I'm not an expert, however broadly speaking there are two kinds of fibers used in making textiles.
Relatively short fibers - such as wool fibers are categorized as "staple fibers."
Fibers that are continuously extruded (and are therefore available in any length) are filament fibers.
Silk, which has long fibers, but not quite any length falls into its own category.
Bulb's filament are wounded into a coil.
the filament is neither too thick nor too light
Fibers of the conduction system of the heart is called Purkinje fibers
Pirkinje Fibers
purkinje fibers
Sliding filament mechanism
for monofilament filament, the round diameter is about 214 micron for multi filament yarn depends to cross section of fibers and the rate of twisting
Ali Demir has written: 'Synthetic filament yarn' -- subject(s): Synthetic Textile fibers, Textile fibers, Synthetic, Textured yarn
Yarns that are spun from short fibres, like cotton. The staple is the length of the fibre, so you might say 'Egyptian cotton is better quality than Indian cotton because it has a longer staple.' Many artificial yarns are extruded, that is made like squeezing toothpaste from a tube, so they don't need to be spun to make a long thread.
Troponin is one of the intracellular proteins found primarily in skeletal muscle fibers, where it is part of the contractile proteins.
Wool dyes so well because it has fibers that absorb color. The filament is very fine in wool. It can be dyed almost any color.
The Filament
The main difference between polyester staple fiber yarn and polyester filament yarn is that polyester staple fiber yarn is made up of chemicals. Polyester filament yarn contains both man-made and natural fibers.
Filament
Filament was made from plastic. The filament was very stable and smooth.
Anther and filament
The stamen, or to be more specific, the microsporangia.