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spheroid

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spheroid

(sfeer -oid) See ellipsoid.
Collins Dictionary of Astronomy © Market House Books Ltd, 2006

spheroid

[′sfir‚ȯid]
(mathematics)
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
Figure 2 gives the scattering cross sections of spheroid quartz particles with different sizes.
The impenetrable spheroid is excited by a primary vector source field, for example, a magnetic dipole m for the purposes of this project, having an arbitrary orientation that yields
In the case of encapsulated spheroids, the major mass transport limitation is determined by the spheroid itself and the matrix permeability can be ignored [56, 57].
To prevent cell contamination during the experiments, the cell spheroids were fixed.
Earlier research found that lung spheroid cells showed powerful regenerative properties when applied to a mouse model of lung fibrosis.
In Krajcik and McLenitham [11] and Tee [14] equivalent readaptations of (1) are presented as well, verified in 1714 by Roger Cotes, for the situation where c > a = b = r > 0, as it is seen in (3), which is a particular case of ellipsoid of revolution, denominated as prolate spheroid, presenting the result of [sin.sup.-1] given in radians.
Observed microscopically, spheroid cells were tightly packed together as shown in [Figure 5]c and [Figure 5]d.
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