
Modeling the Sedimentation of Red Blood Cells in
... relatively simple. Hence, together with the frontal area, the DI can describe the main character of the deformation. Figure 5 shows the variation of the DI of a RBC according to the external magnetic body force. As depicted in Figure 2, during the sedimentation of RBC, the frontal surface with resp ...
... relatively simple. Hence, together with the frontal area, the DI can describe the main character of the deformation. Figure 5 shows the variation of the DI of a RBC according to the external magnetic body force. As depicted in Figure 2, during the sedimentation of RBC, the frontal surface with resp ...
Dimenssional Analysis File
... Historically, the first person to write extensively about units and dimensional reasoning in physical relations was Euler in 1765. Euler’s ideas were far ahead of his time, as were those of Joseph Fourier, whose 1822 book, Analytical Theory of Heat, outlined what is now called the principle of Dimen ...
... Historically, the first person to write extensively about units and dimensional reasoning in physical relations was Euler in 1765. Euler’s ideas were far ahead of his time, as were those of Joseph Fourier, whose 1822 book, Analytical Theory of Heat, outlined what is now called the principle of Dimen ...
Dimensional Analysis File
... Historically, the first person to write extensively about units and dimensional reasoning in physical relations was Euler in 1765. Euler’s ideas were far ahead of his time, as were those of Joseph Fourier, whose 1822 book, Analytical Theory of Heat, outlined what is now called the principle of Dimen ...
... Historically, the first person to write extensively about units and dimensional reasoning in physical relations was Euler in 1765. Euler’s ideas were far ahead of his time, as were those of Joseph Fourier, whose 1822 book, Analytical Theory of Heat, outlined what is now called the principle of Dimen ...
Thursday Aug 27 1-d Motion/Kinematics • Goal: Describe Motion
... Scalars add, subtract, multiply the way we're used to. Vectors need to account for direction – may need trig. If parallel or antiparallel, then can treat more simply. If not – need to use trig. Magnitude of vector is its ‘size’ (ignore direction) The magnitude of a vector “3 m to the left” is 3 m Bo ...
... Scalars add, subtract, multiply the way we're used to. Vectors need to account for direction – may need trig. If parallel or antiparallel, then can treat more simply. If not – need to use trig. Magnitude of vector is its ‘size’ (ignore direction) The magnitude of a vector “3 m to the left” is 3 m Bo ...
Flow conditioning
Flow conditioning ensures that the “real world” environment closely resembles the “laboratory” environment for proper performance of inferential flowmeters like orifice, turbine, coriolis, ultrasonic etc.