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drift A change in an instrument's reading or setpoint value over extended periods due to factors such as time, line voltage, or ambient temperature effects.
Ãâó: www.omega.com/literature/transactions/volume1/glos...
drift The physical movement of prohibited substances from the intended target site onto an organic operation or portion thereof.
Ãâó: www.ebfarm.com/Organic/Glossary.aspx
drift A magnetically trapped ion or electron moves as if it were attached to a magnetic field line. Drift is one of the features of such motion, namely its slow shift from one magnetic field line to its neighbor. In the Earth's magnetic field, such drifts gradually move particles all the way around Earth. Viewed from far above the north magnetic pole, ions drift around the Earth clockwise, electrons counter-clockwise, resulting in an electric current circling the Earth, the ring current.
Ãâó: www-spof.gsfc.nasa.gov/Education/wgloss.html
drift Moving out of position or off a mark. (Not a good thing to do!)
Ãâó: www.mcalistertalent.com/filmterm.htm
drift Molecule chains of a stretched elastomer begin to slowly drift apart from each other when they or their crosslinks get damaged by too high strain or temperature. This results in an increase of steepness and long term hysteresis. Molecule chains those are not fixed by crosslinks (like eg in thermoplastics) drift around under mechanical load also without that molecules got torn apart.
Ãâó: latexmindresearch.tripod.com/glossary.htm
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