Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Movement pathways

Eor pesticides to leach to groundwater, it may be necessary for preferential flow through macropores to dominate the sorption processes that control pesticide leaching to groundwater. Several studies have demonstrated that large continuous macropores exist in soil and provide pathways for rapid movement of water solutes. Increased permeabiUty, percolation, and solute transport can result from increased porosity, especially in no-tiUage systems where pore stmcture is stiU intact at the soil surface (70). Plant roots are important in creation and stabilization of soil macropores (71). [Pg.223]

These three functions involve the movement of O2, CO2, and HjO through the epidermal layers of the leaf. The analogy to human inhalation is obvious. With the diffusion of gases into and out of the leaf, pollutant gases have a direct pathway to the cellular system of the leaf structure. Direct deposition of particulate matter also occurs on the outer surfaces of the leaves. [Pg.112]

Reaction (12-9) shows the photochemical dissodation of NO2. Reaction (12-10) shows the formation of ozone from the combination of O and molecular O2 where M is any third-body molecule (principally N2 and O2 in the atmosphere). Reaction (12-11) shows the oxidation of NO by O3 to form NO2 and molecular oxygen. These three reactions represent a cyclic pathway (Fig. 12-4) driven by photons represented by hv. Throughout the daytime period, the flux of solar radiation changes with the movement of the sun. However, over short time periods (—10 min) the flux may be considered constant, in which case the rate of reaction (12-9) may be expressed as... [Pg.172]

For some types of production, the facility housing the equipment and machinery needed to create, move, and store product has to be designed. The pathways for raw materials and semi-finished product need to be thought out and the gangways for staff movement need careful planning to prevent hazard. [Pg.213]

Leute and Stratmann [1237] have shown that the double conversion between CdTe and HgSe is strongly influenced by intrinsic doping. The pathway for reaction is identified as the movement of interstitial species,... [Pg.279]

Radioisotopes are used as long-lasting power sources, to study the environment, and to track movement. They are used in biology to trace metabolic pathways, in chemistry to trace reaction mechanisms, and in geology to determine the ages of rocks. [Pg.834]

The dominant processes controlling the movements of P through terrestrial ecosystems are schematically presented in Fig. 14-4. In a general way, the overall movement of P on the continents may be envisioned as the constant erosion of P from continental rocks and transport in both dissolved and particulate form by rivers to the ocean, stopping occasionally along this pathway to interact with biological and mineralogical systems. [Pg.364]

Muscle Fast twitch Slow twitch Rapid movement Sustained movement Glycolysis Aerobic pathways, eg, p-oxidation and citric acid cycle Glucose Ketone bodies, triacylglycerol in VLDL and chylomicrons, free fatty acids Lactate Lipoprotein lipase. Respiratory chain well developed. [Pg.235]

People with Parkinson s disease show a specific degeneration of the nigrostriatal tract so DA must be linked in some way to the control of motor function. It is also known that an imbalance of DA function on the two sides of the rat brain, either by stimulation or lesion of one SN, causes off-line or rotational movement (Ungerstadt and Arbuthnott 1970). This is best shown some days after 6-OHDA lesion of one substantia nigra and its nigrostriatal pathway when systemic apomorphine (DA agonist) causes animals to turn away from the lesioned side (contraversive), presumably... [Pg.155]

Normally (Fig. 15.2(a)) DA inhibits the Ind Path to GPext so that this is then free to inhibit the SThN. This latter system can then no longer drive, through glutamate release, the SNr or GPint whose inhibitory outputs are reduced. The assumption is that the thalamo-cortical pathway can then function properly and movement is normal. [Pg.303]

The extrapyramidal motor system controls muscle movement through a system of pathways and nerve tracts that connect the cerebral cortex, basal ganglia, thalamus, cerebellum, reticular formation, and spinal neurons. Patients with PD lose dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra, which is located in the midbrain within the brain stem. The substantia... [Pg.474]

The electrocrystallization and characterization of a novel molecular metal which displays both electronic and ionic conduction has been reported. The complex Li0.6(15-crown-5-ether)[Ni-(dmit)2] H20 is composed of stacks of [Ni(dmit)2] units which provide pathways for electronic conduction. The stacks are separated by parallel stacks of 15-crown-5-ether moieties in a channellike formation which facilitates ion conduction. The salt has a room temperature conductivity of 240 Scm-1. Temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility and NMR measurements were used to prove the existence of Li+ movement within the crown ether channels.1030... [Pg.339]

The symposium blended tutorial review papers with descriptions of field, laboratory, industrial, and regulatory problems that have been approached using chemical fate simulations. Authors presented current practices and practical questions such as material balance analysis, atmospheric processes influencing human exposure, aquatic system pathway analysis, movement in soil/groundwater media, and uptake or degradation in biota. [Pg.4]

When chemicals are released in the environment, their hazard potential to human or ecological receptors depends upon the extent of contact between the receptors and the chemical. This exposure level is not only influenced by where, when and how much of the chemical is released, but also on its movement and changes in air, water, soil or biota relative to the locations of the receptors. Risk is defined as the probability of some adverse consequence in the health context, or as the probability times the extent of the consequence in the technology context. In this paper we shall examine and discuss how mathematical models are used to generate estimates of risk when more than one of the environmental media must be considered in tracing pathways connecting sources with receptors. The principal objective here is to place in perspective the... [Pg.89]

The spinal cord is the most anatomically inferior portion of the CNS and its functions are at the lowest level of sophistication (see Table 6.1). As mentioned earlier, the spinal cord receives sensory input from the periphery of the body and contains the cell bodies of motor neurons responsible for voluntary and involuntary movements. Once again, the involuntary and neurologically simple reflexes are processed entirely at the level of the spinal cord. Voluntary, deliberate movements are initiated and controlled by thought processes in the cerebrum. The second important function of the spinal cord is to transmit nerve impulses to and from the brain. Ascending pathways carry sensory input to higher levels of the CNS and descending pathways carry impulses from the brain to motor neurons in the spinal cord. [Pg.48]


See other pages where Movement pathways is mentioned: [Pg.788]    [Pg.788]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.788]    [Pg.788]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.298]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.649]    [Pg.984]    [Pg.1319]    [Pg.1320]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.611]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.426]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.49]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.117 ]




SEARCH



Pathways of Hormone Movement

© 2024 chempedia.info