granules

listen to the pronunciation of granules
Englisch - Englisch
Small cylindrical-shaped pieces of plastics material made by the extrusion process and used in moulding or sintering processes
similar to dusts, but with still larger particles In a granule, the chemical becomes available to the living plant by breaking down the granule or by releasing the active ingredient Granules are usually spread with a lawn spreader Weather and moisture provide the slower chemical-release action
Ceramic coated colored crushed rock that is applied to the exposed surface of roofing products
Crushed rock coated with ceramic material, applied to the exposed suface of asphalt roofing products to add color and reduce UV degradion
Small bright features of the photosphere of the sun, covering 50 to 60 percent of the surface They have been likened in appearance to rice grains
Crushed rock coated with ceramic material, applied to the exposed surface of asphalt roofing products to add color and reduce ultraviolet degradation Copper compounds added to these help make them algae resistant
Ceramic-coated colored crushed rock that is applied to the exposed surface of asphalt roofing products
Same as Crumbs only aggregates are relatively non-porous Massive – Massive soil acts as single grains that are cohesive yet do not aggregated into structures such as crumbs or blocks
the pellet form that raw plastic is delivered in
Ceramic-coated colored crushed rock that is applied to the exposed surface of asphalt roofing products IKO makes its own granules at our Madoc, Ontario, and Ashcroft, British Columbia granule plants Granules protect the asphalt coating from the sun's rays, add color to the product and enhance fire resistance
granule
A tiny grain, a small particle
granule
a small mark in the photosphere of the sun caused by convection currents. See also
granule
A fragment of rock etc., larger than a sand grain and smaller than a pebble
granule
A small structure in a cell
granule
a small grain or particle
granule
{n} a small grain, a compact particle
granule
{i} small grain, small grain-like formation
granule
small, roundish patch of dark nebulosity that may be the precursor of a protostar
granule
(also referred to as Mineral or Ceramic Granule) opaque, natural, or synthetically colored aggregate commonly used to surface cap sheets, shingles, and other granule-surfaced roof coverings
granule
opaque, natural or synthetically colored aggregate commonly used to surface cap sheets, shingles, and other granule-surfaced roof coverings (Mineral or Ceramic)
granule
An information granule is a term used by some fuzzy logic experts to describe a fuzzy set of objects which can be seen as a unit in fuzzy logic calculations
granule
A natural soil aggregate or ped of relatively low porosity See also soil structure and soil structure shapes
granule
The fundamental grouping of members of a domain (system) into an object manipulated as a unit
granule
A roughly circular region on the Sun whose bright center indicates hot gases rising to the surface, and whose dark edges indicate cooled gases that are descending towards the interior Individual granules appear and disappear on time scales of about 5 minutes and are typically about 1000 km more!
granule
A small aggregate, naturally or synthetically colored, used to surface cap sheets, shingles, and other granule-surfaced roof coverings
granule
A little grain a small particle; a pellet
granule
granulus = [Latin] small grain, from granum = [Latin] grain Granules are regions where hot material comes to the solar surface from below All granules and intergranular lanes together are called granulation A typical granule is about 600 miles (1000 km) across, and the centers of two adjacent granules are typically about 900 miles (1400 km) apart Granules appear bright incontinuum images Granules typically live about 5 to 10 minutes before they fade away You can see granules in the high-resolution continuum image and in the very-high-resolution continuum image
granule
The smallest aggregation of data that is independently managed (e g , described, inventoried, retrievable)
granule
a tiny grain
granule
a small mark in the photosphere of the sun caused by convection currents
granule
granulus = [Latin] small grain, from granum = [Latin] grain Granules are regions where hot material comes to the solar surface (the photosphere from below All granules and intergranular lanes together are called granulation A typical granule is about 600 miles (1000 km) across, and the centers of two adjacent granules are typically about 900 miles (1400 km) apart Granules appear bright incontinuum images and are also visible in dopplergrams Granules typically last about 5 to 10 minutes before they fade away You can see granules in the high-resolution continuum image and in the very-high-resolution continuum image
granule
Granules are small round pieces of something. She was spooning coffee granules into cups. a small hard piece of something (granulum , from granum; GRAIN)
granule
A subdivision of the AATSR image In general 1 granule corresponds to 32 image rows, although the Summary Quality ADS is based on a 512 row granule In general, a granule is a group of consecutive records in a Measurement Data Set; the number of such records is instrument dependent Thus for the AATSR full resolution products, the granule is 32 records It is intended to be the minimum increment used to define the limits of a child product With the exception of the Summary Quality ADS, all Annotation Data Sets in the AATSR products contain 1 record per granule
granules

    Türkische aussprache

    gränyılz

    Aussprache

    /ˈgranyəlz/ /ˈɡrænjəlz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'gran-(")yü(&)l ] (noun.) 1652. Late Latin granulum, diminutive of Latin granum grain.
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