Examples of I-band in the following topics:
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- The I-band is spanned by the titin
molecule connecting the Z-line with a myosin filament.
- The region between two
neighboring, parallel I-bands is known as the A-band and contains the entire
length of single myosin myofilaments.
- At the level of the sliding
filament model, expansion and contraction only occurs within the I and H-bands.
- During contraction myosin ratchets along actin myofilaments compressing the I and H bands.
- During stretching this tension is release and the I and H bands expand.
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- These are also called "undoped semiconductors" or "i-type semiconductors. "
- Most of the states with low energy (closer to the nucleus) are occupied, up to a particular band called the valence band.
- In semiconductors, only a few electrons exist in the conduction band just above the valence band, and an insulator has almost no free electrons.
- In semiconductors, the band gap is small, allowing electrons to populate the conduction band.
- As the energy in the system increases, electrons leave the valence band and enter the conduction band.
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- A red car stopped at the intersection, and the parents walked beside the band.
- I love chocolate cake with rainbow sprinkles and I eat it all the time for breakfast.
- While I love him dearly, I will get rid of my pterodactyl for the sake of the community.
- I love my pet pterodactyl, but since he's been eating neighborhood cats, I will donate him to the city zoo.
- A red car stopped at the intersection, and the parents walked beside the band.
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- Absorption bands associated with C=O bond stretching are usually very strong because a large change in the dipole takes place in that mode.
- i) Stretching frequencies are higher than corresponding bending frequencies.
- The general regions of the infrared spectrum in which various kinds of vibrational bands are observed are outlined in the following chart.
- Note that the blue colored sections above the dashed line refer to stretching vibrations, and the green colored band below the line encompasses bending vibrations.
- Absorption bands in the 4000 to 1450 cm-1 region are usually due to stretching vibrations of diatomic units, and this is sometimes called the group frequency region.
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- To investigate force standards and cause and effect, get two identical rubber bands.
- Hang one rubber band vertically on a hook.
- Find a small household item that could be attached to the rubber band using a paper clip, and use this item as a weight to investigate the stretch of the rubber band.
- Measure the amount of stretch produced in the rubber band with one, two, and four of these (identical) items suspended from the rubber band.
- A force is that which can cause an object with mass to change its velocity, i.e., to accelerate, or which can cause a flexible object to deform.
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- Such a function is said to be band limited; it contains frequencies only in the band $[-2\pi f_s, 2\pi f_s]$ .
- Clearly a band limited function has a finite inverse Fourier transform
- $\displaystyle{f(t) = \frac{1}{2\pi} \int _{-2\pi f_s} ^{2 \pi f_s} F(\omega) e^{-i\omega t}~d\omega. }$
- $\displaystyle{F(\omega) = \sum _{n = -\infty} ^{\infty} \phi _n e^{i\omega n/2f_s}}$
- $\displaystyle{\phi _n = \frac{1}{4\pi f_s} \int _{-2\pi f_s} ^{2 \pi f_s} F(\omega) e^{-i\omega n/2f_s} ~ d\omega. }$
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- Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
- They went on to become the biggest-selling rock band of all time.
- Meanwhile in the United States, bands that exemplified the counterculture were becoming mainstream commercial successes.
- Bands such as The Velvet Underground came out of this underground music scene and were predominantly centered at artist Andy Warhol's legendary Factory.
- The 1960s also saw the rise in protest songs, with Phil Ochs's "I Ain't Marching Anymore" and Country Joe and the Fish's "I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-to-Die-Rag" among the many anti-war anthems that were important to the era.
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- According to band theory, a conductor is simply a material that has its valence band and conduction band overlapping, allowing electrons to flow through the material with minimal applied voltage.
- In solid-state physics, the band structure of a solid describes those ranges of energy, called energy bands, that an electron within the solid may have ("allowed bands") and ranges of energy called band gaps ("forbidden bands"), which it may not have.
- Band theory models the behavior of electrons in solids by postulating the existence of energy bands.
- On the left, a conductor (described as a metal here) has its empty bands and filled bands overlapping, allowing excited electrons to flow through the empty band with little push (voltage).
- Apply the concept of band theory to explain the behavior of conductors.
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- After the artist is signed by a record label, then that organization provides a number of services, including financing music recording and production; organizing concert tours; producing and selling merchandise; marketing the band's creation; promoting the band through exposure on mass media; and more.
- The Apple's iTune store successfully implements this model in the twenty-first century.
- Other sources of income may include touring, selling band paraphernalia, endorsements, and fan clubs.
- According to Ulrich, "The argument I hear a lot, that music should be free, must then mean the musicians should work for free.
- The band Radiohead tested this model during the debut of their seventh album "Only in Rainbows. " The band alienated themselves from their record label, EMI, and offered the album solely from their website Radiohead.com.
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- The following text, adapted from Creating Value for Customers by William Band, describes the typical concerns associated with workplace change.
- This can lead to employees wanting excessive details and other procrastination techniques (i.e. paralysis by analysis).