| DCX | double charge exchange |
|---|---|
| EC | effective concentration; ejection click; electrochemical; electron capture; embryonal carcinoma; eme... |
| Fr | fracture; francium; franklin [unit charge]; French; frequency or frequent |
| MLCT | metal-to-ligand charge transfer |
| m/z | mass-to-charge ratio |
| SCSB | Static Charge Sensitive Bed |
|---|---|
| ECP | energy charge potential |
| CHARGE syndrome |
Each letter sands for an associated disorder of the syndrome: Coloboma on the eye , Heart, Atresia of choane , Retardation of growth , Genital malformations, Ear malformations and/or deafness. CHARGE syndrome has an estimated birth incidence of 1 in 12,000 and is a common cause of congenital anomalies. Most affected individuals with CHARGE syndrome have mutations involving the chromodomain helicase DNA-binding protein-7
Ãâó: embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/Notes/Index/C.htm
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|---|---|
| charge |
An electrical property of particles, such as electrons and protons, which causes them to attract and repel each other. A material with an excess of electrons is defined to have a "negative" charge; material with an absence of electrons (or an excess of protons) is defined as "positive." Materials with a balanced number of electrons and protons are called "neutral." Positive and negative charges attract each other. ...
Ãâó: www.pbs.org/transistor/glossary.html
|
| charge |
which studies the ion composition of the solar wind.
Ãâó: www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Solar-and-Helios...
|
| charge |
A property of some types of particles. There are two types of charges: positive and negative. Anything electrical or magnetic is because of the property of charge. Charged particle - A particle that has either a positive or negative charge. Particles with like charges repel while particles with opposite charges attract
Ãâó: www.natureshift.org/robotLab/glossary.html
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| charge |
the amount of electricity carried by a body (A charge can be negative, like an electron, or positive, like a proton. Objects with opposite charges attract one another, while objects with like charges repel one another.)
Ãâó: education.jlab.org/beamsactivity/6thgrade/vocabula...
|
| charge | the quantity of unbalanced electricity in a body (either positive or negative) and construed as an excess or deficiency of electrons |
|---|---|
| charge | the price charged for some article or service |
| charge | financial liabilities (such as a tax) |
| charge | saturate |
| charge | energize a battery by passing a current through it in the direction opposite to discharge |
| charge | cause formation of a net electrical charge in or on (a conductor, for example) |
| charge | set or ask for a certain price |
| charge | attribute responsibility to |
| charge | instruct or command with authority |
| charge | instruct (a jury) about the law, its application, and the weighing of evidence |
| charge | impose a task upon, assign a responsibility to |
| charge | blame for, make a claim of wrongdoing or misbehavior against |
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