Sometimes these are at cross-purposes because if the segments break apart too soon, penetration will be shallow and dispersion wide. |
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Capturing neutrons causes the boron nuclei to break apart, resulting in the emission of alpha radiation and lithium nuclei. |
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The resulting yield from the salvo caused the Battlecruiser to break apart, a tidal wave of flame running its entire length. |
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The photons can break apart, or ionize, molecules and atoms of the atmosphere into protons and electrons, producing plasma. |
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She was a spectator, a spectator watching her life break apart before her eyes. |
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The basis for the pH scale is when, at any instant in liquid water, some water molecules break apart into hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions. |
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The party, which was deeply split on the issue, could very well break apart. |
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Cassette doors can break off, spring mechanisms inside cartridges can be dislodged, or the entire tape cabinet may break apart. |
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The tiles break apart to reveal red, raw meatlike excrescences that threaten to overwhelm the entire image. |
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The grey, looming clouds began to break apart and the blue sky of winter slowly began to show. |
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Bond strength is the energy needed to break apart two bonded atoms. |
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If you have bulbs in your garden, you can dig them up and break apart the clumps of bulbs, planting the bulblets and cormels independently as you would a bulb. |
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The standoff has threatened to break apart the country, independent for just 13 years and lying between an expanded EU and its centuries-long master, Russia. |
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To make cheese lose its shape and go all goopy, you need those proteins to break apart. |
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When the cell divides, these conjoined chromosomes break apart, but at a different location. |
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Families will break apart and parents will move to new areas to find work with no support networks. |
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For this test, the specimens are clamped between two conical platens and subjected to pressure until they break apart. |
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Instead of high temperatures we maybe able to use enzymes and bacteria to break apart bitumen molecules and remove sulphur. |
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Uses several analytical techniques to break apart complex situations or problems to reach a solution. |
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This crystallization caused the soil particles to break apart and destroyed their cohesion. |
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Track circuits may not show a problem until the rail or joint bars completely break apart and separate. |
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Ice cubes do not break apart after defrost because of thick web between cubes. |
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However this metal tends to break apart and particles can then be inhaled causing lung damage. |
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When the gas is hot enough, the compound molecules break apart, and the atoms recombine with the oxygen to form water, carbon dioxide and other products. |
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For this reason, missilery has accepted aerodynamically unstable vehicles which, in case of loss of thrust, flip over and break apart, destroying themselves in the air. |
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As you cut down summer annuals and biennials, such as foxglove, hollyhock, poppy and sweet william, break apart the seed heads and sprinkle the seeds around. |
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It is helpful to break apart blocks of product when they are partially thawed to accelerate thawing if this can be done without damaging the material. |
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If a CD or DVD is cracked or otherwise physically damaged, it is possible for the disc to break apart or even shatter when the CD and DVD drives are in use. |
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It turned out that the Raven is supposed to crash-land and break apart. |
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The ability to do this is achieved through a process by which digestive enzymes break apart the chemical bonds that once linked multiple glucose molecules together to form starch. |
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Could it be this capacity for goodness and forgiveness that make it possible today for societies that are a prey to profound tensions not to break apart? |
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Brittle stone such as limestone, dolomite or slate would break apart which would lead to exposure of the uncolored interior portion of the stone and possibly to premature mineral granule loss. |
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Plants with a fibrous root system like hardy geranium and Astilbe will break apart into plantlets quite easily. |
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Instruct those present to leave the danger area behind or underneath the machine, since the machine may lurch backwards if the halves of the upper link have been screwed apart by mistake or if they break apart. |
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If heat continues to be applied, the molecules do actually break apart and escape from the attractive force of their neighbours within the liquid, evapoating into the air. |
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Cycloalkane chains are much harder to break apart than petroleum's shoe-stringlike molecules, Andresen says. |
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About 167 million years ago, the great southern continent called Gondwana began to break apart. |
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If they break apart, just patch them together. |
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The molecular ion can subsequently break apart into smaller fragments. |
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If two rigid sections of a glacier move at different speeds and directions, shear forces cause them to break apart, opening a crevasse. |
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It assembled from earlier continental units approximately 335 million years ago, and it began to break apart about 175 million years ago. |
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This event happened in less than 10,000 years and occurred just before Pangaea started to break apart. |
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As Brahms's music rises, the dancers sometimes break apart. |
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But the government could also break apart. |
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When you're talking to your own constituents and the taxpayers of Canada, I think they have to understand the enormous costs we would have to bear if the whole situation would break apart there. |
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Each satellite is equipped with 25 sensors to record in splitsecond detail what happens when the planet's magnetic field lines break apart and reconnect. |
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Additionally, after these separations, it has also been discovered that the separated land masses may have also continued to break apart multiple times. |
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Ordinarily, these elements would sink into the star quickly and disappear, so the atoms are probably raining down on the white dwarf as the planets break apart. |
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The research at the Georgia Institute of Technology indicates that ultraviolet photons emitted by the sun likely cause H2O molecules to either quickly desorb or break apart. |
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In the 1800s and early 1900s, once great and powerful Empires such as Spain, Ottoman Turkey, the Mughal Empire, and the Kingdom of Portugal began to break apart. |
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