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Rainbows

Pack R T 1978 Anisotropic potentials and the damping of rainbow and diffraction oscillations in differential cross-sections Chem. Phys. Lett. 55 197... [Pg.216]

Figure A3.9.5. Population of rotational states versus rotational energy for NO moleeules seattered from an Ag (111) surfaee at two different ineidenee energies and at = 520 K [25] (a) E = 0.85 eV, 0. = 15° and b) E = 0.09 eV, 9. = 15°. Results at = 0.85 eV show a pronoimeed rotational rainbow. Figure A3.9.5. Population of rotational states versus rotational energy for NO moleeules seattered from an Ag (111) surfaee at two different ineidenee energies and at = 520 K [25] (a) E = 0.85 eV, 0. = 15° and b) E = 0.09 eV, 9. = 15°. Results at = 0.85 eV show a pronoimeed rotational rainbow.
Expression (B3.4.29) is still not well suited for classical simulations due to several reasons. First, dp" dx can vanish at specific times, which leads to infinities in the result. (In classical scattering this is related to the existence of scattering rainbows .) This is easily circumvented by changing integration parameters, from a to p (i.e. from the final position to the initial momentum)... [Pg.2315]

L. iris, rainbow) Tennant discovered iridium in 1803 in the residue left when crude platinum is dissolved by aqua regia. The name iridium is appropriate because its salts are highly colored. [Pg.138]

FIGURE 13.2 Colorizatoii of the HOMO-1 orbital of H2O. Colorizations often use a rainbow palette of colors. [Pg.117]

Species such as carp, salmon, trout, channel catfish, and tilapia have been bred for many generations in captivity though they usually differ httle in appearance or genetically from their wild counterparts. A few exceptions exist, such as the leather carp, a common carp strain selectively bred to produce only one row of scales, and the Donaldson trout, a strain of rainbow trout developed over numerous generations to grow more rapidly to larger size and... [Pg.21]

Pish silage prepared by autolysis of rainbow trout viscera waste was investigated as a substrate for the plastein reaction using pepsin (pH 5.0), papain (pH 6—7), and chymotrypsin (pH 8.0) at 37°C for 24 h (152). Precipitation with ethanol was the preferred recovery method. Concentration of the protein hydrolysate by open-pan evaporation at 60°C gave equivalent yields and color of the final plastein to those of the freeze-dried hydrolysate. [Pg.471]

AH of the propylene glycols are considered to be practically nontoxic to fish on an acute basis (LC q < 100 mg/L) and practically nontoxic to aquatic invertebrates, also on an acute basis. Acute marine toxicology testing (38) on propylene glycol showed that the 96-h LC q for fathead minnows was 54,900 mg/L and the 48-h LC q for Daphnia magna was 34,400 mg/L. A 24-h NOEL of 50,000 mg/L was also observed for fingerling trout. Similar results were observed for guppies and rainbow trout (39). [Pg.369]

The mode of action has not yet been elucidated but the manufacturer states that it probably behaves like the herbicide triflurolin and its congeners. These materials inhibit cell division by binding to tubuHn thereby internipting micro-tubule development. This, in turn, stops spindle fiber formation essential to mitosis and cell division. Experiments with C-labeled Prime+ show that it is acutely toxic to fish with estimated LC q (96 h) of less than 100 ppb for rainbow trout and bluegiU. sunfish. However, channel catfish did not exhibit any toxic response at the maximum attainable water concentration (10). [Pg.425]

Environmental Impact of Ambient Ozone. Ozone can be toxic to plants, animals, and fish. The lethal dose, LD q, for albino mice is 3.8 ppmv for a 4-h exposure (156) the 96-h LC q for striped bass, channel catfish, and rainbow trout is 80, 30, and 9.3 ppb, respectively. Small, natural, and anthropogenic atmospheric ozone concentrations can increase the weathering and aging of materials such as plastics, paint, textiles, and mbber. For example, mbber is degraded by reaction of ozone with carbon—carbon double bonds of the mbber polymer, requiring the addition of aromatic amines as ozone scavengers (see Antioxidants Antiozonants). An ozone decomposing polymer (noXon) has been developed that destroys ozone in air or water (157). [Pg.504]

The chronic aquatic effects which relate silver speciation to adverse environmental effects were studied on rainbow trout eggs and fry. The maximum acceptable toxicant concentration (MATC) for silver nitrate, as total silver, was reported to be 90—170 ng/L (43). Using fathead minnow eggs and fry, the MATC, as total silver, for silver thiosulfate complexes was reported as 21—44 mg/L, and for silver sulfide as 11 mg/L, the maximum concentration tested (27). [Pg.92]

The cyclopropenoid fatty acids, malvaUc acid and stercuhc acid, exist in hexane-defatted meal at levels of 21—76 ppm (70). In rainbow trout, the cyclopropenoid acids cause cancer of the fiver either alone or by acting synergistically with aflatoxin B. However, similar effects in mammals or humans have not been demonstrated (63). [Pg.301]

Intensive or extensive culture of aquatic animals requires chemicals that control disease, enhance the growth of cultured species, reduce handling trauma to organisms, improve water quality, disinfect water, and control aquatic vegetation, predaceous insects, or other nuisance organisms. The aquacultural chemical need for various species have been described for rainbow trout, Oncorhjnchus mjkiss (1) Adantic and Pacific salmon, Salmo and Oncorhjnchus sp. (2) channel catfish, Ictaluruspunctatus (3) striped bass, Morone saxatilis (4) milkfish, Chanos chanos (5) moUusks (6) penaeid (Penaeus sp.) shrimp (7) and a variety of other marine species (8). [Pg.319]

Protamine kinase (from rainbow trout testes) [37278-10-7] [EC 2.7.1.70]. Partial purification by hydoxylapatite chromatography followed by biospecific chromatography on nucleotide coupled Sepharose 4B (the nucleotide was 8-(6-aminohexyl)amine coupled cyclic-AMP). [Jergil et al. Biochem J139 441 1974.]... [Pg.562]

The eapabilities of new eoatings are initially evaluated in the laboratory on speeially designed rainbow rotor test rigs to determine their eorrosion resistanee and effeet on meehanieal properties. [Pg.434]

The salts of the heavy metals beryllium, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, mercury, nickel and zinc are all of high eco-toxicity. For example, the toxicity of some heavy metals to rainbow trout is demonstrated in Table 16.13 coarse fish are somewhat more resistant. [Pg.504]

Table 16.13 Toxic concentrations of heavy metals to rainbow trout... Table 16.13 Toxic concentrations of heavy metals to rainbow trout...
University of Kansas Medical Center 3901 Rainbow Blvd., Rm. B-400 Kansas City, KS 66160-7231... [Pg.313]

L-Ascorbic acid, better known as vitamin C, has the simplest chemical structure of all the vitamins (Figure 18.30). It is widely distributed in the animal and plant kingdoms, and only a few vertebrates—humans and other primates, guinea pigs, fruit-eating bats, certain birds, and some fish (rainbow trout, carp, and Coho salmon, for example)—are unable to synthesize it. In all these organisms, the inability to synthesize ascorbic acid stems from a lack of a liver enzyme, L-gulono-y-lactone oxidase. [Pg.599]

Such efforts have met with limited success, and the reason usually advanced is our lack of understanding of the frequency dependence of molecular NLO properties. In classical electromagnetism, we refer to properties that depend on the frequency of radiation as dispersive and we say that (for example) dispersion is responsible for a rainbow. The blue colour of the sky is a dispersion effect, as is the red sky at night and morning. There is more to it than that, and you might like to read a more advanced text (Hinchliffe and Munn, 1985). [Pg.298]

Dyeing) rainbow ground, irisieren, v.t. irisate, iridize. — v.i. iridesce. — irisierend, p.a. iridescent. [Pg.226]


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Angular Distribution of the Scattered Light Rainbow Angles

Colors of the rainbow

Granite and Rainbow

Gravity s rainbow

Impact parameter rainbow

Light rainbows

Polysialoglycoprotein of rainbow trout eggs

Primary rainbow

Rainbow Bridge

Rainbow Trout Egg Polysialoglycoproteins

Rainbow angle

Rainbow bead

Rainbow body

Rainbow colors

Rainbow demonstration

Rainbow effect

Rainbow holograms

Rainbow plans

Rainbow quartz

Rainbow scattering

Rainbow scattering oscillations

Rainbow smelt

Rainbow structure, anisotropy

Rainbow thermometry

Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss

Rainbow trout eggs

Rainbow trout eggs polysialoglycoprotein

Rainbow trout fry syndrome

Rainbow trout hepatocytes

Rainbow trout mykiss

Rainbow trout protein expression

Rainbow trout starvation

Rainbow trout, bioaccumulation

Rainbow, The

Rainbow, artificial

Rainbowing

Rainbows double

Rainbows polarization

Rotational rainbow

Secondary rainbow

Smelt Rainbow, Osmerus mordax

Supernumerary rainbow

Trout, rainbow

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