Sentences with phrase «of oxygen bubbles»

02 Bubbles: A jet of oxygen bubbles can feel absolutely amazing.

Not exact matches

The tech bubble of 1998 - 2000 sucked all the oxygen out of the stock market and left no capital for any securities other than tech and telecom companies.
With devastation coming to Puerto Rico from natural disasters, an ongoing spat with North Korea looming, Republican health - care legislation in Congress, and more bubbling around Washington, the president appeared unfocused since he was giving plenty of oxygen to sports - related topics.
She can hear the bubbling of her oxygen, the beep of alarms, the sound of nurses and doctors talking.
A low - voltage current applied to the electrodes drives a catalytic reaction that separates molecules of H2O, releasing bubbles of hydrogen on one electrode and oxygen on the other.
When he shines light on the beaker containing these rods, after a few minutes little bubbles of oxygen come to the surface.
Many of us are familiar with electrolytic splitting of water from their school days: if you hold two electrodes into an aqueous electrolyte and apply a sufficient voltage, gas bubbles of hydrogen and oxygen are formed.
Matula says this sudden illumination happens because during the first bout of sonoluminescence, temperatures in the bubble, which can be as high as several hundred thousand degrees — hotter than the sun's surface — do something to nitrogen and oxygen to make them form compounds such as nitrous oxide that dissolve in the surrounding water.
«Without a membrane, the photoanode and photocathode are close enough to each other to conduct electricity, and if you also have bubbles of highly reactive hydrogen and oxygen gases being produced in the same place at the same time, that is a recipe for disaster,» Lewis says.
«Without a membrane, the photoanode and photocathode are close enough to each other to conduct electricity, and if you also have bubbles of highly reactive hydrogen and oxygen gases being produced in the same place at the same time, that is a recipe for disaster,» Lewis says regarding his findings published in PNAS.
A multi-disciplinary team led by Professor Eleanor Stride won Pioneer Award funding in 2016 to develop a drink containing tiny bubbles of oxygen, which could help to get oxygen back into tumours and boost the effectiveness of cancer treatments.
I had been interviewed for a BBC documentary on my work to use microbubbles to improve cancer treatment, and that's when I got a call from my collaborator Ray Averre of Avrox Technologies to ask if it would be possible to make a sports drink using tiny bubbles of oxygen.
When exposed to oxygen, they bubble up, purging pores of impurities, gently exfoliating skin, and helping active ingredients to penetrate more deeply — with the added benefit of leaving your face feeling totally tingly.
Using language that evoked some of his fiercest critics, Mr. Duncan wrote in a blog post, «I believe testing issues today are sucking the oxygen out of the room in a lot of schools,» and he added that teachers needed time to adapt to new standards and tests that emphasize more than simply filling in bubbled answers to multiple - choice questions.
The physiologic effects of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy («HBOT») include improved oxygenation, intravascular and tissue gas bubble reduction, vasoconstriction, increased antimicrobial activity, modulation of inflammation, improved immune function, and angiogenesis.
The charged water then passes through an ion exchange membrane, creating an oxygen - rich mixture of positive and negative nano - bubbles.
Turtle grass: Thalassia testudinum: BEACHCOMBERS TIP: While snorkeling on calm days over the Thalassia, 4 to 5» deep, if one looks carefully one can see streams of tiny bubbles of oxygen coming from the photosynthetic reactions of the Thalassia.
Careful placement of turrets can easily offset almost any invasion, the game provides more than enough air bubbles throughout levels where oxygen hardly becomes a problem, and wild life can usually be cheesed with careful abuse of the environment.
Has the majority of journeyman climate scientists, looking for a new angle for contributing some insight into some aspect of climate forecasting, with the aid of pollen counts, trapped oxygen bubbles, or cross sections of sedimentary rocks on the bottom of some sea — has the majority even read Thomas Kuhn?
For example, ice cores taken in various locations around the world (Greenland and Antarctica, for example) are excellent proxies; gas bubbles containing CO2 trapped in ancient ice can be measured, and the age can be determined very accurately (by counting the seasonal ice layers, or measuring the isotope levels of oxygen).
The paper, «Reconstruction of past atmospheric CO2 concentrations by ice core analysis», acknowledges that, due to impurities, liquid water can exist as low as -50 deg C. Diffusion of CO2 into this water, due to its far higher solubility than nitrogen and oxygen, will partially deplete the CO2 from trapped air bubbles.
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