This method causes callose in the pollen grains and tubes to be stained and to fluoresce brightly under short-wave light. |
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The energy flux was measured with a short-wave ultraviolet intensity meter. |
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This is due in part to the fact that VOA is broadcast only on short-wave frequencies. |
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To a dichromatic deuteranope, the short-wave end of the spectrum appears blue. |
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I was sharing a tent with John Hunt and set up a short-wave radio to listen to the Met Office weather report. |
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I was lying in my tent and heard the news on my short-wave radio from the BBC World Service. |
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Clouds, being white, are highly reflective and they reflect the incoming short-wave radiation from the Sun. |
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In devastated areas, short-wave radios are likely to be more common and reliable than Internet connections. |
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Records show that, on opening, it had space for 21 police vehicles, including 14 equipped with short-wave radios. |
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All Church Services from Ballina-Boher parish are broadcast on short-wave radio. |
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Everything was censored and she relied on the BBC, broadcast through her short-wave radio, for real news from the outside world. |
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Jim carried a tiny short-wave radio, but in these high valleys we could hear only Chinese and Russian voices. |
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With telephone connections so difficult from Arecibo, Hulse used the observatory's short-wave radio link to Cornell University. |
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Overseas short-wave transmission wasn't reliable enough to send live commentary back to Australia. |
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From 1936 onwards short-wave radio stations replaced the posts on the Yukon Telegraph line. |
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Eminent mathematicians once claimed to prove logically that short-wave radio was impossible. |
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Crisis managers who need immediate, person-to-person communications are likely to reach for a telephone or a short-wave radio. |
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The short-wave radio was playing a soft sound from the American Music Network. |
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Short-wave radio allowed tactics such as submarine wolf packs, massive bombing raids, and co-ordinated blitzkrieg attacks. |
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Yes, it's a lot of short-wave radio signals, data transmissions, signals ricocheting around in the stratosphere, as well as the sounds of an analog synthesizer. |
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The first was the short-wave transmitter, which could be used to communicate at great distances but was small enough to fit into an aircraft or tank. |
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Those who listened to international radio broadcasts will recall the ebb and flow of the short-wave signal as it made its way from the other side of the planet. |
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I used to listen to a lot of short-wave radio when I was in my teens. |
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