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velocity The time rate of motion, the distance traveled divided by the time required to travel that distance.
(09 Oct 1997)
velocity coefficient The rate of transformation of a unit mass of substance in a chemical reaction.
(05 Mar 2000)
velocity constants Proportionality constants equal to the initial rate of a reaction divided by the concentration of the reactant(s); e.g., in the reaction A → B + C, the rate of the reaction equals -d[A]/dt = k1[A]. The rate constant k1 is a unimolecular rate constant since there is only one molecular species reacting and has units of reciprocal time (e.g., sec-1). For the reverse reaction, B + C → A, the rate equals -d[B]/dt = d[A]/dt = k2[B][C]. The rate constant k2 is a bimolecular rate constant and has units of reciprocal concentration-time (e.g., m-1 sec-1).
Synonym: velocity constants.
(05 Mar 2000)
velocity space <radiobiology> Mathematical space where each point corresponds not to a certain location in reality, but to a certain velocity. Distribution functions typically involve mixes of both position and velocity spaces. (See distribution function.) Contrast with position space where each point corresponds to a given location.
(09 Oct 1997)
velocity space instability <radiobiology> A class of instabilities driven by particle distributions (in velocity space) which are not in thermal equilibrium.
(09 Oct 1997)
maximum velocity The maximum rate of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction that can be achieved by progressively increasing the substrate concentration at a given enzyme concentration; in cases of substrate inhibition, Vmax is an extrapolated value in the absence of such inhibition; Cf.: Michaelis-Menten equation.
The maximum initial rate of shortening of a myocardial fibre that can be obtained under zero load; used to evaluate the contractility of the fibre.
(05 Mar 2000)
group velocity <radiobiology> This is derived from the dispersion relation as Vgroup = dw/dk, the group velocity is the rate at which modulations or information within a wave travel through a given medium.
(09 Oct 1997)
critical velocity <biology> The maximum speed a device or organism can sustain over a specified distance or length of time, or the maximum velocity against which device or organism can sustain a position over a specified length of time.
<marine biology> Velocity through which a fish will not swim, creating a velocity barrier.
(09 Oct 1997)
steady-state velocity The velocity of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction in which, over the time course of the study, the concentration of any enzyme species is constant (i.e., for an enzyme-substrate binary complex, ES, d[ES]/dt&apprxeq;00; for this to hold true, the total enzyme concentration must be much less than the initial substrate concentration.
Synonym: steady-state rate.
(05 Mar 2000)
nerve conduction velocity The rate of impulse conduction in a peripheral nerve or its various component fibres, generally expressed in meters per second.
(05 Mar 2000)
drift velocity <radiobiology> Characteristic velocity at which the centre of a particle's orbit (guiding centre) drifts when drift motion (see above) occurs.
(09 Oct 1997)
initial velocity The rate of a reaction, e.g., an enzyme-catalyzed reaction, at the early stages of the reaction such that the product(s) concentrations have not risen to a level to significantly affect the observable rate; typically, initial velocities are observed when less than 10% of the reaction's approach toward equilibrium has occurred.
Synonym: initial rate.
(05 Mar 2000)
thermal velocity <radiobiology> Average speed (magnitude of velocity) of a particle at a given temperature (in a Maxwellian velocity distribution).
(09 Oct 1997)
electron velocity <physics> The rate of motion of an electron.
(05 Aug 1998)
fish velocity The velocity at the location occupied by a fish, measured at the fish's snout.
(09 Oct 1997)
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