fluctuational

fluctuational

(ˌflʌktjʊˈeɪʃənəl)
adj
of or pertaining to fluctuation
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
L-DOPA-induced dyskinesia in a rat model of Parkinson's disease is associated with the fluctuational release of norepinephrine in the sensorimotor striatum.
In this supersaturated solution, supercritical bubbles nucleate according to a fluctuational mechanism [2, 3], The rate of fluctuational nucleation depends on the concentration of dissolved gas, solution temperature, surface tension, viscosity of solution, diffusion coefficient of dissolved gas in the polymer [4], and molecular weight of the polymer [5].
Kornienko, "Fluctuational equation of state and hypothetical phase diagram of superheated water and two imidazolium-based ionic liquids," Journal of Molecular Liquids, vol.
Looking in turn at mechatronics, control, and robotics, 24 papers discuss such aspects as damage and corrosion diagnostics of welded light alloy ship constructions, modeling the impact of underwater explosions, mechatronic systems supported by vision techniques, the fluctuational model of identifying small floating objects by passive radar reflectors, the control-oriented modeling of spatial motion of an autonomous underwater vehicle, the dynamics and control of a gyroscope-stabilized platform in a ship's anti-aircraft rocket missile launcher, an algorithm for generating coordinated robot trajectories in Cartesian space, and a segmentation algorithm using an edge detection method.
From the Aslamazov-Larkin theory [34], it is known that in the vicinity of [T.sub.c] the excess conductivity is stipulated by the processes of fluctuational pairing of the charge carriers.
Fifth, ch'i is fluctuational. It ebbs and flows, affected by an individual's mental state, the environment, or other factors.
In other words, unlike the classical theory of thermal radiation, which is bound by the constraints of geometrical optics, we can now calculate the second moments of the fluctuational field, that is to say both the wave part (taking into account all the diffraction phenomena), and the nonwave (quasistationary) part for any [lambda] vs l ratio" [53; [section]3.5].
"Because of the fluctuational pre-disposition of your position's productive capacity as juxtaposed to government standards, it would be momentarily injudicious to advocate an increment."
Former US Secretary of State Alexander Haig once refused an employee's request for a rise by saying: 'Because of the fluctuational pre-disposition of your position's productive capacity as juxtaposed to government standards, it would be momentarily injudicious to advocate an increment.' Translation: The nature of your job means your performance is variable due to government standards, so I can't give you a rise just now.
ALEXANDER HAIG (Former US Secretary of State, refusing a request for a pay rise): "Because of the fluctuational pre-disposition of your position's productive capacity as juxtaposed to government standards, it would be momentarily injudicious to advocate an increment."
Section three shows that the two kinds of indeterminism shed light on the difference between developmental change and fluctuational change.