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Fluids derived from some plants have bactericidal properties. Some of the best known ones are lemon juice and onion juice.
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Hydraulic systems primarily use incompressible fluids, with mineral oil being the most common type due to its lubricating properties and thermal stability. Other fluids can include water-based solutions, such as water-glycol or water-oil emulsions, and biodegradable fluids made from esters. The choice of fluid depends on factors like application, operating temperature, and environmental considerations.
Well, that's pretty straightforward. An "object" is a named thing with certain properties, like in Plato's "Allegory of the Cave," and "classification" refers to a GROUP of similar things, that all share certain properties. To use a non-programming example, the classification "animals" might include objects like "mammal," "reptile," "bird," and so forth. Or those things might themselves be "classes," depending on your own personal choices and needs. So a "bird" might be a "class" including "objects" like "robin," "thrush," and "starling," with properties like "color of breast," "forked tail," and "temperament."
Not solid, not gas, not plasma. Fluids do not have any structrual properties. (Only hydraulic properties) Fluids do not have any crystal strucutre properties
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The propertie that make the fluids dangerous is nitrogen.
Fluids derived from some plants have bactericidal properties. Some of the best known ones are lemon juice and onion juice.
Fluids have the following properties : 1. Fluids can't sustain a shearing force when they are at rest. 2. They undergo a continuous change in shape when they are subjected to stress 3. A perfect fluid lacks viscosity, but real fluids do not.
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Cutting oils Emulsifiable oils Chemical cutting fluids
a substance that is liquid or gas that can flow and change its shape
The physical characteristics of reservoir rocks that enable them to store fluids and to allow fluids to flow through them. The main properties of interest are rock porosities and permeabilities.
Durable is the classification that includes tools.
Reginald Cyril Stanley has written: 'Mechanical properties of solids andfluids' -- subject(s): Analytic Mechanics 'Mechanical properties of solids and fluids' -- subject(s): Fluids, Materials, Solids
G. F. C. Rogers has written: 'Thermodynamic and transport properties of fluids' -- subject(s): Fluids, Handbooks, manuals, Thermal properties, Thermodynamics, Transport theory, Units