The old Roman coin the solidus was considered to be wholly reliable, and a soldier was one who was paid in solidi. |
|
Large, insoluble intermetallic particles that are present or form in the temperature range between liquidus and solidus reduce feeding. |
|
Possible evidence of this was found in the form of a gold solidus in the concrete floor of a town house at Carlisle. |
|
Beyond this, nothing can be said of their direction, except, of course, that they must connect liquidus to solidus. |
|
This latter mark has a number of aliases, being known also as the solidus, oblique or virgule, among other names. |
|
It has been reported, based on as-yet unpublished data, that the acanthodian Diplacanthus solidus is indicative of Eifelian age. |
|
Historical documents show that Chinese emperor Wudi was impressed with the solidus, as well as the silver drachm of Sasanian Persia, the standard currency along the Silk Road. |
|
At temperatures between the solidus and the liquidus, an SORT phase, predominantly composed of octadecanol, coexists with a tetradecanol-enriched liquid phase. |
|
We quantitatively determined the degree of mixing nonideality by fitting the experimental liquidus and solidus curves to a model based on regular solution theory. |
|
The abbreviation for the old penny, d, was derived from the Roman denarius, and the abbreviation for the shilling, s, from the Roman solidus. |
|
The solidus was maintained essentially unaltered in weight, dimensions and purity until the 10th century. |
|
The word soldier is ultimately derived from solidus, referring to the solidi with which soldiers were paid. |
|
Temperatures can also exceed the solidus of a crustal rock in continental crust thickened by compression at a plate boundary. |
|
The solidus symbol is still used for the shilling currency unit in former British East Africa, rather than sh. |
|
The critical strain rate asymptotically approaches zero around solidus, meaning inevitable hot tearing, which is not physically real. |
|
In order to reorganize finances and currency, Constantine minted two new coins: the silver miliarensis and, most importantly, the gold solidus, whose stability was to make it the Byzantine Empire's basic currency. |
|
Over the past 2,000 years, the leading international currency has changed many times, from the Roman denarius via the Byzantine solidus to the Dutch guilder and then to sterling. |
|
The Byzantine solidus also inspired the originally slightly less pure Arabian dinar. |
|
Peridotite at depth in the Earth's mantle may be hotter than its solidus temperature at some shallower level. |
|
A new gold coin, the solidus, was introduced to combat inflation. |
|
|
Water lowers the solidus temperature of rocks at a given pressure. |
|
A new gold coin was introduced to combat inflation known as the solidus. |
|
In all cases, melting of solid rock requires high temperature, and also water or other volatiles which act as a catalyst by lowering the solidus temperature of the rock. |
|
The solidus was introduced by Diocletian in AD 301 as a replacement of the aureus, composed of relatively solid gold and minted 60 to the Roman pound. |
|
By this time, the solidus was worth 275,000 increasingly debased denarii. |
|
In the French language, which evolved directly from common or vulgar Latin over the centuries, solidus changed to soldus, then solt, then sol and finally sou. |
|
Other parts of the cooling curve that respond to inoculation are the start of eutectic freezing, maximum recalescence rate and the first derivative at solidus. |
|
Considering the low curvature of the liquidus and solidus, very narrow freezing ranges are expected for small deviations from the Cu-Mn congruent point. |
|
Despite Diocletian's introduction of the gold solidus and monetary reforms, the credit market of the Empire never recovered its former robustness. |
|