The phrase
"unit area" refers to a specific amount of space or surface that is used as a measurement. It is a standardized area that is used for comparison or calculation purposes.
Full definition
Nevertheless, the power production
per unit area of land is not particularly impressive.
We see great cultural diversity and large numbers of cultures per
unit area in regions of the world in which the environment is really rich.
You also get a lot more perimeter per
unit area so more people get access to windows.
Check products in
sandwich unit area and restock items to ensure a sufficient supply through the entire shift.
Additional escalation of the mining impact occurs as conventional oil mining is supplanted by tar sands development, with mining and land disturbance from the latter producing land use - related greenhouse gas emissions as much as 23 times greater than conventional oil production per unit area [152], but with substantial variability and uncertainty [152]--[153].
The similar H2O fluxes per
unit area found in the four giant planets and Titan (Feuchtgruber et al. 1997; Coustenis et al. 1998; Moses et al. 2000), combined with the rather constant dust flux (∼ 3 × 10 − 18 g cm − 2 s − 1) measured in interplanetary space beyond 5 AU (Landgraf et al. 2002), have been regarded as evidence that micrometeoroids — interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) or interstellar — are the dominant source (Moses et al. 2000).
Its colour and spectrum correspond roughly to spectral type A, with a surface temperature of about 25,000 K. Hence, the energy emission per
unit area from the surface must be much greater than that of the Sun.
Nevertheless, it is important to note that measuring PCSA allows a better estimate of muscle fiber specific tension in vivo than ACSA, as changes in pennation angle obscure the underlying force per
unit area within the muscle (Morse et al. 2008).
«Our
service unit area, which also provides our Internet access, uses the Bess Internet Filtering Service by Secure Computing.
There could also be some such complexity in the radiative flux per
unit area absent CO2, which would affect the relationship between changes in CO2 and radiative forcing; for sufficient self - similarity of finer scale texture, the effect might be treated the same way as the texture of the CO2 spectrum -LRB-?).
Absent emission, absorption, reflection, scattering, and refraction outside of a sphere with radius 1, and assuming steady state, the flux coming out of such a sphere is the same as the flux coming out of any closed surface enveloping that sphere; the area of a sphere is proportional the square of the radius, so the average flux per
unit area going through successively larger spheres follows an inverse square law.
The heat capacity of an atmospheric column of
unit area cross section extending from the ocean surface to the...
Organic agriculture has demonstrable benefits to the environment on a per
unit area basis, however, those benefits are often negated or reversed on a per unit production basis because organic systems tend to yield less per area [5].
Checks products in
sandwich unit area and restocks items to ensure a sufficient supply throughout the shift.
Additional escalation of the mining impact occurs as conventional oil mining is supplanted by tar sands development, with mining and land disturbance from the latter producing land use - related greenhouse gas emissions as much as 23 times greater than conventional oil production per unit area [152], but with substantial variability and uncertainty [152]--[153].
Flux per
unit area in direction Q2 = integral over solid angle of [intensity in direction Q1 * cos (θ)-RSB-, where θ is the angle between Q1 and Q2.
Yield is the mass of grain harvest
per unit area harvested — in other words, the productivity of the crops on an area basis.
Traditional rustic shade has a larger carbon footprint than commercial polyculture because yields are lower per
unit area, and all the contributing factors are allocated to less product.
In fact, many multiple cropping systems, such as those developed by smallholders and subsistence farmers, even show higher yields in terms of total harvest per
unit area.
A Giant Galactic Ghost Intrigued by faint blurs on old photographic plates of the Virgo galaxy cluster, a nearby region teeming with galaxies, Oregon's Bothun and colleagues wondered if the apparitions might be smallish galaxies with «low surface brightness» — astronomer - speak for emitting less light per
unit area than typical galaxies.
Many scientists care more about intensity — the power per
unit area — than the total number of petawatts.
«Comparing results with other global estuaries, the discharge per
unit area of the Sydney Harbour provides a predictor of emissions for estuaries from a similar geomorphic class,» he said.
The trend has put smiles on the faces of conservationists, who say that large reserves are the fastest way to bulk up protected areas, and are cheaper to manage per
unit area than smaller ones to boot.
One of the major problems with biofuels that algae could solve is space, since algae can yield as much as 100 times more fuel per
unit area than other so - called «second generation» biofuel crops (e.g. non-food crops or non-food waste parts of food crops).
Though it is not a perfect food, maize could feed more people per
unit area than anything else that was available, and populations increased as much as fifteen-fold.
This will require system innovations — to further reduce the use of resources such as water and minerals, to increase production per
unit area, and to obtain the high - quality, healthy products that consumers want.
In contrast, the ostrich is the 10th most distinct species, but as it has a large range only 0.05 million years would be preserved per
unit area.
Now, Thomas Hales of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, has shown that a hexagonal honeycomb has walls with the shortest total length, per
unit area, of any design that divides a plane into equal - sized cells.