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The optimal destroying conditions were determined with a lab-scale facility, then designed and manufactured a pilot plant facility of 30 kg/h capacity.
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This was at a time when further education staff were under attack from aggressive managers trying to destroy conditions of service.
So enthusiastic members of the audience start to clap faster to raise the noise level, increasing the variability in clapping rates and destroying the conditions for synchronization.
For America, the goal must be to destroy the conditions that allowed Afghanistan to play host to terrorism.
The problem is not that Kurzel cuts the words, which is his absolute right, but that he destroys the conditions from which they might conceivably have sprung.
Once the slightest trace of vorticity is present, it destroys the conditions on which the proof of Thomson's theorem depends.
In his famous last comments on the last page of Major Trends Scholem acknowledges that modernity destroyed the conditions for mysticism as we knew it historically but he acknowledges it could indeed rise in a different guise in the future.
The thrust of these no-go results is that straightforward constructions of plausible models for composite systems destroy regularity conditions (ortho-coherence in the case of the Foulis-Randall result, orthomodularity and the covering law in that of Aerts' result) that have widely been used to underwrite reconstructions of the usual quantum-mechanical formalism.
A single player lacking a valid PD matrix destroys the conditions for a Prisoner's Dilemma, so between any two players, PD games themselves are fewer still (3% in this case).
This is the problem of 'Life on the scales' whereby cells are damned if they simply grow (since they risk being destroyed if conditions turn bad) and damned if they eschew growth, for example, to sporulate (since they risk being out-competed by other, growing, cells if conditions remain good) [ 6].
This is the problem of 'Life on the scales' whereby cells are damned if they simply grow (since they risk being destroyed if conditions turn bad) and damned if they eschew growth, for example, to sporulate (since they risk being out-competed by other, growing, cells if conditions remain good) {Norris, 2012 51099}.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com