Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Parent, organic

A) The filing of bankruptcy for or on the part of the other party (or its parent organization or affiliate organizations) ... [Pg.74]

Most of these part-time employees are full-time employees of the parent organization of the air pollution control agency, but dev ote as much of their time to the work of the air pollution control agency as required. [Pg.439]

False. Continuous cultures operate for lengthy periods. Spontaneous mutations will arise and if they can compete successfully with the parent organism (by virtue of higher growth rate) they can predominate in the culture. Batch cultures have short growth times and so do not suffer such drawbacks. [Pg.92]

The easiest cells to grow are microbes that live independently in their natural environment. These include bacteria, yeasts, and molds. The hardest are the cells extracted from higher order plants and animals since they normally rely on complex interactions with other cells in the parent organism. Bacteria and yeasts are single-celled. Molds are multicelled but have relatively simple structures and nutritional requirements. [Pg.446]

Clone A large number of organisms, cells or molecules that are identical with a single parental organism cell or molecule. [Pg.413]

Huang Y, Eglington G, van der Hage ERE, Boon JJ, Bol R, Ineson P (1998) Dissolved organic matter and its parent organic matter in grass upland soil horizons studied by analytical pyrolysis techniques. Eur J Soil Sci 49 1-15... [Pg.227]

There are two classical strategies for vaccination. One involves vaccination with either killed pathogenic organisms or subunits of the pathogenic organism. The other utilizes live attenuated viruses or bacteria that do not cause disease but have been derived from the pathogenic parent organism. [Pg.425]

Bound residnes are those chemicals retained in the subsurface matrix in the form of the parent organic contaminant or its metabolites these residnes remain after subsequent extractions, dnring which the nature of the compound or of the matrix is not altered by the extraction procedure. An example of sequential extraction of... [Pg.206]

Erwinia chrysanthemi, interest in the maceration process has led to the cloning and sequencing of four separate genes coding for different secreted pectate lyases (18,19), The production of these enzymes, either by the parent organism, or as recombinant enzymes in E. coli, has now led to their detailed characterization with respect to depolymerization mechanism. [Pg.457]

Some items and components may require examination that is more detailed. Specific techniques for data analysis are beyond the scope of this guidebook. Entire volumes have been written on specific issues such as the fracture patterns of alloys and the corresponding clues for determining the actual cause and mechanism for the failure. Known specific materials and alloys perform and fail in consistent and predictable ways. This area of expertise is normally supplied to the incident investigation team via the use of specialists, from either within the parent organization or from outside experts or labs engaged specifically for the task. [Pg.164]

This area of expertise is normally supplied to the incident investigation team via the use of specialists, from either within the parent organization or from outside experts or lahs engaged specifically for the task. [Pg.176]

Lessons learned from one facility s incident often have applicability to other facilities within the same parent organization. A management system should be in place to ensure that the understanding of the lessons learned is not isolated to a single location. Another way to express these thoughts was presented in Trevor Kletz s paper Organizations Have No Memory.In practice, organizations may find it extremely difficult to... [Pg.317]

Questions concerning the origins of coal and petroleum center on three topics the nature and composition of the parent organisms, the mode of accumulation of the organic material, and the reactions whereby this material was transformed into the end products. [Pg.185]

In Eq. (LL), M is the concentration of the condensed-phase organic (in igm 3) available to absorb semivolatile organic products, ( is a constant that relates the concentration of the ith secondary organic aerosol component formed, C, to the amount of parent precursor organic reacted i.e., C, (ng m ) 1000a, A(parent organic in p,g m 3), and Kom i is the gas-particle partioning coefficient for the ith component. As discussed in more detail in Section D, Kim j is in effect an equilibrium constant between the condensed- and gas-phase concentrations. [Pg.406]

More practical questions are whether introduced GEMs will survive in polluted matrices, or whether their continued viability will dramatically affect the success of remediation. A recent development in this area is the isolation of bacterial strains which can respond to selective agents under field conditions. These strains have been called field application vectors or FAVs, since their intended purpose is to express foreign genes in environments not conducive to the use of the parent organism (Lajoie et al., 1993). The proposed use of FAVs illustrates the need to control bacterial growth and survival under the real-world conditions where bacterial remediation has to occur. [Pg.361]

Placenta That part of the carpel bearing ovules or in animals the structure which is attached to the parent organism and obtains food for an immature individual, i.e. an haustorium produced by some immature animals and attached to the parent organism. [Pg.51]

Such design concepts were first reported utilizing 2,2 -bithiazole and 2,2 -bi-pyridine units, respectively, as postpolymerization metal coordination sites [349, 350]. Subsequently, a poly(p-phenylenevinylene)-based polymer 69 containing ionic ruthenium centers bound to bipyridyl (BPY) units incorporated into the polymer backbone was reported. This system, depicted in Scheme 68, exhibits enhanced photoconductivity relative to the parent organic polymer [351] (Yu). [Pg.112]


See other pages where Parent, organic is mentioned: [Pg.1940]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.431]    [Pg.396]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.374]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.641]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.1460]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.321]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.39 ]




SEARCH



Alphabetically ordered index. Organic names are listed at the “parent” based on Rule

Homeschooling Parents Organizations

Parent

Parenting

© 2024 chempedia.info