| surface |
An equipotential surface of the gravity field. The force of gravity is everywhere perpendicular to this surface. The surface of a body of still water is a level surface. The surface of the ocean, if disturbances caused by tides, currents, winds, atmospheric pressure, and so on, are not considered, is a level surface. The surface of the geoid is a level surface. ...
Ãâó: chswww.bur.dfo.ca/danp/appendixc.html
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| surface |
The texture, both finish and hardness, of a bowling ball.
Ãâó: www.jayhawkbowling.com/Pro_s_Corner/Glossary/gloss...
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| surface |
A quality factor indicating the amount of blemishes on a pearl, ranging from clean to heavily-blemished.
Ãâó: pearl.tamsquare.com/html/pearl-term.htm
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| surface tension |
The attraction of a liquid for any material with which it has contact. A high surface tension means low attraction and a low surface tension means a high degree of attraction. Water has a high surface tension so it beads on wax paper. If you add soap to the water it reduces the surface tension and causes the water to penetrate the wax paper.
Ãâó: www.jnevins.com/inkjetglossary.htm
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| surface tension |
A measure of the "tension force" -how difficult it is to stretch or break the surface of a liquid. A property, due to attractive intermolecular forces (unbalanced molecular cohesive forces at or near the surface), which exists in the surface film of all liquids that tends to draw the surface molecules into the bulk of the liquid and causes the contained volume to have a shape of the least surface area. ...
Ãâó: www.sbs.utexas.edu/delia/bio212/glossary.htm
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