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Meanings of short wavelength in English
We have no meanings for "short wavelength" in our records yet.
Usage of short wavelength in English
1
Conditions were chosen to exclude any contribution of the shortwavelength-sensitive (S-) cones.
2
Lens densities were higher in the shortwavelength region of the visible spectrum across all age groups.
3
Both vertebrate rod and medium wavelength-sensitive (M) cone photoreceptors differentiate by repression of a shortwavelength-sensitive (S) cone differentiation program.
4
Needless to say, any characteristics which make shortwavelength photons the friends of weapon designers do not to endear them to armor designers.
5
This would explain why violet light packets, with a relatively shortwavelength, carried more energy than red light packets, with a relatively longer one.
6
The so-called "Active Denial System" works by heating the outer surface of the target's skin using millimeter waves - shortwavelength microwaves.
7
Finally, we investigate the influence of the ternary impurity on a shortwavelength oscillatory instability that is already present at off-eutectic compositions in binary eutectics.
8
Dalton's eyes really only see medium and shortwavelengths of light-bluesand greens, and their overlap color, yellow.
9
They are tuned to long, medium and shortwavelengths of light, which we see as red, green and blue.
10
There must have been quite a bit of shorterwavelength radiation, but the Earth's atmosphere would filter most of it out.
11
Dr. Thaddeus tells writer that New York City is a wonderful observatory at shortwavelengths, which is what this radio telescope operates on.
12
To transmit this data, Kaku proposes using x-rays, which have super- shortwavelengths and high frequencies that carry 1m times more data than normal optical fibre.
13
The moon changes colour because blue light - and other shortwavelengths - scatter more in the Earth's atmosphere, with more red light getting through.
14
Most harmful radiation is in the "ultraviolet" region of the solar spectrum, invisible to the eye at shortwavelengths (under 3,000 A).