytic solutions of linear equations, equilibria, linearization, stability, phase portraits, bifurcations, simulations, and modeling methodology. |
|
This would mitigate some of the anatomic variations seen in patients with high bifurcations or a low inferior hypogastric artery. |
|
The elevated gantries run through the bifurcations to connect with the external stairs. |
|
In my practice, it is now the default two-stent strategy for bifurcations. |
|
Bifurcations have been difficult to treat with conventional stents since those stents are designed to support a single cylinder, not a cylinder with an offshoot in the middle. |
|