| inert |
deficient in active properties; not affecting other substances when in contact with them such as inert gases.
Ãâó: www.acculam.com/defs.htm
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|---|---|
| inert gas |
A gas which does not normally combine chemically with the substrate or the deposit.
Ãâó: www.asm-intl.org/tss/glossary/i.htm
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| inert gas |
Any one of six gases, helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon, that does not react with other substances under ordinary conditions. These gases are being used in the cargo tanks of tankers as protection against explosion and fire.
Ãâó: www.berg.com.sg/mgI.htm
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| inertia |
The tendency of an object at rest to remain at rest, and of an object in motion to remain in motion.
Ãâó: urban.arch.virginia.edu/~km6e/references/glossary/...
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| inertia |
is the apparent resistance an object offers to any change in its state of rest or of motion.
Ãâó: www.dac.neu.edu/physics/b.maheswaran/phy1121/data/...
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| INE | (Christianity) exemption from error |
|---|---|
| INE | not liable to error |
| INE | slow and apathetic |
| INE | unable to move or resist motion |
| INE | (chemistry) having only a limited ability to react chemically |
| INE | any of the chemically inert gaseous elements of the helium group in the periodic table |
| INE | a disposition to remain inactive or inert |
| INE | (physics) the tendency of a body to maintain is state of rest or uniform motion unless acted upon by an external force |
| INE | of or relating to inertia |
| INE | a coordinate system in which Newton's first law of motion is valid |
| INE | a method of controlling the flight of a missile by devices that respond to inertial forces |
| INE | a system to control a plane or spacecraft |
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