Examples of condenser in the following topics:
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- This type of microscope contains a special condenser that scatters light and causes it to reflect off the specimen at an angle.
- Rather than illuminating the sample with a filled cone of light, the condenser is designed to form a hollow cone of light.
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- Two components are common to all types of freeze-dryers: a vacuum pump to reduce the ambient gas pressure in a vessel containing the substance to be dried, and a condenser to remove the moisture by condensation on a surface cooled to −40º to −80ºC.
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- The microscope contains special condensers that throw light "out of phase" causing it to pass through the object at different speeds.
- A phase ring in condenser allows a cylinder of light to pass through it while still in phase.
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- Polyketides are usually biosynthesized through the decarboxylative condensation of malonyl-CoA derived extender units in a similar process to fatty acid biosynthesis (a Claisen condensation).
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- They are made up of a shell of protein that has a highly hydrophobic inner surface, making it impermeable to water (and stopping water vapor from condensing inside), but permeable to most gases.
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- Like the Planctomycetes species, Verrucomicrobia possess a compartmentalised cell plan with a condensed nucleoid and the ribosomes pirellulosome (enclosed by the intracytoplasmic membrane) and paryphoplasm compartment between the intracytoplasmic membrane and cytoplasmic membrane.
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- The microscope is a bright field light microscope with the addition of the following elements: a polarizer between the light source and the condenser, a DIC beam-splitting prism, a DIC beam-combining prism, and an analyzer .
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- Using this approach, lipids may be divided into eight categories: fatty acids, glycerolipids, glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids, saccharolipids, and polyketides (derived from condensation of ketoacyl subunits); and sterol lipids and prenol lipids (derived from condensation of isoprene subunits ).
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- Sludge can also be incinerated, or condensed, heated to disinfect it, and reused as fertilizer.
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- These so-called cold shock proteins are thought to help the cell survive in temperatures lower than optimum growth temperature, by contrast with heat shock proteins, which help the cell survive in temperatures greater than the optimum, possibly by condensation of the chromosome and organization of the prokaryotic nucleoid.