Sentences with phrase «micrometers from»

The researchers also observed communication over many micrometers from one gold particle to another, but not between gold and palladium particles.
Like the network's first original series, «Cedar Cove,» Good Witch doesn't stray a micrometer from the Hallmark brand.

Not exact matches

The industrial country has high levels of PM2.5 (particulate matter at 2.5 micrometers), pollution caused by decades of heavy manufacturing and unfettered vehicle exhaust — particularly from motorbikes.
Coarse particulate matter (PM 10 - 2.5) measures from 2.5 to 10 micrometers.
Coarse particulate matter (PM10 - 2.5) measures from 2.5 to 10 micrometers; fine particulate pollution (PM2.5) measure 2.5 micrometers or smaller.
Molecules ranging in length (L) from 22 to 84 micrometers were held stationary against the flow by the optical trapping of a latex microsphere attached to one end.
It then combines with pollutants from combustion — mainly nitrogen oxides and sulfates from vehicles, power plants and industrial processes — to create tiny solid particles, or aerosols, no more than 2.5 micrometers across, about 1/30 the width of a human hair.
To do it, the team suspended micrometer - sized bits of graphene to avoid interference from the underlying substrate.
The nanorods range in size from a few hundred nanometers to a few micrometers in length, and a few tens of nanometers in diameter.
Nanowires grew from the MEMS to lengths of 5 to 10 micrometers all anchored at one end to the MEMS bridges, the team reports in the 30 June issue of Applied Physics Letters.
The infrared radiation from these regions revealed copious amounts of micrometer - sized crystalline grains.
That's the lesson one researcher is taking away from a microscopic analysis of the fairy wasp (Megaphragma mymaripenne), which at a mere 200 micrometers in length is one of the world's smallest animals (shown compared to a paramecium and amoeba above).
From this light signature they deduced that the satellites are made of fine - grained dust (smaller than a micrometer [3]-RRB-.
Messenger took measurements of reflected light from Mercury's surface at wavelengths shorter than 1 micrometer, which revealed, among other things, that Mercury contains a surprising amount of sulfur and potassium (SN: 7/16/11, p. 12).
Those wavelengths come only from the top few micrometers of Mercury.
Then, mechanical arms at either end rift it apart at rates ranging from 1 to 100 micrometers per second.
By measuring on many locations with micrometer spacing between the measurement points, we can construct a two - dimensional image of the surface's repellency, called a wetting map,» explains Professor Quan Zhou from Aalto University School of Electrical Engineering.
The grains, collected from loess, riverbeds, and sand dunes, ranged in size from 5 to 16 micrometers.
At Cornell University, we developed and tested a new detector for electron microscopes that enables quantitative measurements of electric and magnetic fields from micrometers down to atomic resolution.
Though single crystals were once thought to be too fragile for flexible applications, the UMass Amherst team found that crystals ranging in thickness from about 150 nanometers to 1 micrometer were thin enough to be wrinkled and applied to any elastomer substrate.
The embassy has been using Twitter to publish average hourly readings of particulate matter that's less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter (PM2.5): fine particles from combustion and industrial emissions that penetrate deeply into the lungs and are linked to heart disease and other health problems.
In the prototype, the researchers coat the board with a much denser array of tiny spheres, only a micrometer high, made from a hydrophobic (water - repellent) material.
In their experiments, the group fired a powerful laser pulse at a micrometer - sized plastic sphere, blasting a bunch of protons from the target and accelerating them to velocities approaching the speed of light.
To concentrate the energy of laser light to an even finer area, the team patterned aluminum dots of various sizes, from tens of micrometers down to 30 nanometers, across the surface of silicon, silicon germanium alloy, gallium arsenide, gallium nitride, and sapphire.
In this study, the researchers, from Arizona State University, used a process known as chemical vapour deposition to create a 41 micrometer - long nanosheet made from Cadmium Sulphide and Cadmium Selenide powders, using silicon as a substrate.
In their study, scientists around Prof. Olivier Pertz from the Department of Biomedicine at the University of Basel gained novel insights into the regulation of directional cell migration: Using a special procedure, 20 micrometer wide lines were fabricated on glass thereby mimicking the connective tissue environment — creating a highway for cells.
The device separated 9.9 - micrometer particles from 7.3 - micrometer particles so efficiently that 97 percent of the 7.3 - micrometer particles went to the correct location.
Those nanogrooves lie within larger troughs that measure about 1.5 micrometers deep and 3 micrometers wide, a good size to snag fog droplets from the air.
They formed silk scaffolds of different thicknesses (ranging from 2 to 5 micrometers) and stiffness combined with growth factors, to test the success of megakaryocyte adhesion and the formation of proplatelets — the parts of the megakaryocytes that fragment into platelets.
We report new EBL anisotropy measurements from a specialized sounding rocket experiment at 1.1 and 1.6 micrometers.
The company's first chips, he says, were made in a semiconductor fabrication facility from 1995, in which the smallest features that could be inscribed on chips were 0.35 micrometers across.
These water droplets, suspended in clouds, typically range from 20 to 50 micrometers — bigger than those in the simulations.
Ranging in length from 35 micrometers to 95 micrometers, they are the smallest protozoa in the rumen.
The realized mirror converts light from a wavelength of 8 micrometers to 4 micrometers; however, the structures can be tailored to work at other wavelengths, from near - infrared to mid-infrared to terahertz.
Dated to 3.43 billion years ago in sandstone from the Strelley Pool Formation in Western Australia, the microstructures were found with micrometer - sized pyrite crystals (fool's gold, an iron - sulfur mineral), as would be expected as the metabolic by - products of sulfur - based life that employ «sulphate - reduction and sulphur - disproportionation pathways.»
Assuming that the infrared emissions are from from silicate grains at 0.25 micrometers, however, the disk would be located at an outer orbit of 120 ± 20 to 220 ± 10 AUs (Vogt et al, 2009).
How is the pericentriolar matrix (PCM), an amorphous, micrometer - scale structure, assembled from thousands of nanometer - scale proteins in the cytoplasm?
Infrared excess from dust particles at 70 micrometers in size was detected at around 5 AUs out from Zeta Doradus (Trilling et al, 2008; and Bryden et al, 2006, pp. 36 and 41 for HD 33262).
[citation needed] Additionally, in American English the use of «micron» helps differentiate the unit from the micrometer, a measuring device, because the unit's name in mainstream American spelling is a homograph of the device's name.
The product of decades of trial and error by Willett and his collaborators, it was made from a flake of gallium arsenide so pure, he said, that electrons inside could sense one another's presence across vast micrometers of distance.
In pioneering novel nano - systems, new instruments and methodologies are indispensable to cover a wide range of characterizations, from measurements of physical properties of individual nanomaterials to the evaluation of functionalities of nano - systems constructed at the micrometer and larger sizes through nanoarchitectonics.
Using a 2 - mm micropunch (Harris Uni-core; EMS, Hatfield, Pennsylvania), tissue was collected from 2 major components of the medullary 5 - HT system, the raphé obscurus and paragigantocellularis lateralis (PGCL), according to the atlas of Paxinos and Huang, 19 and standardized protein samples were obtained for Western blot analysis in each SIDS case and control.20 Twenty - micrometer tissue sections were collected from the remaining blocks in a standardized manner for tissue receptor autoradiography.
A grid - format picture capture system allowed the monitoring of living hESC cultures ranging in size from a few hundred micrometers to cell colonies of several millimetres at a defined picture capture cycle rate.
Another major reason is technical: virions are tiny (with diameters ranging from 20 nanometers to over one micrometer), and so scientists need transmission electron microscopes to see their unique and varied shapes.
When it has all its receiver bands enabled, ALMA will capture radiation from space in longer wavelengths, from a few hundred micrometers to approximately 1 millimeter (close to one thousand times longer than visible light waves).
Their micrometer - scale, nonmagnetic devices route microwave photons and can shield qubits from harmful noise.
Fossils vary in size from one micrometer bacteria to dinosaurs and trees, many meters long and weighing many tons.
But David Begun of the University of Toronto, and one of the world's leading palaeoanthropologists, told The Independent neither tooth had a resemblance Fossils vary in size from one micrometer bacteria to dinosaurs and trees, many meters long and weighing many tons.
The cells of an onion skin are generally rectangular in shape and range in size from to millimeters in length (250 - 400 micrometers).
I will also need to use a micrometer to remeasure the actual thickness of each lifter because it may have varied over time from what it says it is on it.
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