Decreased T1 and increased T2 signal intensities in MRI typically suggest changes in tissue composition or pathology. A decreased T1 may indicate the presence of edema or fat, while an increased T2 often points to fluid accumulation or inflammation. These changes can be associated with various conditions, such as tumors, infections, or demyelinating diseases. Overall, the combination of T1 and T2 findings helps in diagnosing and characterizing different medical conditions.
T1 and T2 commonly refer to the primary and secondary terminals of a transformer. T1 is typically the primary side where the input voltage is applied, while T2 is usually the secondary side where the output voltage is obtained. The terminals are used to connect the transformer to the electrical circuit.
COF = h1-h4/h2-h1=T1(s1-s4)/T2-T1(s1-s4)=T1/T2-T1
Tensions t1 and t2 are related in that they are both forces acting in opposite directions on an object or system. The relationship between t1 and t2 depends on the specific situation and the forces involved.
T1 and T2 refer to the first and second thoraxic vertebrae. They are the 8th and 9th vertebrae, starting from the top.
T1 and T2 can refer to the Thoracic vertebrae (part of your spine). But I don't know what 'low' would imply.
The CalDigit Thunderbolt™ T1 and T2 primarily differ in that the T1 is a single-drive solution whereas the T2 is a dual-drive solution. See related links for more information.
The SHLD (Store H&L Direct) instruction takes 5 machine cycles and 16 clock states, not including any wait states. Opcode fetch: T1, T2, T3, and TX Low order address fetch: T1, T2, T3 High order address fetch: T1, T2, T3 Store L: T1, T2, T3 Store H: T1, T2, T3
T1 = 273.15K. T2 = 410.15K. V1 = 350mL. V2 = ? P1 = P2. Since pressure is constant you can use the formula. V1/T1 = V2/T2 Rearrange the formula to get: V2 = T2V1/T1
t1:german tiger 1 t2:german tiger 2 t1:armor 69 t2:armor 89 t1:speed 14 mph t2:speed 20 mph t1:gun is 98% great t2:gun is 99% good so german tiger 2 is better
This question refers to the combined gas law: (P1V1)/T1=(P2V2)/T2, where P is pressure, V is volume, and T is temperature in Kelvins.To solve for T1, rearrange the equation to isolate T1.T1=(P1V1T2)/(P2V2)
T1= Fat- Appears Bright e.g. Grey matter = Water- Appears Dark e.g. CSF, water T2 Just opposite to T1
Let X(t) be an iid random process and hence X(t) has an identical distribution for any t i.e., distributions are identical at instants of time t1, t2...tn, so 1st order pdfs f(x1;t1), f(x2;t2)....f(xn;tn) are time invariant and further X(t1) and X(t2) are independent for any two different t1 and t2. So, f(x1, x2, . . . , xn; t1, t2, . . . , tn) = f(x1;t1)*f(x2;t2)*....*f(xn;tn) f(x1;t1), f(x2;t2).... f(xn;tn) are time invariant, therefore their product f(x1, x2, . . . , xn; t1, t2, . . . , tn) is also time invariant which is nth order pdf. So X(t) is strict sense stationary.