释义 |
Definition of coarse-grained in English: coarse-grainedadjectiveˈkɔːsɡreɪndˌkɔrsˈɡreɪnd 1Coarse in texture or grain. Example sentencesExamples - Ordinary coarse-grained metals deform when parts of a grain slip past one another as extra planes of atoms, called dislocations, move through the material.
- These veins usually bear free coarse-grained, high-grade gold and produce most of the placers in the province.
- However, there is a general correlation between grain size and terrace height in medium- and coarse-grained sediments.
- The soup was outstanding - rich, thick, with a lovely, coarse-grained texture and a flavour of tomatoes overlain with a hint of what seemed like orange or carrot.
- The igneous rocks in it include a variety of types, ranging from fine-, medium-, and coarse-grained granite, to syenite, monzonite, diorite, and gabbro.
- Generally coarse-grained soils compact more readily than fine grained ones and hence the finer the particles the less maximum thickness of layer to be compacted.
- The coarse-grained, bivalve-rich floatstone layers intercalated with the ‘background’ slope facies are interpreted as storm deposits.
- A separation and drainage layer, of a coarse-grained material such as sand, can be constructed to isolate the unsealed pavement from the underlying saturated soils.
- They appeared to be of a kind of coarse-grained sandstone composition, probably one of the basal rock layers that contained many kinds of trace fossils, but unlikely to have any fossil fish remains.
- It's very finely-layered and very coarse-grained rock and really doesn't look like anything we've seen at the site before.
- The lower part of the section consists of cross-bedded, fine to medium sandstone, with scattered coarse-to very coarse-grained particles.
- Thick sheet sandstone units containing upright trees represent the product of single large-scale flood events that deposited coarse-grained sediment across the proximal interchannel region, locally burying vegetation.
- The percentage of coarse-grained materials in the soil affects the strength and compressibility of the wall.
- In our case, the reaction of interest is simply the unimolecular folding/unfolding of the coarse-grained protein molecules in their finite-concentration solution environment.
- One learns to look along the perimeters of fossil woodpiles, where the sediments still demonstrate the appropriate coarse-grained textures.
- 1.1 (of photographic film) having a noticeably grainy appearance.
Example sentencesExamples - When miniature cameras first appeared, Rodinal fell out of favor because the early 35 mm films were very coarse-grained.
- Since it was produced for television, Scenes from a Marriage was shot on 16 mm, and the DVD transfer has the coarse-grained look inherent in the small film stock.
- 1.2 Coarse in manner or speech.
- 1.3 Rough rather than detailed or precise.
a very coarse-grained approximation of what is actually going on Example sentencesExamples - In order to hide the internal application model, the endpoints must expose coarse-grained interfaces that reduce the number of interactions.
- Avoid the more massive coarse-grained conglomerates.
- The heterogeneous computer is a unique system for exploring fine and coarse-grained parallelism in computing.
- Note that our coarse-grained model actually makes no hypothesis concerning the origin of the saddle-like inclusions.
- There are also many examples of composite models, which include aspects of both full-atom and coarse-grained techniques.
- In general it will not be possible to get a 100% performance increase per node, unless the problem is coarse grained and requires little synchronization.
- The use of physical interactions in all-atom representations incurs a large computational cost when compared to more coarse-grained, or homology-based models.
- We adopt a coarse-grained description of the protein by which each amino acid is reduced to its C [ beta ] atom.
- Enterprises that rely on coarse-grained security risk potential security breaches.
- A theory must thus balance the respects in which concepts are fine-grained and the respects in which they are coarse-grained.
- The second movement is wilful and could irritate but the coarse-grained double bass solo at the start of the third movement shows Mitropoulos never prettifies Mahler.
- Define a product taxonomy that classifies products into coarse-grained classes and sub-classes.
- In this case the coarse-grained geometry can provide a guide to extracting useful information from an inherently approximate calculation.
- One approach to overcoming these two simulation problems has been to abandon the molecular-level detail and instead adopt a coarse-grained description.
- In this article, we have introduced a new coarse-grained approach for modeling protein stability in concentrated solution environments.
- The question then arises as to whether causation requires coarse-grained or fine-grained individuation.
- Relatively coarse-grained abilities can be extremely reliable in an environment that doesn't demand refined discrimination.
- It is based on a coarse-grained elastic network model.
- A fuller understanding of such phenomena is likely to be of importance if more coarse-grained simulations of ion flux through channels are to accurately predict physiological data.
- Thus, to make any progress one has to resort to more coarse-grained models.
Definition of coarse-grained in US English: coarse-grainedadjectiveˌkôrsˈɡrāndˌkɔrsˈɡreɪnd 1Coarse in texture or grain. Example sentencesExamples - The soup was outstanding - rich, thick, with a lovely, coarse-grained texture and a flavour of tomatoes overlain with a hint of what seemed like orange or carrot.
- However, there is a general correlation between grain size and terrace height in medium- and coarse-grained sediments.
- In our case, the reaction of interest is simply the unimolecular folding/unfolding of the coarse-grained protein molecules in their finite-concentration solution environment.
- Generally coarse-grained soils compact more readily than fine grained ones and hence the finer the particles the less maximum thickness of layer to be compacted.
- The igneous rocks in it include a variety of types, ranging from fine-, medium-, and coarse-grained granite, to syenite, monzonite, diorite, and gabbro.
- One learns to look along the perimeters of fossil woodpiles, where the sediments still demonstrate the appropriate coarse-grained textures.
- These veins usually bear free coarse-grained, high-grade gold and produce most of the placers in the province.
- Thick sheet sandstone units containing upright trees represent the product of single large-scale flood events that deposited coarse-grained sediment across the proximal interchannel region, locally burying vegetation.
- The lower part of the section consists of cross-bedded, fine to medium sandstone, with scattered coarse-to very coarse-grained particles.
- The percentage of coarse-grained materials in the soil affects the strength and compressibility of the wall.
- It's very finely-layered and very coarse-grained rock and really doesn't look like anything we've seen at the site before.
- A separation and drainage layer, of a coarse-grained material such as sand, can be constructed to isolate the unsealed pavement from the underlying saturated soils.
- They appeared to be of a kind of coarse-grained sandstone composition, probably one of the basal rock layers that contained many kinds of trace fossils, but unlikely to have any fossil fish remains.
- Ordinary coarse-grained metals deform when parts of a grain slip past one another as extra planes of atoms, called dislocations, move through the material.
- The coarse-grained, bivalve-rich floatstone layers intercalated with the ‘background’ slope facies are interpreted as storm deposits.
- 1.1 (of photographic film) having a noticeably grainy appearance.
Example sentencesExamples - Since it was produced for television, Scenes from a Marriage was shot on 16 mm, and the DVD transfer has the coarse-grained look inherent in the small film stock.
- When miniature cameras first appeared, Rodinal fell out of favor because the early 35 mm films were very coarse-grained.
- 1.2 Coarse in manner or speech.
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