释义 |
Definition of inextensible in English: inextensibleadjective ˌɪnɪkˈstɛnsɪb(ə)lˌɪnɛkˈstɛnsɪb(ə)lɪnɪkˈstɛnsɪbəl Unable to be stretched or drawn out in length. Example sentencesExamples - Abstract Thick filaments are generally thought to be effectively inextensible.
- Most biological hydraulic skeletons are cylindrical and their walls are reinforced by relatively inextensible fibers (usually collagen or chitin in animals, and cellulose in plants).
- All that is required is a spring balance or, better, an electronic strain gauge, against which the body-part of interest exerts force through a virtually inextensible wire or rigid lever system.
- Since amniote intromittent organs are hydrostatic, it follows that the wall of their erectile structures must be reinforced with inextensible fibers to prevent aneurysms.
- Wall tissue is extensible when collagen fibers are folded, but nearly inextensible when collagen fibers near full extension.
- The base of the stem was surrounded with an inextensible strap linked to a motorized dynamometer, allowing controlled basal bending.
- His decision turned on this question of whether the product was inextensible, according to what appears on page 254.
- The elastic properties of the chain are chosen to match the persistence length and torsional persistence length of DNA, with a large stretching modulus that essentially renders the chain inextensible.
- Root lengths were measured by aligning an inextensible cord with the roots and then taking measurements of the cord with a ruler.
- The formulation is idealised by an elastic-plastic relation that can explain the deformation patterns of inextensible steel reinforcements to that of highly extensible geosynthetics.
- This is consistent with the more general observation in the literature, that microtubules are almost inextensible, the compliance of cells being due primarily to filament bending or sliding between filaments.
- So one year later, in 1890, C.K. Welsh patented the design of a wheel rim with a lip and an outer inextensible cover.
- For example, a rubber band that is resilient at room temperature becomes leathery and relatively inextensible when cooled in a kitchen freezer.
- An electron cryomicroscopy study of analogous SPP1 portal protein complexes documented a change in curvature upon ring closure consistent with inextensible subunits.
Definition of inextensible in US English: inextensibleadjectiveɪnɪkˈstɛnsɪbəlinikˈstensibəl Unable to be stretched or drawn out in length. Example sentencesExamples - The formulation is idealised by an elastic-plastic relation that can explain the deformation patterns of inextensible steel reinforcements to that of highly extensible geosynthetics.
- Wall tissue is extensible when collagen fibers are folded, but nearly inextensible when collagen fibers near full extension.
- His decision turned on this question of whether the product was inextensible, according to what appears on page 254.
- The elastic properties of the chain are chosen to match the persistence length and torsional persistence length of DNA, with a large stretching modulus that essentially renders the chain inextensible.
- So one year later, in 1890, C.K. Welsh patented the design of a wheel rim with a lip and an outer inextensible cover.
- All that is required is a spring balance or, better, an electronic strain gauge, against which the body-part of interest exerts force through a virtually inextensible wire or rigid lever system.
- Root lengths were measured by aligning an inextensible cord with the roots and then taking measurements of the cord with a ruler.
- Since amniote intromittent organs are hydrostatic, it follows that the wall of their erectile structures must be reinforced with inextensible fibers to prevent aneurysms.
- Abstract Thick filaments are generally thought to be effectively inextensible.
- For example, a rubber band that is resilient at room temperature becomes leathery and relatively inextensible when cooled in a kitchen freezer.
- An electron cryomicroscopy study of analogous SPP1 portal protein complexes documented a change in curvature upon ring closure consistent with inextensible subunits.
- This is consistent with the more general observation in the literature, that microtubules are almost inextensible, the compliance of cells being due primarily to filament bending or sliding between filaments.
- Most biological hydraulic skeletons are cylindrical and their walls are reinforced by relatively inextensible fibers (usually collagen or chitin in animals, and cellulose in plants).
- The base of the stem was surrounded with an inextensible strap linked to a motorized dynamometer, allowing controlled basal bending.
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