| fusion |
a style developed in the late 60s by Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis, Chick Corea and others, partly as a reaction to the eclipse of jazz on the music scene by rock. Incorporated elements of rock into jazz and made greater use of repetition and non-improvised passages. Harmonic language was simplified; key feeling tended to be established by repetition rather than harmonic movement. Straight-8 time and a strong back-beat predominated.
Ãâó: www.humboldt1.com/~jazz/glossary.html
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| fusion |
A process where nuclei collide so fast they stick together and emit a great deal of energy. In the center of most stars, hydrogen fuses together to form helium. Fusion is so powerful it supports the star's enormous mass from collapsing in on itself, and heats the star so high it glows as the bright object we see today. Scientists here on earth are trying to make nuclear fusion in the laboratory a useful energy source.
Ãâó: www.bjp.org.cn/apod/glossary.htm
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| fusion |
Mechanism of energy generation in the core of the Sun (and other stars), in which light atomic nuclei are combined, or fused, into heavier ones, releasing energy in the process.
Ãâó: www.astro.utoronto.ca/~hudon/ast210/210.glossary.h...
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| fusion |
Method for total to near total decomposition of samples.A portion of sample pulp is mixed with flux such as lithium metaborate (LiBO 2 ) or sodium peroxide (Na 2 O 2 ) that lowers the melting point.The mixture is then heated in a muffle furnace until molten.After cooling the fused mass is digested in 5% HNO 3 .
Ãâó: www.acmelab.com/cfm/index.cfm
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| fusion |
A second type of nuclear reaction where nuclei combine to form a large nucleus. During this reaction, energy is also released.
Ãâó: www.me.utexas.edu/~uer/manhattan/glossary.html
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