| reverse osmosis |
Reverse osmosis is a process that separates impurities from water by forcing it through filters under great pressure into a spirally wound tube called a reverse osmosis element. The membrane allows water to pass through the filter while rejecting suspended and dissolved impurities and most color and odor-causing compounds. If the filters do not absorb the contaminants, then they have to pass through three post-treatment cylinders
Ãâó: www.gulflink.osd.mil/water_use/water_use_taba.htm
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| reverse transcriptase |
An RNA-dependent DNA polymerase isolated from retrovirus infected cells. It synthesizes a complementary DNA from an RNA template.
Ãâó: www.bscs.org/onco/glossary.htm
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| reverse transcriptase |
An enzyme used by retroviruses to form a complementary DNA sequence (cDNA) from an RNA template -usually the genome of the retrovirus . The enzyme then performs a complimentary template of the cDNA strand such that a double stranded DNA molecule is formed. This double stranded DNA molecule is then inserted into the chromosome of the host cell which has been infected by the retrovirus. Reverse transcriptase is one of the key components that HIV uses to mount its attack.
Ãâó: www.cs.uu.nl/people/ronnie/local/genome/r.html
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| revolute |
Rolled back from the margin toward bottom surface.
Ãâó: forest.moscowfsl.wsu.edu/rmrs_gtr118/glossary.html
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| reverberation |
In concert hall acoustics, reverberation refers to sound that persists in a venue after a tone is suddenly stopped. A hall that is reverberant is called a "live" hall. (See also liveness.) A room that is not reverberant is called a "dead" or "dry" room. [2]
Ãâó: www.keithyates.com/glossary.htm
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| REV | a return to a normal phenotype (usually resulting from a second mutation) |
|---|---|
| REV | (law) an interest in an estate that reverts to the grantor (or his heirs) at the end of some period (e.g., the death of the grantee) |
| REV | of or relating to or involving a reversion (especially a legal reversion) |
| REV | an annuity payable to one person in the event that someone else is unable to receive it |
| REV | (law) a party who is entitled to an estate in reversion |
| REV | someone who lapses into previous undesirable patterns of behavior |
| REV | tending to be turned back |
| REV | undergo reversion, as in a mutation |
| REV | go back to a previous state |
| REV | (law) to be returned to the former owner or that owner's heirs |
| REV | a failure to maintain a higher state |
| REV | tending to return to an earlier state |
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