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anisotropy When characteristics vary with direction from a point of reference.
Ãâó: www.copa.org/library/glossary/a.htm
anisotropy in geostatistics, anisotropy refers to covariance models that have major and minor ranges of different distances (correlation scale or lengths). There are two types of anisotropy: Geometric anisotropic covariance models have the same sill, but different ranges; Zonal anisotropic covariance models have the same ranges, but different sills.
Ãâó: www.qgsi.com/Terms.html
anisotropy The difference in the property of a system with changes in direction. In this case, anisotropy refers to the difference in the temperature of the cosmic microwave background radiation with direction.
Ãâó: wmap.gsfc.nasa.gov/m_help/h_glossary.html
anisotropy The tendency for a magnetic material to be more easily magnetised in certain directions. It is this anisotropy that stabilises magnetism to allow it to be used
Ãâó: www.stoner.leeds.ac.uk/misc/glossary.htm
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