crossing
(noun)
The junction of the four arms of a cruciform church.
Examples of crossing in the following topics:
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The Cross Product
- The cross product of two vectors is a vector which is perpendicular to both of the original vectors.
- The cross product is a binary operation of two three-dimensional vectors.
- If the two original vectors are parallel to each other, the cross product will be zero.
- The cross product is denoted as $a \times b = c$.
- The geometric method of finding the cross product uses the magnitudes of the vectors and the sine of the angle between them:
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The Punnett Square Approach for a Monohybrid Cross
- Mendel performed seven monohybrid crosses involving contrasting traits for each characteristic.
- Recall that Mendel's pea-plant characteristics behaved in the same way in reciprocal crosses.
- Called the test cross , this technique is still used by plant and animal breeders.
- In a test cross, the dominant-expressing organism is crossed with an organism that is homozygous recessive for the same characteristic.
- This cross produces F1 heterozygotes with a yellow phenotype.
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Mendelian Crosses
- Mendel's crosses involved mating two true-breeding organisms that had different traits to produce new generations of pea plants.
- Mendel performed crosses, which involved mating two true-breeding individuals that have different traits .
- Plants used in first-generation crosses were called P0, or parental generation one, plants.
- Mendel collected the seeds belonging to the P0 plants that resulted from each cross and grew them the following season.
- In one of his experiments on inheritance patterns, Mendel crossed plants that were true-breeding for violet flower color with plants true-breeding for white flower color (the P generation).
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Cross-Functional Teams
- A cross-functional team comprises people from different departments and with special areas of expertise working to achieve a common goal.
- Many business activities require cross-functional collaboration to achieve successful outcomes.
- This can make communication between members of a cross-functional team difficult and subject to misunderstanding.
- Cross-functional teams may be more likely than less complex teams to have members with divergent perspectives on how work gets done.
- Perceived differences in relative importance or credibility can undermine the effectiveness of cross-functional collaboration.
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Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand
- The cross-price elasticity of demand shows the relationship between two goods or services.
- Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand (EA,B) is calculated with the following formula:
- The value of the cross-price elasticity for complementary goods will thus be negative .
- A positive cross-price elasticity value indicates that the two goods are substitutes.
- In the case of perfect substitutes, the cross elasticity of demand will be equal to positive infinity .
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Hatching and Cross-Hatching
- Hatching and cross-hatching are artistic techniques used to create tonal, shading, and textural effects by drawing closely spaced parallel lines.
- Hatching and cross-hatching are artistic techniques used to create tonal, shading and textural effects by drawing closely spaced parallel lines.
- Cross-hatch lines are used to provide additional tone and texture and can be oriented in any direction, often overlapping each other to create heavily shaded areas.
- Multiple layers of cross-hatch lines can give rich and varied shading to objects by manipulating the pressure of the drawing tool to create a large range of values.
- Albrecht Dürer uses hatching and cross-hatching in both the background and foreground of this image.
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Control of Muscle Tension
- Muscle tension is influenced by the number of cross-bridges that can be formed.
- In individual muscle fibers, the amount of tension produced depends primarily on the amount of cross-bridges formed, which is influenced by the cross-sectional area of the muscle fiber and the frequency of neural stimulation.
- The number of cross-bridges formed between actin and myosin determine the amount of tension that a muscle fiber can produce.
- Cross-bridges can only form where thick and thin filaments overlap, allowing myosin to bind to actin.
- If more cross-bridges are formed, more myosin will pull on actin and more tension will be produced.
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ATP and Muscle Contraction
- ATP is critical for muscle contractions because it breaks the myosin-actin cross-bridge, freeing the myosin for the next contraction.
- As soon as the actin-binding sites are uncovered, the high-energy myosin head bridges the gap, forming a cross-bridge.
- After the power stroke, ADP is released, but the cross-bridge formed is still in place.
- ATP can then attach to myosin, which allows the cross-bridge cycle to start again; further muscle contraction can occur.
- The cross-bridge muscle contraction cycle, which is triggered by Ca2+ binding to the actin active site, is shown.
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Mendel's Law of Independent Assortment
- The independent assortment of genes can be illustrated by the dihybrid cross: a cross between two true-breeding parents that express different traits for two characteristics.
- For more complex crosses, the forked-line and probability methods are preferred.
- For a trihybrid cross, the F2 phenotypic ratio is 27:9:9:9:3:3:3:1.
- The forked-line method can be used to analyze a trihybrid cross.
- This dihybrid cross of pea plants involves the genes for seed color and texture.
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Switching Parties
- For these reasons, it is fairly uncommon for a Member of Congress to cross over parties, but it is not unheard of.
- A member might switch parties, or "cross the floor," for a number of reasons.
- Crossing over can cause difficulties.
- For example, when Ben Nighthorse Campbell crossed to the Republican party after being elected as a Democratic Senator, much of his Congressional staff quit.
- Senator Lieberman was a Democrat, then crossed over as an Independent, then endorsed a Republican presidential candidate.