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Free sign up'empirical value' is a correct and usable term in written English.
It is used to refer to an observed measure that is based on experience or experiment, as opposed to an abstract or theoretical measure. For example, "The empirical value of this new drug was measured by tracking the health of participants over the course of the trial."
Exact(60)
In this research, 0.4 is chosen as an empirical value.
An empirical value τ3=0.26655 is good enough for almost all the scenes.
An empirical value of 0.1 is used as the clustering bandwidth d.
The empirical value of QGF index for paleo oil pools is greater than 4.
The Equivalent First Discharge Headway (EFDH) is proposed to replace the current empirical value in traffic capacity calculation.
The m-k values define shear transferring capacity of the profiled steel deck, where m represents the empirical value of mechanical interlocking between concrete and profiled steel decking, and k stands for the empirical value for friction between them.
We set the exogenous value of δ to the empirical value observed in each cell of the partition.
The relationship was summarized, and the empirical value of H was used to evaluate the fracture width.
An empirical value of β = ~ 0.1 has been sometimes used for ocean tide modeling (Ray, 1998; Kantha and Clayson, 2000).
If the empirical value is within the range given in the guide then nutrition is considered adequate.
The empirical value of the paper lays in the presented and discussed intermediate results from the CIMULACT project.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com