Because there are more number of air pocket in loosely knotted sweater so it wont let heat to flow from our body and keeps us warm
No. The best conductors are metals (esp copper), which have loosely bound electrons.
When two materials rub together, the loosely held electrons of one material move to the material with the more tightly held electrons.
a pillow
What kind of proverb a broom is sturdy because its strands are tightly bound
to grip tightly
to allow expansion in summer
very tightly
smp is tightly coupled ad cmp is loosly coupled
FDBSs can be categorized as loosely coupled or tightly coupled based on who manages the federation and how the com- ponents are integrated. interoperable database system ( loosely ) An FDBS is loosely coupled if it is the user's responsibility to create and maintain the federation and there is no control enforced by the feder- ated system and its administrators. A federation is tightly coupled if the federation and its adminis- trator(s) have the responsibility for creat- ing and maintaining the federation and actively control the access to component DBSs. A loosely coupled FDBS always supports multiple federated schemas. A tightly coupled FDBS may have one or more federated schemas. A tightly coupled FDBS is said to have single federation if it allows the creation and management of only one federated schema. A tightly coupled FDBS is said to have multiple federations if it allows the creation and management of multiple federated schemas
Chromosomes are tightly packed DNA. When DNA is not tightly packed it is called chromatin. Chromosomes only exist during mitosis or meiosis.
scoliosis
Coenzymes has a complex structure. They are a group of co-factors that are tightly or loosely attached to enzymes.
Yes they do. Blood cells and sperms cells can move freely while most epithelial tissues are tightly knitted.
The cells of bread mold are loosely arranged. This is the opposite of the cells of mushrooms which are packed tightly together.
It can be either or even both - depends on how the designer(s) designed the distributed systems
No. The best conductors are metals (esp copper), which have loosely bound electrons.
Usually a liquid, but some solids, like ice, have the molecules more spread apart, making it less dense than the liquid. If, by "loosely packed," you mean being able to slide past each other, then the liquid is always the answer.