(1) A colloid that has a continuous liquid phase in which a solid is suspended in a liquid,(Roman mythology) ancient Roman god,personification of the sun,counterpart of Greek Helios,the syllable naming the fifth (dominant) note of any musical scale in solmization [also: soles (pl)]
(2) A colloid that has a continuous liquid phase in which a solid is suspended in a liquid
(3) (Roman mythology) ancient Roman god
(4) Personification of the sun
(5) Counterpart of Greek Helios
(6) The syllable naming the fifth (dominant) note of any musical scale in solmization [also: soles (pl)]
(1) At this stage the mixture is known as a sol , and contains sufficient energy for the molecules to move freely in the mixture.
(2) De Hevesy dissolved the medals in acid, creating a colloidal sol so dark it was virtually black.
(3) This concept does not entail the simultaneous existence of a silica gel and a sol , but rather a coexistence of short-chain silica polymers and monosilicic acid that condense to form quartz fibers.
(4) Conversely, in areas where the silica was less concentrated, a gel would not form; rather, horizontal Uruguay bands would form by precipitation and settling out of silica crystallites from the aqueous sol .
(5) Monoliths doped with azurin were prepared adding the protein to the buffer solution to be mixed with the sol .
(6) Peru's sol reached a decade high against the dollar after its foreign-currency debt rating was raised to investment grade by Fitch Ratings yesterday, increasing the allure of the nation's securities.
(7) The Peruvian Neuvo Sol is also known around the world as a commodity currency.
(8) Garcia merely printed more of them, so many that a new currency, the nuevo sol , had to be invented to erase the memory of the old one.
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