62 résultats pour "polarité"
- POLAR
- Polar Bear.
- Polar Bear - biology.
- Oso polar.
- Mars Polar Lander (sonde spatiale) - astronomie.
- Tundra y desiertos polares - geographia.
- Tundra, Polar Deserts, and Ice - geography.
- Climas polares - geographia.
-
-
PACES 2011-2012
UE1
ED2 - Liaison chimique et thermochimie
La liaison
Exercice 1 :
Déterminer la géométrie et la polarité des molécules suivantes : CH4, CH3Cl, CCl4, SO2 et SO3.
2 Exercice 9 : Soient les équilibres 1/ Ag + (aq) + Cl - (aq) AgCl (s) ∆H 1 = -56 kJ.mol -1 2/ C (graphite) + H 2O (g) CO (g) + H 2 (g) ∆H 2 = +132 kJ.mol -1 3/ HCOOEt (liq) + H 2O (liq) HCOOH (liq) + EtOH (liq) ∆H 3 = 0 kJ.mol -1 Indiquer le sens de déplacement des équilibres en f onction des modifications suivantes: Eq...
-
Bears.
American black bears live in Canada, the United States, and northern Mexico. Scientists think there maybe as many as 700,000 black bears in the United States. American black bears eat grasses, berries,acorns, and walnuts. BROWN BEAR Brown bears have fur that is light or dark brown. They also have a big hump on their shoulders. Theirsnout is turned upward. Brown bears live in Asia, Europe, and North America. Grizzly bears are a kind ofbrown bear. Brown bears are among the largest bears. Large mal...
- Polar Climates - geography.
-
Meteorology.
to find the corresponding relative humidity and dew-point temperature. III SPECIAL METEOROLOGICAL INSTRUMENTS Meteorologists have developed several sophisticated instruments that measure multiple physical characteristics of the air simultaneously and at more than one location.The most important of these special instruments are radiosondes, Doppler radar, and weather satellites. A Radiosonde A radiosonde measures air temperature, air pressure, and humidity from the earth’s surface up to an alt...
-
Cambio climático - ciencias de la naturaleza.
relevante que influye en la dinámica del clima en la Tierra. El hielo presente en las regiones polares proporciona datos sobre la composición de la antigua atmósfera de la Tierra. Los núcleos de hielo analizados por los científicos,procedentes de las placas de hielo de Groenlandia y de la Antártida, ofrecen información sobre la temperatura y los gases de efecto invernadero presentes en la atmósferade hace cientos de miles de años. Las capas de estos núcleos de hielo formadas por las nevadas esta...
-
Cambio climático - geografía.
relevante que influye en la dinámica del clima en la Tierra. El hielo presente en las regiones polares proporciona datos sobre la composición de la antigua atmósfera de la Tierra. Los núcleos de hielo analizados por los científicos,procedentes de las placas de hielo de Groenlandia y de la Antártida, ofrecen información sobre la temperatura y los gases de efecto invernadero presentes en la atmósferade hace cientos de miles de años. Las capas de estos núcleos de hielo formadas por las nevadas esta...
-
Cambio climático - ciencias de la naturaleza.
relevante que influye en la dinámica del clima en la Tierra. El hielo presente en las regiones polares proporciona datos sobre la composición de la antigua atmósfera de la Tierra. Los núcleos de hielo analizados por los científicos,procedentes de las placas de hielo de Groenlandia y de la Antártida, ofrecen información sobre la temperatura y los gases de efecto invernadero presentes en la atmósferade hace cientos de miles de años. Las capas de estos núcleos de hielo formadas por las nevadas esta...
-
Northwest Territories - Geography.
million years ago by the severe bending (folding) and faulting (breaking) of sedimentary rock that was once part of the Interior Plains. During the Wisconsin Ice Age,alpine glaciers covered the Cordillera, and the movement of the glaciers created razor-sharp peaks and ridges in these mountains. The moving glaciers also createdbroad U-shaped valleys. To the east of the Interior Plains, the ancient rocks of the Canadian Shield are exposed at the Earth’s surface, resulting in a rough, rolling terra...
-
-
Northwest Territories - Canadian History.
million years ago by the severe bending (folding) and faulting (breaking) of sedimentary rock that was once part of the Interior Plains. During the Wisconsin Ice Age,alpine glaciers covered the Cordillera, and the movement of the glaciers created razor-sharp peaks and ridges in these mountains. The moving glaciers also createdbroad U-shaped valleys. To the east of the Interior Plains, the ancient rocks of the Canadian Shield are exposed at the Earth’s surface, resulting in a rough, rolling terra...
-
Nunavut - Canadian History.
The Arctic Lands is a complex geological area that is centered on the Arctic Ocean. It includes coastal plains, plateaus, and mountains. Coastal plains and plateaus arefound in the western Northwest Territories section of the Arctic Lands, such as on Victoria Island, which is mostly a large, flat plateau. In striking contrast to theserelatively gentle landscapes, the eastern Nunavut section of the Arctic Lands is dominated by a jagged chain of ice-covered mountains. The mountains on EllesmereIsl...
-
Marte (planeta) - ciencia y tecnologia.
contener hielo y gases helados de un espesor aproximado de 2 kilómetros. Además de las nubes de dióxido de carbono helado, en el planeta hay otros tipos de nubes. Se observan neblinas y nubes de hielo a gran altitud. Estas últimas son elresultado del enfriamiento asociado con las masas de aire que se alzan por encima de obstáculos elevados. Durante los veranos del sur son especialmente notablesextensas nubes amarillas compuestas de polvo levantado por los vientos. 3 OBSERVACIÓN MEDIANTE NAVES ES...
-
Complex Numbers
I
INTRODUCTION
Complex Numbers, in mathematics, the sum of a real number and an imaginary number.
sometimes referred to as an Argand diagram. If a complex number in the plane is thought of as a vector joining the origin to that point, then addition of complexnumbers corresponds to standard vector addition. Figure 1 shows the complex number 3 + 2 i obtained by adding the vectors 1 + 4 i and 2 - 2 i. Figure 1: Complex Plane in Cartesian CoordinatesThis graph illustrates the addition of two complex numbers by using vectors in the complex plane with cartesiancoordinates. The parallelogram shows...
-
Clima - ciencias de la naturaleza.
2 CLIMATOLOGÍA Y ATMÓSFERA La climatología es una ciencia diferente a la meteorología, aunque se basa en sus análisis. La meteorología es la ciencia que estudia los fenómenos atmosféricos (viento,lluvia, aurora boreal, rayo...) y los mecanismos que producen el tiempo atmosférico actual; una de sus finalidades es elaborar pronósticos sobre el tiempo que hará en elfuturo. La climatología estudia la regularidad del tiempo, y se diferencia de la meteorología en que trabaja con datos medios en vez d...
-
Proyección cartográfica
1
INTRODUCCIÓN
Proyección cilíndrica
Si se coloca un papel dispuesto en forma de cilindro alrededor de un globo iluminado, la proyección en el cilindro será un mapa de
proyección cilíndrica.
proyecciones cónicas, se puede representar en un mapa un área extensa con una exactitud considerable.• Proyecciones acimutales o cenitales. Se obtienen al proyectar la superficie esférica sobre un plano. Pueden ser polares (plano tangente al polo), ecuatoriales (planotangente a un punto sobre el ecuador) u oblicuas (plano tangente a un punto cualquiera entre el polo y el ecuador). Son las que representan mejor las zonas polares. Soloabarcan un hemisferio. Las deformaciones aumentan a medida que...
-
Antártida - geografía.
La península Antártica es el hogar del pingüino de Adelia, que pasa gran parte de su vida en las banquisas de las aguas cercanas a lapenínsula y regresa a la tierra firme para aparearse. La península constituye el extremo más septentrional de la Antártida y seextiende más allá del círculo polar antártico, hacia Sudamérica.Art Wolfe/Tony Stone Images La Antártida actual sufre una etapa glaciar. El futuro desarrollo económico de este continente cubierto de hielo es muy poco probable. La explotació...
-
Arctic - Geography.
The Arctic is not a frozen desert devoid of life on land or sea, even during the cold, dark winter months. Spring brings a phenomenal resurgence of plant and animal life.Low temperatures are not always the critical element—moisture, the type of soil, and available solar energy are also extremely important. Some animals adapt well toArctic conditions; for instance, a number of species of mammals and birds carry additional insulation, such as fat, in cold months. Arctic summers with extended dayli...
-
-
Earth (planet).
Milky Way to complete one revolution around the Galaxy’s center. Earth’s axis of rotation is inclined (tilted) 23.5° relative to its plane of revolution around the Sun. This inclination of the axis creates the seasons and causes the height of the Sun in the sky at noon to increase and decrease as the seasons change. The Northern Hemisphere receives the most energy from the Sun when it is tiltedtoward the Sun. This orientation corresponds to summer in the Northern Hemisphere and winter in the S...
-
Earth (planet) - astronomy.
Milky Way to complete one revolution around the Galaxy’s center. Earth’s axis of rotation is inclined (tilted) 23.5° relative to its plane of revolution around the Sun. This inclination of the axis creates the seasons and causes the height of the Sun in the sky at noon to increase and decrease as the seasons change. The Northern Hemisphere receives the most energy from the Sun when it is tiltedtoward the Sun. This orientation corresponds to summer in the Northern Hemisphere and winter in the S...
-
Mercury (planet) - astronomy.
In 1991 powerful radio telescopes on Earth revealed signs of possible deposits of ice in the polar regions of Mercury. These ice deposits occur in areas where sunlightnever falls, such as crater bottoms near both of the planet’s poles. Similar ice deposits may have been found during the 1990s near the poles of the Moon by theClementine and Lunar Prospector spacecrafts. The ice on Mercury likely comes from comets or water-bearing meteorites that have hit Mercury over the planet’s historyup throug...
-
Orientación espacial
1
INTRODUCCIÓN
Orientación espacial, posición de un punto, lugar, objeto o persona sobre la superficie terrestre respecto a un sistema de referencia.
En los últimos años han aparecido instrumentos y técnicas muy precisos para determinar la posición de un punto de la Tierra: informan sobre su latitud, su longitud e,incluso, su altitud. Son las redes de localización por satélite, y muchas personas las utilizan en lugar de las brújulas. El más conocido es el Sistema de Posicionamiento Global (GPS), Global Positioning System en inglés, que surgió para que las naves militares estadounidenses realizaran trayectos más seguros. Aunque en origen era...
-
Antarctica - geography.
The geographic South Pole lies near the center of the continent in East Antarctica. This point is where all map lines of longitude converge at the southern end ofEarth’s axis of rotation. Distinct from the geographic south pole is the south magnetic pole, where the lines of force of Earth’s magnetic field emerge vertically,arching upward over the planet to enter Earth again at the north magnetic pole. The south-seeking end of a compass needle points to the south magnetic pole. Thesouth magnetic...
-
Chemical Reaction - chemistry.
Many groups of elements occur so often as ions that they are given names: nitrate, NO 3-; sulfate, SO 42-; and phosphate, PO 43-. The suffix -ate usually indicates the presence of oxygen. The positive ion, NH 4+, is called ammonium, as in NH 4Cl, ammonium chloride, or (NH 4)3PO4, ammonium phosphate. Rules for naming more complicated compounds exist, but many compounds have been given trivial names—for example, Na 2B4O7·10 H 2O, borax—or proprietary names—F(CF 2)nF, Teflon. These nonsystemat...
-
Océanos y oceanografía - ciencias de la naturaleza.
El océano contiene el 97% del agua de la Tierra; en la atmósfera está el 0,001%. Los procesos que intercambian y transforman el agua en vapor, en líquido o en sólido sonfundamentales para el clima y para la propia vida. El agua es una de las sustancias más comunes, pero tiene algunas propiedades físicas y químicas inusuales. Es uno de los pocos líquidos naturales y puede encontrarse enlas tres fases: vapor de agua, agua líquida y hielo sólido. Tiene un calor específico y un calor latente grandes...
-
Molecule - chemistry.
attracted to the negatively charged electrons between them. The electrons belong to the molecule as a whole. However, each hydrogen atom now has a complete outershell of two electrons. The formula H 2 describes a hydrogen molecule, a discrete unit. When a molecule contains just two atoms, such as the hydrogen molecule does, it is called a diatomic molecule. Some atoms can form covalent bonds with more than one other atom and thus create a larger molecule. Atoms form molecules with covalent bo...
-
-
Noruega - geografía.
En el norte y en las áreas de montañas más elevadas son comunes los renos, los zorros polares, las liebres polares, los lobos, los glotones y los lemmings. En el sur ysureste viven alces, ciervos, zorros, nutrias y martas. Abundan tanto los peces de agua dulce como los de agua salada. En los lagos y arroyos se pueden encontrarfácilmente salmones, truchas, abadejos grises, percas y lucios. En las aguas costeras son frecuentes el arenque, el bacalao, el halibut y la caballa, entre otras especies....
-
Mars (planet) - astronomy.
The Martian core is probably much like Earth’s, consisting mostly of iron, with a small amount of nickel. If other light elements, particularly sulfur, exist there as well, thecore may be larger than presently thought. From studying Earth’s magnetic field and core, scientists theorize that the motions of the liquid rock in Earth’s core generateits magnetic field. Mars does not have a significant magnetic field, so scientists believe that Mars’s core is probably solid. However, spacecraft data in...
-
Natural Satellite - astronomy.
Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, also has few impact craters. Although icy volcanism from water and ammonia may occur along with some tectonic activity, Titan’s youngsurface is most likely the result of weather processes. Titan’s dense, cold atmosphere precipitates particles of complex organic molecules that accumulate as dunes andmountains. Methane rain erodes the surface and creates lakes at the moon’s poles. Triton’s young surface also may result from processes in its atmosphere, as well aserupt...
-
Antarctica - Geography.
The maximum area of sea ice surrounding Antarctica each winter varies from year to year. A marked decline during the 1970s appears to have reversed in more recentdecades, except in the Antarctic Peninsula area. This area has lost almost 40 percent of its sea ice since the start of the 1980s. Sea ice is important to marine life. Krillfeed on algae that live under the sea ice and are released when the ice melts in spring and summer. In turn, many marine animals feed on krill. Emperor penguinsbreed...
-
Polars
Paul Claudel disait : « Le roman policier s'adresse
aux couches les plus basses de la bêtise humaine. ,....
Polars Paul Claudel disait : « Le roman policier s'adresse aux couches les plus basses de la bêtise humaine. ,. Ainsi balaie-t-on parfois des genres, comme la bande dessinée, qui apparaissent mineurs parce qu'ils n'atteignent pas toujours la profondeur de pensée de la poésie ou du théâtre. Porté aux nues par quelques intellectuels des années 50, le roman policier est ensuite surtout victime de la concurrence du récit d'espionnage et de science-fiction. Des collections comme la Série noire ou le...
-
EPITHELIUMS DE REVETEMENT GENERALITES QCM
Q6. Les stéréocils observés en microscopie photonique au pôle des cellules de l’épithélium de l’épididyme correspondent en microscopie à: A. Des cils vibratiles B. Des microvillosités à disposition régulière C. Des associations de cils et de microvillosités D. Des évaginations cytoplasmiques irrégulières parfois anastomosées E. Des dérivés cuticulaires. Q7. Certaines de propositions suivantes concernant les cils sont exactes. Lesquelles ? A. Ce sont des évaginations cytoplasmiques mobiles...
-
Clima - geografía.
2 CLIMATOLOGÍA Y ATMÓSFERA La climatología es una ciencia diferente a la meteorología, aunque se basa en sus análisis. La meteorología es la ciencia que estudia los fenómenos atmosféricos (viento,lluvia, aurora boreal, rayo...) y los mecanismos que producen el tiempo atmosférico actual; una de sus finalidades es elaborar pronósticos sobre el tiempo que hará en elfuturo. La climatología estudia la regularidad del tiempo, y se diferencia de la meteorología en que trabaja con datos medios en vez d...
-
Clima - geografía.
2 CLIMATOLOGÍA Y ATMÓSFERA La climatología es una ciencia diferente a la meteorología, aunque se basa en sus análisis. La meteorología es la ciencia que estudia los fenómenos atmosféricos (viento,lluvia, aurora boreal, rayo...) y los mecanismos que producen el tiempo atmosférico actual; una de sus finalidades es elaborar pronósticos sobre el tiempo que hará en elfuturo. La climatología estudia la regularidad del tiempo, y se diferencia de la meteorología en que trabaja con datos medios en vez d...
-
-
Clima - ciencias de la naturaleza.
2 CLIMATOLOGÍA Y ATMÓSFERA La climatología es una ciencia diferente a la meteorología, aunque se basa en sus análisis. La meteorología es la ciencia que estudia los fenómenos atmosféricos (viento,lluvia, aurora boreal, rayo...) y los mecanismos que producen el tiempo atmosférico actual; una de sus finalidades es elaborar pronósticos sobre el tiempo que hará en elfuturo. La climatología estudia la regularidad del tiempo, y se diferencia de la meteorología en que trabaja con datos medios en vez d...
-
Weather.
hours, and the snow can be much deeper in places where the wind piles it up in drifts. Extraordinarily deep snows sometimes accumulate on the upwind side ofmountain slopes during severe winter storms or on the downwind shores of large lakes during outbreaks of polar air. VI WIND Wind is the horizontal movement of air. It is named for the direction from which it comes—for example, a north wind comes from the north. In most places near theground, the wind speed averages from 8 to 24 km/h (from 5...
-
Map - Geography.
Often only southeast slopes are hachured or shaded, giving somewhat the effect of a bird's-eye view of the area illuminated by light from the northwest. Shadings orcarefully drawn hachures, neither of which give elevations, are more easily interpreted than contour lines and are sometimes used in conjunction with them for greaterclarity. IV MAP PROJECTIONS For the representation of the entire surface of the earth without any kind of distortion, a map must have a spherical surface; a map of this...
-
Neptune (planet) - astronomy.
The gaseous atmosphere of Neptune contains hydrogen, helium, and about 3 percent methane. It extends about 5,000 km (about 3,000 mi) above the planet’s ocean.Light reflected from Neptune’s deep atmosphere is blue, because the atmospheric methane absorbs red and orange light but scatters blue light. In 1998 astronomersalso identified molecules of methyl in Neptune’s atmosphere. Methyl molecules each contain one carbon atom and three hydrogen atoms. Methyl molecules are knownas hydrocarbon radical...
-
Air Pollution.
Several pollutants attack the ozone layer. Chief among them is the class of chemicals known as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), formerly used as refrigerants (notably in airconditioners), as agents in several manufacturing processes, and as propellants in spray cans. CFC molecules are virtually indestructible until they reach thestratosphere. Here, intense ultraviolet radiation breaks the CFC molecules apart, releasing the chlorine atoms they contain. These chlorine atoms begin reacting withozone, br...
-
Ocean and Oceanography.
of sediment. When studied in sedimentary core samples, which can represent many millions of years of deposits, they provide a detailed and continuous history of theearth’s environmental changes. The record is particularly informative for the most recent 2 million to 5 million years, during which major fluctuations in global climatehave occurred. Successive ice ages can be traced by the relative scarcity or abundance of the shells of warm-water and cold-water diatoms in various layers of asedimen...
-
Ocean and Oceanography - Geography.
of sediment. When studied in sedimentary core samples, which can represent many millions of years of deposits, they provide a detailed and continuous history of theearth’s environmental changes. The record is particularly informative for the most recent 2 million to 5 million years, during which major fluctuations in global climatehave occurred. Successive ice ages can be traced by the relative scarcity or abundance of the shells of warm-water and cold-water diatoms in various layers of asedimen...
-
Whale - biology.
III BEHAVIOR OF WHALES Studies of whales in captivity have taught scientists much about the complex social behavior of whales. Since the late 1980s, advances in the use of satellite trackingsystems have also broadened opportunities for scientists to observe how whales behave in the wild. A Swimming and Diving Whales swim by making powerful up-and-down movements of the tail flukes, which provide thrust. The power comes from body muscles that flex the lower spine upand down in a wavelike motion...
-
-
Ohio - geography.
conflict with modified Gulf air and causing frontal or cyclonic storms. Gulf air is dominant in summer. In fall, polar air passing over Lake Erie is modified, delaying thekilling frost along the adjacent shoreline. C1 Temperatures The mean annual temperatures for the state range from 9° C (48° F) in the northeast to 13° C (55° F) in the south. Average January temperatures range from -4° C(24° F) in the west to 2° C (35° F) in the south. July averages are 24° C (76° F) in the south and 23° C (73...
-
Ohio - USA History.
conflict with modified Gulf air and causing frontal or cyclonic storms. Gulf air is dominant in summer. In fall, polar air passing over Lake Erie is modified, delaying thekilling frost along the adjacent shoreline. C1 Temperatures The mean annual temperatures for the state range from 9° C (48° F) in the northeast to 13° C (55° F) in the south. Average January temperatures range from -4° C(24° F) in the west to 2° C (35° F) in the south. July averages are 24° C (76° F) in the south and 23° C (73...