Examples of fast in the following topics:
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- Skeletal muscle fibers can be further subdivided into slow
and fast-twitch subtypes depending on their metabolism and corresponding
action.
- Fast-twitch fibers are good for rapid movements like jumping
or sprinting that require fast muscle contractions of short duration.
- Unlike
slow-twitch fibers, fast twitch-fibers rely on anaerobic respiration (glycolysis
alone) to produce two molecules of ATP per molecule of glucose.
- Muscles controlling eye movements contain
high numbers of fast-twitch fibers (~85% fast-twitch).
- While there is evidence that each person has a unique proportion of fast-twitch
versus slow-twitch muscles determined by genetics, more research is required.
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- Rate is the speed of speaking in words per minute from slow to fast, with normal rate averaging about 125 words per minute.
- Rate is how fast or slow a person speaks.
- For example, if you are experiencing joy, you will speak at a fast rate compared to a speaker who is expressing surprise who will speak at a much faster rate.
- Finally, ask yourself if you are speaking too fast because you are nervous!
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- How to determine the rate law for a mechanism with a fast initial step.
- Combine elementary reaction rate constants to obtain equilibrium coefficients and construct overall reaction rate laws for reactions with both slow and fast initial steps
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- A tempo marking that is a word or phrase gives you the composer's idea of how fast the music should feel.
- How fast a piece of music feels depends on several different things, including the texture and complexity of the music, how often the beat gets divided into faster notes, and how fast the beats themselves are (the metronome marking).
- Tempo indications such as "Not too fast", "With energy", "Calmly", or "March tempo" give a good idea of how fast the music should feel.
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- Several metabolic adjustments occur during fasting, and some diagnostic tests are used to determine a fasting state.
- For example, a person is assumed to be fasting after 8–12 hours.
- A diagnostic fast refers to prolonged fasting (from 8–72 hours depending on age) conducted under observation for investigation of a problem, usually hypoglycemia.
- Finally, extended fasting has been recommended as therapy for various conditions by health professionals of most cultures, throughout history, from ancient to modern.
- During fasting, post-absorptive state, fatty acid oxidation contributes proportionately more to energy expenditure than does carbohydrate oxidation.
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- During the second agricultural revolution, U.S. agricultural productivity rose fast, especially due to the development of new technologies.
- Between 1950 and 2000, during the so called "second agricultural revolution of modern times," U.S. agricultural productivity rose fast, especially due to the development of new technologies (the greatest period of agricultural productivity growth in the U.S. occurred from World War 2 until the 1970s).
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- Although trained musicians will generally agree that a particular sound is reedy, thin, or full, there are no hard-and-fast, right-or-wrong answers to this exercise.
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- In contrast, cell layouts promote JIT goals by featuring unidirectional product flows, high visibility, and fast throughput times.
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- The second component, calculability, refers to the quantifiable objectives of fast-food chains.
- Workers in these organizations are judged by how fast they accomplish tasks instead of the quality of work they do.
- Another example could be McUniversities, which features modularized curricula, delivering degrees in a fast-track pick-and-mix fashion to satisfy all tastes.
- He explains it occurs when a culture possesses the characteristics of a fast-food restaurant.
- Where Max Weber used the model of the bureaucracy to represent the direction of this changing society, Ritzer sees the fast-food restaurant as having become a more representative contemporary paradigm.
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- The other cooling regmine is called fast cooling where $\gamma_c < \gamma_m$Is this regime for the largest energies $\gamma>\gamma_m>\gamma_c$, Eq. 6.61 holds.
- Both of the distributions either for slow or fast cooling vanish for
- Well into the fast cooling regime we have $\gamma_\mathrm{cut-off} \approx \gamma_c$.
- Figs. 6.4 and 6.5 depict the spectrum for slow and fast cooling.
- Complete synchrotron spectrum for an age greater than the maximum cooling time (fast cooling).