What's the difference between brownian and brunonian?
Brownian
Definition:
(a.) Pertaining to Dr. Robert Brown, who first demonstrated (about 1827) the commonness of the motion described below.
Example Sentences:
(1) The predominant translation motion of the mitochondria satisfied the formal conditions of a Brownian random walk for a free particle, although in several cases there was a slow drift superimposed on the random motion.
(2) ), under the conditions of infinite viscosity - is due to the Brownian rotational motion of the macromolecules as a whole as well as the intramolecular mobility.
(3) In order to determine the location and the extent of rotational brownian motions of the bound chromophores, the experimental data were analyzed by using a simplified physico-mathematical model.
(4) The Brownian dynamics technique is used next to simulate a rotational correlation function that is comparable with the decay of fluorescence emission anisotropy.
(5) Most of the gold particles exhibit a Brownian type of movement, while a minority appeared immobile.
(6) After incubation for 1 h in nutrient-deficient media, a few spherical bodies appeared in the vacuoles and moved actively by Brownian movement.
(7) Early signs of cell stress were shown by the aggregation of nuclear chromatin, clustering of cytoplasmic contents in the central portion of the supranuclear region of the outer hair cells, and Brownian motion of the mitochondria.
(8) Brownian algebra developed by Spencer-Brown (1969) is extensively used for the expression of cellular-automaton rules.
(9) Computer simulations showed that those low-frequency components were well characterized by fractional Brownian motions (FBMs).
(10) The above results point to the existence of long-range interactions mediating platelet aggregation in Brownian diffusion-controlled platelet collisions which varies according to human > dog > rabbit platelets.
(11) An explanation for the dependence of the "initial aggregation rate," kagg, on the square of the vesicle concentration is given, accounting both for Brownian motion of the vesicles and shear effects.
(12) Specific Kerr constants and the rates of rotational Brownian motion after the electric field was removed were measured.
(13) The mechanisms of Taylor dispersion, the effects of Brownian perturbations on translational and rotational motions of the suspended particles in shear fields, and the influence of integratable and chaotic advections, are individually examined.
(14) Simple Brownian motion of myosin molecules could not explain the hyper-sharp phenomenon.
(15) It is demonstrated that if the filaments on the bundle surface are composed of flexible segments, each of which has a local Brownian rotation, the solvent-flow along the surface is strongly depressed because of increased energy dissipation and the solvent permeates through the bundle.
(16) The Brownian motion of these molecules was observed, indicating that DNA in solution exists in a partially supercoiled state.
(17) The dichroism of the long-lived triplet-triplet absorption of covalent labels has been used for measuring the brownian rotational relaxation time of giant macromolecules in the microsecond time range.
(18) Avascular yolk measurements gave flux values (due to Brownian motion of yolk proteins) which were greater than for capillary beds but without oscillations.
(19) The labeling of target proteins by immunogold particles has been analyzed based on Einstein's law of Brownian motion.
(20) His theory is explained on the orthogonal functional series expansion of a nonlinear noise with respect to the Brownian motion whose formal derivative is understood as the white Gaussian noise.
Brunonian
Definition:
(a.) Pertaining to, or invented by, Brown; -- a term applied to a system of medicine promulgated in the 18th century by John Brown, of Scotland, the fundamental doctrine of which was, that life is a state of excitation produced by the normal action of external agents upon the body, and that disease consists in excess or deficiency of excitation.