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layer |
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layer(1) One of several "drawing boards" or "canvasses" for creating elements in a picture. See layers. layer 1. one of four or more levels of vegetation defined in ecological studies: the ground or moss layer, the field or herb layer, the shrub layer, and one or more tree layers 2. a laying hen 3. Horticulture a. a shoot or branch rooted during layering b. a plant produced as a result of layering layer [′lāยทər] (computer science) One of the divisions within which components or functions are isolated in a computer system with layered architecture or a communications system with layered protocols. (geology) A tabular body of rock, ice, sediment, or soil lying parallel to the supporting surface and distinctly limited above and below. (geophysics) One of several strata of ionized air, some of which exist only during the daytime, occurring at altitudes between 30 and 250 miles (50 and 400 kilometers); the layers reflect radio waves at certain frequencies and partially absorb others. (metallurgy) The stratum of weld metal consisting of one or more passes and lying parallel to the welding surface.
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In 2001, Motorola developed a technique that places a spongy layer between gallium arsenide and silicon on the same wafer. Without a complex of tree branches to slowly drip down, a spongy layer to soak into, raindrops land on the side of a building or on a parking lot and stream straight to the gutter. In 2001, Motorola developed a technique that places a spongy layer between gallium arsenide and silicon on the same wafer. |
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