(a.) Without inclination or dipping; -- said the magnetic needle balances itself horizontally, having no dip. The aclinic line is also termed the magnetic equator.
Example Sentences:
(1) Vitamin A and its derivates apparently play a fundamental role not only in the treatment of proliferating malignancies of the skin (carcinomas, severe aclinic keratosis) or involving the skin (fungoid mycosis, skin metastases of solid tumours) but also in the prevention of recurring bladder tumours and the treatment of several bronchial dysplasias.
(2) Ophthalmologic examination can be acline for changing the heart valve.
Isoclinic
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to, or indicating, equality of inclination or dip; having equal inclination or dip.
Example Sentences:
(1) The main isoclines of this system can intersect in one, two or three points.
(2) On the basis of the records of ionic currents zyro-isoclines of approximative differential equations of the 2nd order, describing the membrane studied, were plotted.
(3) The behavior of the resulting nonlinear differential equations is examined analytically and by a graphical integration procedure (method of isoclines).
(4) A tool for teaching and investigating population simulation models, entitled TRICLE (Program for tridimensional representation of trajectories and isoclines) is presented.
(5) It assumes that not the original figure but some specific isocline defined on the image function surface determines area perception.
(6) We construct a Gause-type predator-prey model with concave prey isocline and (at least) two limit cycles.
(7) The isoclines join all points in the space which present a given 'degree of competitiveness' of a particular 'candidate' for overt behavioural expression.
(8) It is shown that an arbitrary scale of measurement along any two axes of the causal-factor space is all that is necessary for empirical determination of the shape of a motivational isocline.
(9) Occlusal loads were simulated and the isoclinics recorded in plane-polarized light.
(10) reversible) processes governing the behaviour of an animal can be represented by means of isoclines in a multidimensional 'causal-factor space'.
(11) The critical points for each model are defined using the isoclines derived from the Ordinary Differential Equations (ODE's) describing competitive growth.
(12) Isoclinic points observed in overlays of sequential EPR spectra recorded during ATP hydrolysis strongly suggest that the probes fall into two motional classes, separated by approximately an order of magnitude in effective rotational correlation time.