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scattering The amount of light that is reflected and refracted away from a particle. The measurement is widely used to estimate overall concentrations of particles suspended in water, and can also be used to look at specific material properties.
Ãâó: www.wetlabs.com/glossary.htm
scattering To remove cremated remains from an urn or other container and allow them to fall to the ground or into water. There is no memorialization, no guarantee of future access, no record. In addition, the cremated remains may not be ashes or powder at all, but large bone fragments. Scattering cremated remains in certain locations is against civil law.
Ãâó: www.cemeteries.org/glossary.asp
scattering dispersion of electromagnetic radiation as a result of it's interaction with molecules in the atmosphere. The sky appears blue as a result of the blue region of the visual spectrum being scattered more than the red region.
Ãâó: www.tsgc.utexas.edu/stars/glossary1.html
scatter diagram A graphic display of data plotted along two dimensions. Scatter diagrams are used to rapidly screen for a relationship between two variables.
Ãâó: www.qaproject.org/methods/resglossary.html
scatterplot a form of graph that presents information from a bivariate distribution. In a scatterplot, each subject in an experimental study is represented by a single point in two-dimensional space. The underlying scale of measurement for both variables is continuous (measurement data). This is one of the most useful techniques for gaining insight into the relationship between tw variables.
Ãâó: bobhall.tamu.edu/FiniteMath/Module8/Introduction.h...
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