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solution

A Wisdom Archive on solution

solution

A selection of articles related to solution

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Solution
solution, Solution, Colligative properties, Colloid, Molar solution, Percentage solution, Solubility equilibrium, Solubility, Suspension (chemistry)

ARTICLES RELATED TO solution

solution: Oceanography Dictionary - solution

 

Definition and meaning of solution:

 

solution - a liquid mixture in which the minor component, the solute, is uniformly distributed within the major component, the solvent

(Source: US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) )

 

Also see these pages: Oceanography, Oceanography Sitemap, Coral Reef, Environment, Sustainability, Climate Change,

 

solution: : Oceanography Sitemap I - S

This is a sitemap for Oceanography - S . Click on a link and you will find multiple definitions and articles related to the word. The sitemap(s) covers over 5.184 different Oceanography terms.

 

s phase, saba bank, sabellid worm, saccate, safety stop, sagittal, sagittiform, saharan dust, salinity, salt, salt marsh, sampling, sampling bias, sampling error, sampling unit, sampling universe, sand, sand flat, sandflat, sanguivore, saprophyte, saprotroph, sargasso sea, sargassum, satellite, satellite chromosome, satellite colony, satellite imagery, satellite mapping, saturation, saturation diving, saxitoxin, sba system, scaffold, scale, scale-like corallites, scanning hydrographic operational airborne lidar survey, scatter diagram, scavenger, schizocoelous, school, schreckreaktion, schreckstoff, science, scientific law, scientific name, sciophilous, scleractinia, sclerite, sclerocyte, sclerodermite, scleroseptum, sclerospongiae, scolex, scorpionfish, scotoscope, scuba, scute, scutiform, sea, sea cow, sea cucumber, sea pansy, sea pen, sea snake, sea star, sea state, sea surface temperature, sea time, sea urchin, seabat, seagrass, seagrass bed., seakeys, seamount, seascape, seawall, seaward slope, seawifs, secchi depth, second law of thermodynamics, second stage regulator, secondary male or female, secondary polyp, secondary production, secretion, secretory product, sedentary, sedimentary rock, sediments, seep, seepage, segmentation, seine, sekisei lagoon, selective pressure, self-contained underwater breathing apparatus, self-fertilization, semelparity, seminal receptacle, semipermeable membrane, semispecies, senescence, senior homonym, senior synonym, sens. lat., sensor, sensory receptor, septate shell, septum, sequence, sequencing, sequential hermaphrodite, sere, serehd, serial homology, serial spawning, series, serosa, serous membrane, serpulid worm, serrate, server, sesquiterpene isocyanides, sessile, seston, set, seta, setiform, setose, sewage, sex chromosome, sex inversion, sex ratio, sex-linked gene, sexual dichromatism, sexual dimorphism, shearwater, shelf break, shelf escarpment, shelf reef, shelf-edge reef, shellfish, shoal, shoals, shore bird, shore reef, shore species, shoreline, short interfering rna, short tandem repeats, shower, sibling species, sic, side scan sonar, sieve plate, sigma, sigmoid growth, sign stimulus, signal transduction pathway, signal-to-noise ratio, signature sound, significance level, sikes act, siliceous, sill, sill reef, silt curtain, simple, simultaneous hermaphrodite, sine, single nucleotide polymorphism, single-stranded, single-stranded dna, sinistral, sink, sink habitat, sink population, sink population or species, sinkhole, sinus, siphon, siphonoglyph, siphonophore, siphonozooid, siphosome, siphuncle, sipuncula, sirna, sister group, sister taxa, skeletal density, skeleton, skerry, skewness, slug, slurp gun, smooth, snapper, sneaky male, snorkel, snout, snp, social behavior, social rank, sociobiology, socmon guidelines, soft coral, soft dorsal, sol, solar energy, solar radiation, solar year, soleiform, solitary coral, solstice, solute, solution, solvent, solvolysis, somatic mutation, somite, sonar, sonic muscle, soniferous, sonograph, sorus, sound, source dna, source habitat, source population, source species, southern cross, southern oscillation, sovereign, sp(p, spat, spathiform, spatial data, spatial index, spatulate, spawn, spawning, specialist, specialist species, speciation, species, species aggregate, species at risk, species diversity, species group, species of special concern, species recovery plan, species richness, specific action potential, specific name, speciose, spectrometer, spectrophotometer, spectroradiometer, spermary, spermatangium, spermatium, spermatogenesis, spermatophore, spermatozoan, spicule, spinate, spine, spiniform, spiny lobster, spiny lobsters in a seagrass bed., spiracle, spiral cleavage, spirocyst, spirotele, spit, splicing, split spawning, splitter, sponge, spongin, spongocoel, spongocyte, spontaneous process, sporangium, spore, sporophyll, sporosac, spot, spur and groove, spyhopping, sql, squall, squall line, squamous epithelium, squeeze, squirrelfish, sst, stability, stable isotope, stakeholder, stalked eye, standard deviation, standard error of the mean, standing stock, starboard, start codon, stasipatric speciation, statistic, statistical analysis, statistical bias, statistics, statocyst, statolith, status and trends analysis, stellate, stem cell, stenohaline, stenokous, stenoky, stenotele, stenothermal, stenotopic, stereoblastula, stereocilium, stereogastrula, stereotypical behavior, stern, sternite, stetson reef, stewardship, stipe, stipitate, stochastic, stolon, stoloniferous, stoma, stomadaeum, stone canal, stonefish, stony coral, stop codon, storm surge, str, strain, strategic plan, stratigraphy, stream bed, stressor, striated, stridulation, stripe, strobila, stromatolite, stromatoporoid, structural complexity, structural gene, structured query language, stygobite, stylet, styliform, subadult, subclass, subduction, subfamily, subgenus, subgular, subkingdom, submarine groove, submerged bank, submerged cultural resource, submersible, suborbicular, suborbital, suborder, subordinate, subordinate taxon, subphylum, subplocoid form, subpopulation, subradular organ, subset, subsidence, subspecies, subspecific name, substrate, subterminal, subtidal, subumbrella, subunit, sucker, sucking disk, sula reef, sulu-sulawesi seascape, summit, sundarbans, superclass, superfamily, superficial cleavage, supergene, superior, supermale, supernatant, supernumerary, superorder, suppressor gene, supraesophageal gangia, supraesophageal ganglion, supraorbital, suprapsammon, supratidal, surf, surface feeder, surface interval, surface water, surge channel, surgeonfish, surrogate species, survey, suspension feeder, suspension-feeding sponge among corals., sustainability science, sustainable development, sustainable yield, suture, swamp, swath, sweeper, sweeper polyp, sweeper tentacle, swell, swimmeret, syconoid, symbiodinium microadriaticum, symbiont, symbiosis, sympatric species, symplesiomorphy, sympodial growth, synapomorphy, synapse, synapticulum, synbiotic, synchronous, synchronous breeding, synchrony, syncytium, synecology, synergism, syngameon, syngamy, synomone, synonym, synonymous substitution, synonymy, synopsis, syntopic, syntype, systemic,

 

More sitemaps here:

Oceanography Dictionary, Oceanography Dictionary - A-Z,
Oceanography Dictionary - A, Oceanography Dictionary - B, Oceanography Dictionary - C, Oceanography Dictionary - D, Oceanography Dictionary - E, Oceanography Dictionary - F, Oceanography Dictionary - G, Oceanography Dictionary - H, Oceanography Dictionary - I, Oceanography Dictionary - J, Oceanography Dictionary - K, Oceanography Dictionary - L, Oceanography Dictionary - M, Oceanography Dictionary - N, Oceanography Dictionary - O, Oceanography Dictionary - P, Oceanography Dictionary - Q, Oceanography Dictionary - R, Oceanography Dictionary - S, Oceanography Dictionary - T, Oceanography Dictionary - U, Oceanography Dictionary - V, Oceanography Dictionary - W, Oceanography Dictionary - X, Oceanography Dictionary - Y, Oceanography Dictionary - Z,

 

Oceanography, Coral Reef, Environment, Sustainability, Climate Change,

 

Read more here: » Oceanography Sitemap I - S

solution: Encyclopedia - Calorimeter

A calorimeter is a device used for calorimetry, the science of measuring the heat of chemical reactions or physical changes. The word calorimeter is derived from the Latin word calor, meaning heat. The constant-volume calorimeter is the most common type of calorimeter. Calorimeter - Example. A simple calorimeter may just consist of a thermometer attached to an insulated container. To find the enthalpy change per mole of a substance X in a reaction between two liquids X and Y, they are a ...

Including:

Read more here: » Calorimeter: Encyclopedia - Calorimeter

solution: Encyclopedia - Ammonia

Ammonia is a compound of nitrogen and hydrogen with the formula NH3. At standard temperature and pressure ammonia is a gas. It is toxic and corrosive to some materials, and has a characteristic pungent odor. An ammonia molecule is not flat, but has the shape of a compressed tetrahedron known as a trigonal pyramid, as would be expected from VSEPR theory. This shape gives the molecule an overall dipole moment and makes it polar so that ammonia very readily dissolves in water. The nitrogen atom in the molecule has a lon ...

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solution: Encyclopedia II - Colloidal silver - Properties

Colloidal silver can be used to keep drinkable water potable over a long period; however, it is not suited for disinfection. It is also used internally and externally for alleged health benefits. Colloidal silver has been claimed to kill various microorganisms. Continued ingestion of silver may result in argyria, a permanent discoloration of the skin. While high concentrations of colloidal silver will certainly kill many bacteria in vitro, the use of colloidal silver as an inter ...

See also:

Colloidal silver, Colloidal silver - Properties, Colloidal silver - Controversy, Colloidal silver - Preparation

Read more here: » Colloidal silver: Encyclopedia II - Colloidal silver - Properties

solution: Encyclopedia II - Cocaine - Pharmacology

Cocaine - Appearance. Cocaine in its purest form is an off-white or pink chunky product. Cocaine appearing in powder form is a salt, typically cocaine hydrochloride (CAS 53-21-4). Cocaine is frequently adulterated or “cut” with various powdery fillers to increase its surface area; the substances most commonly used in this process are baking soda, sugars, such as lactose, inositol, and mannitol, and local anesthetics, such as lidocaine. Adulterated cocai ...

See also:

Cocaine, Cocaine - History, Cocaine - The coca leaf, Cocaine - Isolation, Cocaine - Popularization, Cocaine - Prohibition, Cocaine - Modern usage, Cocaine - Pharmacology, Cocaine - Appearance, Cocaine - Forms of cocaine, Cocaine - Methods of administration, Cocaine - Mechanism of action, Cocaine - Metabolism and excretion, Cocaine - Effects and health issues, Cocaine - Cocaine as a local anesthetic, Cocaine - Cocaine addiction, Cocaine - Treatment, Cocaine - Legal status, Cocaine - Africa, Cocaine - Asia, Cocaine - Middle east, Cocaine - Australia & Oceania, Cocaine - Europe, Cocaine - North America, Cocaine - South America, Cocaine - Usage, Cocaine - In the United States, Cocaine - Works concerning cocaine, Cocaine - Books about cocaine, Cocaine - Movies about cocaine

Read more here: » Cocaine: Encyclopedia II - Cocaine - Pharmacology

solution: Encyclopedia II - Conium - Socrates

The most famous victim of hemlock poisoning is probably Socrates. After being condemned to death for impiety in 399 BC, Socrates was given a potent solution of the hemlock plant. Plato described Socrates' death in Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo. He walked about and, when he said his legs were heavy, lay down on his back, for such was the advice of the attendant. The man who had administered the poison laid his hands on him and after a while examined his feet and legs, then pinched his foot hard and asked if he felt it. He sa ...

See also:

Conium, Conium - Socrates, Conium - Medicinal uses

Read more here: » Conium: Encyclopedia II - Conium - Socrates

solution: Encyclopedia II - Computer algebra system - Symbolic manipulations

The symbolic manipulations supported typically include simplification, including automatic simplification and simplification with assumptions substitution of symbolic or numeric values for expressions change of form of expressions: expanding products and powers, rewriting as partial fractions, rewriting trigonometric functions as exponentials, etc. differentiation with respect to one or all variables symbolic constrained and unconstrained global optimization partial and full fa ...

See also:

Computer algebra system, Computer algebra system - Types of expressions, Computer algebra system - Symbolic manipulations, Computer algebra system - Other features, Computer algebra system - History, Computer algebra system - Mathematics used in computer algebra systems

Read more here: » Computer algebra system: Encyclopedia II - Computer algebra system - Symbolic manipulations

solution: Encyclopedia - Chemical kinetics

In physical chemistry, chemical kinetics or reaction kinetics study reaction rates in a chemical reaction. Analysing the influence of different reaction conditions on the reaction rate gives information about the reaction mechanism and the transition state of a chemical reaction. Peter Waage developed the law of mass action in 1864 that stated for the first time that the speed of a chemical reaction is proportional to the quantity of the reacting substances. Chemical kinetics - Rate of reaction. Kine ...

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Read more here: » Chemical kinetics: Encyclopedia - Chemical kinetics

solution: Encyclopedia - Chemical equilibrium

Chemical equilibrium is the state in which a chemical reaction proceeds at the same rate as its reverse reaction; the rates of the forward and reverse reactions are equal, and the concentration of the reactants and products stop changing. When this condition is met, there is no change in the proportions i.e. concentrations of the various compounds involved, and it appears that the reaction ceases to progress. However the forward and the reverse reactions continue to occur at the same rates. A common example given is the Haber-Bosch pr ...

Read more here: » Chemical equilibrium: Encyclopedia - Chemical equilibrium

solution: Encyclopedia - Calotype

The calotype was an early photographic process introduced in 1841 by William Fox Talbot, using paper sheets covered with silver chloride. The image was fixed in strong salt solution - potassium iodide of hypo. It may be briefly described as the application of silver iodide to a paper support. Carefully selected paper was brushed over with a solution of silver nitrate (100 grains to a fluid ounce of distilled water, or 5 g/L), and dried by the fire. It was then dipped into a solution of potassium iodide (500 grains being dissolv ...

Read more here: » Calotype: Encyclopedia - Calotype

solution: Encyclopedia - Business continuity planning

Business Continuity Planning (BCP) is a methodology used to create a plan for how an organization will resume partially or completely interrupted critical function(s) within a predetermined time after a disaster or disruption. BCP may be a part of a larger organizational effort to reduce operational risk associated with poor information security controls, and thus has a number of overlaps with the practice of risk management. The International Organization for Standardization and the British Standards Institute set BCP best pra ...

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Read more here: » Business continuity planning: Encyclopedia - Business continuity planning

solution: Encyclopedia - Carbonation

Carbonation occurs when carbon dioxide is dissolved in water or an aqueous solution. This process is generally represented by the following reaction, where water and gaseous carbon dioxide react to form a dilute solution of carbonic acid. H2O + CO2 ↔ H2CO3 This process yields the "fizz" to carbonated water and sparkling mineral water, the head to beer, and the cor ...

Read more here: » Carbonation: Encyclopedia - Carbonation

solution: Encyclopedia - Centrifugation

Centrifugation is a process that involves the use of the centrifugal force for the separation of mixtures. In chemistry, increasing the effective gravitational force on a test tube so as to more rapidly and completely cause the precipitate to gather on the bottom of the tube. The solution is then either quickly decanted from the tube without disturbing the precipitate or withdrawn by means of a medicine dropper. The rate of centrifugation is specified by the accelerat ...

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solution: Encyclopedia - Cocaine

Cocaine 3-benzoyloxy-8-methyl-8-azabicyclo [3.2.1]octane-4-carboxylic acid methyl ester CAS number 50-36-2 ATC code N01BC01 used rarely as a topical anesthetic Recreational uses: euphoria stimulant Other uses: local anesthetic cardiovascular disease Severe: (with chronic use) ? Cardiovasc ...

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Read more here: » Cocaine: Encyclopedia - Cocaine

solution: Encyclopedia - Wet cell

A wet cell is a galvanic electrochemical cell commonly used as a learning tool for electrochemistry. The most famous wet cell is the Daniell cell (sometimes referred to as a crowfoot or gravity cell). The Daniell cell was developed in 1836 by the British chemist (and meteorologist) John Daniell as a reliable source of steady electrical current. In the Daniell cell, copper and zinc electrodes are immersed in a solution of copper (II) sulfate and zinc sulfate respectively. At the anode, zinc is oxidized per the following half reaction: Zn(s) → Zn2+ ...

Read more here: » Wet cell: Encyclopedia - Wet cell

solution: Encyclopedia - Computer algebra system

A computer algebra system (CAS) is a software program that facilitates symbolic mathematics. The core functionality of a CAS is manipulation of mathematical expressions in symbolic form. Computer algebra system - Types of expressions. The expressions manipulated by the CAS typically include polynomials in multiple variables; standard functions of expressions (sine, exponential, etc.); various special functions (gamma, zeta, erf, Bessel, etc.); arbitrary functions of expressions; derivatives, integral ...

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solution: Encyclopedia - Concentrate

A concentrate is a form of substance which has had the majority of its base component, or solvent, removed. Typically this will be the removal of water from a solution or suspension such as the removal of water from fruit juice. The benefit of producing a concentrate is that of a reduction in weight and volume for transportation as the concentrate can be re-constituted at the time of usage by the addition of the solvent. See also. concentration ...

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solution: Encyclopedia - Conium

Conium is a genus of 2-3 species of perennial herbaceous plants in the family Apiaceae. The most familiar species is Conium maculatum (also known as Poison Hemlock), the most common of several species of hemlock noted for their toxicity. It is a biennial herb which grows up to about 10 feet or 3 meters tall, has a smooth (sometimes purple) spotted stem and finely divided lacy leaves. The new leaves and root, when crushed emit a rank, unpleasant odour often compared to mice or parsnips. The flowers are small ...

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Read more here: » Conium: Encyclopedia - Conium

solution: Encyclopedia - Colloidal silver

Colloidal silver is a colloid of silver particles in water. It has some antimicrobial properties, and is claimed by some to be a beneficial nutritional supplement. The ingestion of colloidal silver in large quantities or over a long period of time may cause the discoloring condition argyria, in which the skin turns blue-gray. Colloidal silver - Properties. Colloidal silver can be used to keep drinkable water potable over a long period; however, it is not suited for disinfection. It is also used internally a ...

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Read more here: » Colloidal silver: Encyclopedia - Colloidal silver

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