The haze is caused by high concentrations of small particles known as aerosols that are usually less than a few micrometers in diameter. |
|
Saturn's rings are composed primarily of water ice particles, and range in size from micrometers to meters. |
|
The dispersion is called a suspension if the particle is greater than 0.5 micrometers. |
|
In fact, it can exhibit ordered structures with length scales ranging from micrometers to nanometers. |
|
A pixel density of 2,500 pixels per square millimeter corresponds to a pixel size of only 20 micrometers. |
|
That distance varies from a few hundred nanometers to a few micrometers, depending on atom velocity. |
|
Fully grown individuals range in size from about 100 micrometers to almost 20 centimeters long. |
|
The company also relies on laser micrometers to accurately measure tube diameters to five decimal places. |
|
Airborne particles can be organic or inorganic in nature and can range in size from 0.001 micrometers to several hundred micrometers. |
|
It looks similar to the CD-ROM on the left, but the scale is in nanometers instead of micrometers. |
|
The fluorescent tagging devices are short glass ribbons just 100 micrometers long and 20 microm wide. |
|
However, laser micrometers used motors and motors had some disadvantages such as limited speed and short lifetimes. |
|
It can be integrated with minimum effort directly in probes or in the tips of gauge micrometers. |
|
The fibril clumps have a diameter of between 20 and 200 nanometers, and lengths of a few micrometers. |
|
Fibril agglomerations have diameters between 20-200 nm, and lengths of several micrometers. |
|
Each brain was serially sectioned in the coronal plane at a thickness of 8 micrometers, mounted on a gelatin-coated glass slide, then stained with hematoxylin-eosin. |
|
Tailbud embryos also varied in size, with the scorpion fish measuring only 700 micrometers and the mudpuppy measuring 9.25 millimeters. |
|
These dark necklaces are situated a few micrometers of the sarcolemma and have been observed in the two types of fibres. |
|
There are different varieties of long infrared waves measuring from 3 to 1000 micrometers. |
|
Setae range in length from a few micrometers to several millimeters. |
|
|
Next, the researchers measured profiles of the bullets' surface ridges and grooves to accuracies of 20 nanometers in depth and a few micrometers across the surface. |
|
On top of the lead, they spread a grid of tiny magnetic dots, each measuring 800 nanometers across and separated from its neighbors by 1.5 micrometers. |
|
A careful adjustment of the experimental exchange times should allow the detection of confined motions for typical distance scales between nanometers and micrometers. |
|
The connective tissues were measured in their thickest part under light microscopy with ocular micrometry and the results were recorded as micrometers. |
|
Ranging from mere nanometers to micrometers across, they exist in numerous mineralogical flavors. |
|
Carbon nanotubes, graphite cylinders with diameters from 1 to 50 nanometers and lengths of a few micrometers, are ideally suited to this task. |
|
The machine is designed to permit the roller micrometers to be quickly set and calibrated. |
|
The face of the certification impactor shall be made of aluminium, with an outer surface finish of better than 2.0 micrometers. |
|
Yet natural gas combustion does not emit much if any particulate matter greater than 2.5 micrometers. |
|
A termite bait composition comprising a powdered microcrystalline cellulose attractant having a particle size in the range of 1 to 100 micrometers and a termite killing agent. |
|
A porous orbital implant structure for implantation into the orbital cavity of a mammal comprising pores having a mean size of less than 200 micrometers wherein said structure comprises hydroxyapatite. |
|
This trophont is considered parasitic, contains thousands of cells, and can be several hundred micrometers in length. |
|
Back in the laboratory, Empa researchers studied all the particles with diameters between 0.5 and 10 micrometers using an environmental scanning electron microscope. |
|
The alpha particle range from radium Ra 223 dichloride is less than 100 micrometers which may limit the damage to the surrounding normal tissue. |
|
In these lesser water boatmen the area used for stridulation is only about 50 micrometers across, roughly the width of a human hair. |
|
In January, the Chinese capital saw levels of PM2.5 – particles below 2.5 micrometers in diameter – hit concentrations equivalent to those during the notorious peasouper fogs of 1950s London. |
|
This guarantees one-hundred percent control of diameters and thicknesses thanks to the graduated clearance of a high-precision pair of roller micrometers. |
|
By employing purely mechanical methods, it was possible to separate cellulose fibrils from the pulp with diameters in the range from 20 to 200 nm and very suitable lengths of several micrometers. |
|
To build its laser, the UCLA team applied microfabrication techniques to a silicon chip to create a wire 2 centimeters long and only micrometers across. |
|
Array offers Continuous Variable Spot Size from 50 to 1000 micrometers, allowing the doctor to customize treatment for the disease state and tissue response. |
|
|
Because water droplets are more numerous than the ice crystals the crystals are able to grow to hundreds of micrometers in size at the expense of the water droplets. |
|