| temper |
process used to increase the strength of glass. To achieve this, manufacturers re-heat glass after it is formed, and rapidly cool it.
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| tempered glass |
Float glass panels heated and then cooled rapidly in a controlled environment. This process makes the glass several times stronger than regular glass. It also makes it safer because when broken it yields small pebble-like fragments.
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| temperate b. |
one whose genetic material (prophage) becomes an intimate part of the bacterial cell, persisting through many cell division cycles. The affected bacterial cell is known as a lysogenic bacterium (q.v.).
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| temperate v. |
see under bacteriophage.
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| temperature c. |
a number indicating the effect of temperature upon the velocity constant of a chemical reaction. Symbol Q10 because 10°C is the most commonly employed temperature change; see van't Hoff's rule, under rule.
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