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Placement of the valve in smaller conduits will result in residual gradients, while placement in larger conduits are associated with failure of leaflet coaptation.
The difference in crystal size between the micritic and sparitic limestones will affect the formation of such pathways (larger crystals may create fewer and larger conduits) and this is expected to be more important for the long-term denudation than the differences in activation energies.
One of the key features involved in the maturation of blood vessels into larger conduits is a remodeling of the vessel by monocyte/macrophages.
Secondly, more time is given for bubble nucleation to occur in larger conduits compared with smaller ones due to the lower ice propagation rate.
Similar(56)
This movement will cause the path to be enlarged by melting, causing faster flow, more melting, a larger conduit, and so on until all the water is released quite suddenly.
Thus, there is higher fluid velocity retardation in the larger conduit.
The RF (i.e. apparent viscosity as discussed above) is higher in the larger conduit than in the smaller conduit.
For a discharge rate of higher than 10 m3/s, a larger conduit results in a leftward shift of the solution curves.
This parameter tells us whether the solution viscosity is sufficient to selectively slow down flow in the larger conduit with respect to the smaller one.
For this particular 6/4 concentration ratio, the maximum contrast between the two conduits is obtained at a point where the retardation factor is still low in the small conduit, but near the maximum in the larger conduit.
Using Eq. 3 this become RF_{text{s}} < RF_{text{l}} which means (using the definition of Eq. 4) that to reduce flow in the larger conduit we need to have the condition S > 1.
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