root absorption - meaning and definition. What is root absorption
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What (who) is root absorption - definition

THEOREM
Absorption identities; Absorption Identities; Absorption Law; Absorption laws; Absorption identity

Absorption (acoustics)         
TRANSFER OF SOUND ENERGY INTO INTERNAL ENERGY OF THE ABSORBER
Sound absorption; Acoustic insulator
Acoustic absorption refers to the process by which a material, structure, or object takes in sound energy when sound waves are encountered, as opposed to reflecting the energy. Part of the absorbed energy is transformed into heat and part is transmitted through the absorbing body.
root note         
  • Play}}
  • Play}}.
NOTE AFTER WHICH A CHORD IS NAMED
Root (music); Basse fondamentale; Root progression; Root note; Fundamental bass; Chord root; Five-three chord; Root chord; Assumed root; Absent root; Omitted root; Root-position; Basse fondementale; Son fondamentale; Harmonic root; Root of chord
¦ noun see root1 (sense 5).
rooted         
  • Roots forming above ground on a cutting of an ''Odontonema'' ("Firespike")
  • Aerial root
  • Fluorescent imaging of an emerging lateral root.
  • barley]] root
  • Coralloid roots of ''[[Cycas revoluta]]''
  • Cross section of a [[mango]] tree
  • Large, mature tree roots above the soil
  • Aerating roots of a [[mangrove]]
  • Roots on onion bulbs
  • Cross section of an adventitous crown root of pearl millet (''Pennisetum glaucum)''
  • Root system of adult ''[[Araucaria heterophylla]]''
  • Stilt roots of Maize plant
  • Ranunculus Root Cross Section
  • Roots of trees
  • The growing tip of a fine root
  • Roots can also protect the environment by holding the soil to reduce soil erosion
  • The stilt roots of ''[[Socratea exorrhiza]]''
  • Tree roots at [[Cliffs of the Neuse State Park]]
  • alt=
  • [[Ficus]] Tree with [[buttress root]]s
  • Visible roots
ORGAN OF A HIGHER PLANT THAT ANCHORS THE REST OF THE PLANT IN THE GROUND, ABSORBS WATER AND MINERAL SALTS FROM THE SOIL, AND DOES NOT BEAR LEAVES OR BUDS
Rooted; Root (botany); Tree root; Plant roots; Plant root; Shallow-rooted; Shallow rooted; Deep-rooted; Deep rooted; Peg root; Adventitious Root; Root (plant)
adj.
1) deeply rooted
2) rooted in (rooted in poverty)
3) rooted to (rooted to the spot)

Wikipedia

Absorption law

In algebra, the absorption law or absorption identity is an identity linking a pair of binary operations.

Two binary operations, ¤ and ⁂, are said to be connected by the absorption law if:

a ¤ (ab) = a ⁂ (a ¤ b) = a.

A set equipped with two commutative and associative binary operations {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \lor } ("join") and {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \land } ("meet") that are connected by the absorption law is called a lattice; in this case, both operations are necessarily idempotent.

Examples of lattices include Heyting algebras and Boolean algebras, in particular sets of sets with union and intersection operators, and ordered sets with min and max operations.

In classical logic, and in particular Boolean algebra, the operations OR and AND, which are also denoted by {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \lor } and {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \land } , satisfy the lattice axioms, including the absorption law. The same is true for intuitionistic logic.

The absorption law does not hold in many other algebraic structures, such as commutative rings, e.g. the field of real numbers, relevance logics, linear logics, and substructural logics. In the last case, there is no one-to-one correspondence between the free variables of the defining pair of identities.