"Isotropism" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Isotropism is a term used to describe the characteristic of an object or phenomenon that remains unchanged or unchanged-in-all-directions, regardless of the direction in which it is observed or measured. This means that it has no directional properties or biases, and its properties are the same in all directions or axes.
For example, in physics, isotropism is often used to describe a material or a phenomenon that behaves equally in all directions, such as the way light travels in a vacuum or the way a magnetic field affects an object. In biology, it can refer to the way an organism grows or develops without any directional preference.
Isotrimorphism refers to the quality of being identical in structure or form, but differing in chemical composition. In other words, isotrimorphs are compounds that have the same crystalline structure, but have different chemical compositions. This means that the arrangement of atoms in the crystal lattice is the same, but the atoms themselves are different.
Isotropically refers to the property of being uniform in all directions or having the same properties in all directions. In physics, a phenomenon that occurs isotropically is one that is the same in all parts of space and in all directions. For example, a blackbody that emits radiation isotropically emits radiation equally in all directions.
Isotypic refers to proteins or antibodies that have the same antigenic determinant, which is the part of the protein that reacts with the immune system to elicit an immune response. In other words, isotypic proteins or antibodies have the same ability to bind to an antigen, but may differ in their carbohydrate or immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) composition. This term is often used in immunology and biotechnology to describe the different forms of antibodies that recognize the same antigen.