Extrinsic can be used to mean not essential or inherent or included within. It can also be used to mean originating from the outside.
No, extrinsic properties are not physical properties. Extrinsic properties refer to characteristics that are not inherent to an object but are instead dependent on external factors or conditions. Examples include color, weight, and odor.
No, the sugar in honey is not considered an extrinsic sugar. Extrinsic sugars are those added to food during processing or preparation, while the sugar in honey is a naturally occurring intrinsic sugar.
An intrinsic property is an essential or inherent property of a system or of a material itself or within. It is independent of how much of the material is present and is independent of the form the material, e.g., one large piece or a collection of smaller pieces. Intrinsic properties are dependent mainly on the chemical composition or structure of the material.[1]A property that is not essential or inherent is called an extrinsic property.
Lambda max is an intrinsic property because it is a characteristic wavelength specific to a particular molecule. It represents the maximum absorbance or emission of light by that molecule and is determined by its electronic structure.
If you want actual values, you'll need to be more specific, I'm not about to list hundreds if not thousands of properties in the hopes that one of them is the one you want.It's probably more useful to discuss what the two terms mean. "Intrinsic" properties are those that are characteristic of the material itself ... it doesn't matter (within reason) how much of the material there is. Intrinsic properties are things like melting point, boiling point, color (sometimes), heat capacity, atomic/molecular mass, and so on. "Extrinsic" properties are those that depend on the "extent" of the material ... that is, how much there is of it. Mass, weight, and volume are extrinsic properties (though in some cases, dividing one extrinsic property by another can give you an intrinsic property again ... mass divided by volume yields density, an intrinsic property).
receiving a free t-shirt for exercise performance. can this be an extrinsic reward/
Extrinsic
An extrinsic motivator
Extrinsic
Extrinsic is external; intrinsic is internal.
No, extrinsic properties are not physical properties. Extrinsic properties refer to characteristics that are not inherent to an object but are instead dependent on external factors or conditions. Examples include color, weight, and odor.
Extrinsic factors are outside influences.
Extrinsic membrane Extrinsic membrane
Extrinsic sugar is free in foods or it is added, it's not natural.
If the condition has an identifiable cause, it is designated as extrinsic.
Extrinsic muscles of the hand originate in the antebrachium (forearm).
Strange, foreign, alien, outside, and extrinsic are all synonyms for extrinsic.