"Isoenergetic" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Isoenergetic refers to a process or system that occurs or exists at constant energy, with no net gain or loss of energy. In other words, the total energy remains unchanged throughout the process. This term is often used in chemistry, physics, and biology to describe reactions or phenomena that occur at a steady state energy level.
Isodrosotherm is a term used in thermodynamics and fluid mechanics to describe a curve or line on a diagram that represents the relationship between temperature and concentration, or phase composition, of a system where the physical properties of the system remain constant.
Isodynamous refers to two or more substances that have the same density. In other words, isodynamous compounds or elements have the same mass per unit volume, making them exhibit the same specific gravity.
Isoechoic refers to an area or structure in an image, such as an ultrasound or medical scan, that appears to have the same echogenicity (the ability to reflect ultrasound waves) as the surrounding tissue or material. In other words, isoechoic structures do not stand out or differ from the surrounding area based on their echo patterns. This can be important in medical diagnosis, as it can be difficult to distinguish isoechoic structures from surrounding tissue or to identify potentially abnormal areas.
Isoefficiency refers to a concept in software engineering that describes the minimum cost in terms of hardware or resources that a system requires to perform a specific task or set of tasks, while meeting certain performance requirements or standards. In other words, it is the minimum level of resources (e.g. CPU, memory, storage) that an application or system needs to achieve a particular level of efficiency or performance.
Having the same electric charge as an electrically charged substance. Typically applied to protein molecules, which have got a net positive or negative electric charge. An isoelectric point is the pH at which the net charge of the protein is zero.
Isoetaceae is a family of plants in the order Isoetales, native to the tropics and warm temperate regions around the world. They are commonly known as quillworts.
Isoetales is a term in botany that refers to a group of ancient relatives of modern trees. Isoetales are a branch of ancient vascular plants that lived during the Carboniferous and Permian periods, over 300 million years ago. They were among the first land plants to evolve and were characterized by having vascular tissue, similar to modern trees, but were still quite different from today's trees in terms of their physical characteristics and biology.