Sentences with phrase «for homogenisation»

Italian GEA subsidiary Niro Soavi supplied equipment for homogenisation.

Not exact matches

Digital utopias disagree with those who worry about scenarios of worldwide cultural homogenisation, they see the emergence of new and creative lifestyles, vastly extended opportunities for different cultures to meet and understand each other, and the creation of new virtual communities that easily cross all the traditional borderlines of age, gender, race, and religion.
The GEA scope of supply is recognised worldwide through its well established and globally known brands for batch and continuous granulation, drying, pelletizing and coating; for contained materials handling; for tablet compression; for pharmaceutical freeze drying and automated vial handling systems; for fermentation and liquid formulation; for separation, homogenisation and cell disruption.
Sony's vision of the future for console gaming is one I'm very much excited about, and I'd hate for these delays to compromise that by driving customers to the competition, with it's rather anaemic homogenisation of all entertainment, not just games, into a means to maximise consumer exploitation becoming the new standard for most next gen.
In ways I am glad that the save slots helped broaden the appeal for the sequel, it means that there might be a third game... But unless they do curtail this homogenisation they are going to start to introduce features that I can not work around (in case west you do not have to escort or protect survivors, they are merely quest givers with a time limit, dull, dull, dull).
Directly referencing the latest in men's hair removal procedures, the work is a reflection on the physical and spiritual homogenisation of today's image - conscious society; in our search for a standardised perfection, the body has become yet another commodity.
The errors due to the homogenisation procedures are unfortunately large (as also attested to by McCarthy et al (2008)-RRB- and could (according to L&F) be responsible for all of the difference from the moist adiabat (the expected amplification with height).
Willett, K. M. et al., submitted, Concepts for benchmarking of homogenisation algorithm performance on the global scale.
Am I correct in thinking that my attention should be drawn to the lower graphs, which (I think) might show that the homogenisation algorithms flatten the output curve except for the remaining jump at Y2K?
SMHI clarified their position on 3/4/10 by writing, «It has never been our intention to withhold any data but we feel that it is paramount that data that has undergone, for instance, homogenisation by anyone other than SMHI is not presented as SMHI data.»
When / if CRU release the data for all countries, will it be pre or post homogenisation?
«[NASA is] supposed to make a «homogenisation adjustment,» to allow for [urban heat island (UHI)-RSB- bias,» Homewood wrote.
Each organisation in turn then subject sthe «raw» or «unadjusted» data to a series of «adjustments» /» homogenisations» supposed to allow for station movements, instrument / equipment changes and in some cases Urban Heat Island (UHI) correction.
Homogenisation may legitimately be used in climate science to correct for anomalies in data when stations are relocated from one site to another.
Peer - reviewed literature supports my contention that early twentieth century cooling was real and significant and that homogenisation creates an artificial warming trend in the official temperature record for Australia.
In addition to needing reasonable coverage of observations for gridding the data, the sparseness of the data also makes homogenisation a difficult task.
The reasons for the differences between the national values from these datasets, both those with and without homogenisation, over the period 1910 to 1940 are complex.
Some other urbanisation signals may also manifest themselves as step changes related to specific changes in a site environment (e.g. the 1996 construction of a new building across the street from the Melbourne site) and are detected and adjusted for as part of the normal ACORN - SAT homogenisation process.
Yet inland stations are included in the homogenisation process for Darwin.
-LSB-...] for example the following rebuttal regarding the case for over zealous record homogenisation: Speaking Truth to Power, and Correcting Brian Cox sorry, but due to a fault on my PC, many graphics are not downloading, & clicking on links -LSB-...]
I was gobsmacked (something I wickedly have in mind for Brian Cox, should I ever come within striking distance)-- I had discovered one of the worst aspects of «homogenisation».
Worse, once homogenisation is done for current data, past data has to be adjusted also, to avoid introducing steps into the record.
Critique 1) I have no idea about any cleansing, homogenisation or aggregation performed on this data prior to its presentation by Rutgers 2) Snow extent is only 1 part of the issue, thickness and mass would need to be considered for a full picture 3) I haven't taken care to provide exactly similar sample sizes, however the F and t methods do not require it 4) I haven't taken care to ensure that the same number of winter periods are present in each sample batch; this would increase the risk of a false positive and would have required further investigation if a weak indication of significance had been detected.
The point I am making has nothing to do with resiting stations, I am addressing the idea that one can expect stations sited within a few miles to produce similar readings, and that homogenisation between such stations could be a valid technique for improving data quality.
Homogenisation across Europe of the assessment of the legal requirements of novelty, inventive step and industrial applicability for patents is a big merit of the EPO.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z