oblique layer
(noun)
This layer is responsible for creating the motion that churns and physically breaks down the food.
Examples of oblique layer in the following topics:
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Muscularis
- Each layer has different structures and functions.
- The muscularis externa consists of an inner circular layer and a longitudinal outer muscular layer.
- Within the muscularis externa, the circular muscle layer prevents food from traveling backward, while the longitudinal layer shortens the tract.
- The layers are not truly longitudinal or circular, rather the layers of muscle are helical with different pitches.
- This is the inner oblique layer, and helps churn the chyme in the stomach.
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Microscopic Anatomy of the Stomach
- Like the other parts of the gastrointestinal tract, the stomach walls are made of a number of layers.
- From the inside to the outside, the first main layer is the mucosa.
- Under these muscle layers is the adventitia, layers of connective tissue continuous with the omenta.
- The muscularis externa is made up of three layers of smooth muscle.
- The innermost layer is obliquely-oriented: this is not seen in other parts of the digestive system.
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Animal Characterization Based on Features of Embryological Development
- Animals develop either two or three embryonic germs layers .
- Radially-symmetrical animals are diploblasts, developing two germ layers: an inner layer (endoderm) and an outer layer (ectoderm).
- Diploblasts have a non-living layer between the endoderm and ectoderm.
- Bilaterally-symmetrical animals are called triploblasts, developing three tissue layers: an inner layer (endoderm), an outer layer (ectoderm), and a middle layer (mesoderm).
- This spiral cleavage is due to the oblique angle of the cleavage.
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The Human Eye
- Middle Layer - composed of the choroid, ciliary body and iris.
- Innermost Layer - the retina, which can be seen with an instrument called the ophthalmoscope.
- The image passes through several layers of the eye, but happens in a way very similar to that of a convex lens.
- Each eye has six muscles; lateral rectus, medial rectus, inferior rectus, superior rectus, inferior oblique, and superior oblique.
- Layers of tissues with varying indices of refraction in the lens are shown here.
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Natural and Artificial Methods of Asexual Reproduction in Plants
- They include grafting, cutting, layering, and micropropagation.
- Both are cut at an oblique angle (any angle other than a right angle), placed in close contact with each other, and are then held together.
- Layering is a method in which a stem attached to the plant is bent and covered with soil .
- In some plants, a modified form of layering known as air layering is employed.
- In layering, a part of the stem is buried so that it forms a new plant.
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Horizontal Asymptotes and Limits at Infinity
- The asymptotes are computed using limits and are classified into horizontal, vertical and oblique depending on the orientation.
- They can be computed using limits and are classified into horizontal, vertical and oblique asymptotes depending on the orientation.
- Oblique asymptotes are diagonal lines so that the difference between the curve and the line approaches $0$ as $x$ tends toward $+ \infty$ or $- \infty$.
- More general type of asymptotes can be defined as the oblique asymptote case.
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Anterior Muscles
- They are continuous with the external oblique muscle of the abdomen.
- External Oblique – The external oblique is the largest and most superficial of the flat muscles.
- Internal Oblique – Lying deep to the external oblique, the internal oblique is smaller and thinner.
- Its fibers run perpendicular to the external oblique, improving the strength of the abdominal wall.
- Highlighted in orange, the external obliques lie inferior to the pectoral muscles
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Asymptotes
- There are three kinds of asymptotes: horizontal, vertical and oblique.
- An asymptote that is neither horizontal or vertical is an oblique (or slant) asymptote.
- A rational function has at most one horizontal or oblique asymptote, and possibly many vertical asymptotes.
- The graph of a function with a horizontal ($y=0$), vertical ($x=0$), and oblique asymptote (blue line).
- Explain when the asymptote of a rational function will be horizontal, oblique, or vertical
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The Law of Sines
- A right triangle contains a $90^{\circ}$ angle, while any other triangle is an oblique triangle.
- Solving an oblique triangle means finding the measurements of all three angles and all three sides.
- To solve an oblique triangle, use any pair of applicable ratios from the law of sines formula.
- The sides of this oblique triangle are labeled a, b, and c, and the angles are labeled $\alpha$, $\beta$, and $\gamma$.
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Marine Habitats
- Longshore currents flow parallel to the beaches, making waves break obliquely on the sand.
- Mudflats may be viewed geologically as exposed layers of bay mud, resulting from deposition of estuarine silts, clays and marine animal detritus.