ubiquitous
(adjective)
Being everywhere at once: omnipresent.
Examples of ubiquitous in the following topics:
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Introduction to normal distribution
- The symmetric, unimodal, bell curve is ubiquitous throughout statistics.
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Psychrophilic Crenarchaeota
- The environments they inhabit are ubiquitous on Earth, as a large fraction of our planetary surface experiences temperatures lower than 15°C.
- DNA sequences from Crenarchaea have also been found in soil and freshwater environments, suggesting that this phylum is ubiquitous to most environments.
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Environmental Diversity of Microbes
- Microbes are ubiquitous on Earth and their diversity and abundance are determined by the biogeographical habitat they occupy.
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Introduction to Motors and Pumps
- Motors are ubiquitous.
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Acidobacteria
- The members of this phylum are acidophilic, physiologically diverse, and are ubiquitous in soils.
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How businesses waste water
- Acting as if supplies are ubiquitous and renewable and don't need to be managed,
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Microbial Environments and Microenvironments
- Microorganisms are ubiquitous despite the fact that the planet is host to extraordinarily diverse environments.
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Betaproteobacteria
- The Burkholderia (previously part of Pseudomonas) genus name refers to a group of virtually ubiquitous gram-negative, motile, obligately aerobic rod-shaped bacteria including both animal/human (see above) and plant pathogens as well as some environmentally important species.
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Lasers
- When lasers were invented in 1960, they were called "a solution looking for a problem. " Nowadays, lasers are ubiquitous, finding utility in thousands of highly varied applications in every section of modern society, including consumer electronics, information technology, science, medicine, industry, law enforcement, entertainment, and the military.
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The Hall Effect
- The Hall effect is a rather ubiquitous phenomenon in physics, and appears not only in conductors, but semiconductors, ionized gases, and in quantum spin among other applications.