Examples of frigorific mixture in the following topics:
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- Fahrenheit himself used a mixture of ice, water, and ammonium chloride (a salt) at a 1:1:1 ratio.
- This is a frigorific mixture, which stabilizes its temperature automatically; the stable temperature of this mixture was defined as 0 °F (-17.78 °C).
- The second determining point, 32 degrees, was a mixture of just ice and water at a 1:1 ratio.
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- White light, in particular, is a fairly uniform mixture of all visible wavelengths.
- Sunlight, considered to be white, actually appears to be a bit yellow because of its mixture of wavelengths, but it does contain all visible wavelengths.
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- Third, the mixture is less orderly, or to use another term, less structured.
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- There is considerable speculation as to why the observable universe is apparently composed almost entirely of matter (as opposed to a mixture of matter and antimatter), whether there exist other places that are almost entirely composed of antimatter instead, and what sorts of technology might be possible if antimatter could be harnessed.
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- In astrophysical contexts, there is generally a mixture of different elements.
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- These examples are of waves that are similar. illustrates that when non-identical waves superimpose, the outcome is a mixture of constructive and destructive interference.
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- The quality of a tone depends on its mixture of harmonics.
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- Since green and blue have relatively short wavelengths, you see a mixture of these colors in the sky, and the sky appears to be blue.
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- All versions of the periodic table include only chemical elements, rather than mixtures, compounds, or subatomic particles.
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- At this point, there is a mixture of both ice and water.