structural changes - meaning and definition. What is structural changes
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What (who) is structural changes - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Changes; Changes (song); The Changes (disambiguation); Changes (album); Changes (disambiguation); Changes (film); Changes..; Changes...

2019–2023 structural changes to local government in England         
  • [[Essex]]
  • [[Gloucestershire]]
  • [[Kent]]
  • [[Lancashire]]
  • [[Lincolnshire]]<!--, with the mentioned partnership composed of the coastal boroughs 4, 5 and 6.-->
  • [[Oxfordshire]]
  • [[Staffordshire]]<!--. "Greater Stoke" would combine 1, 2 and 3 here. The proposed "Staffordshire" unitary authority would be 4, 5 and 7.-->
  • [[Warwickshire]]<!--, with the proposed "South Warwickshire" composed of 4 and 5.-->
  • [[Worcestershire]]<!--, with the 2016 proposal for "South Worcestershire" being 1, 2 and 6. [[Redditch]] is the district numbered 5.-->
PLANNED CHANGES TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT AUTHORITIES IN ENGLAND
2019 structural changes to local government in England; 2019/2020 structural changes to local government in England; 2019-20 structural changes to local government in England; 2019–20 structural changes to local government in England; 2019-21 structural changes to local government in England; 2019–21 structural changes to local government in England; 2019-2021 structural changes to local government in England; 2019–2021 structural changes to local government in England; 2019-2023 structural changes to local government in England; 2019-2023 English local government reforms
Structural changes to local government in England have taken place between 2019 and 2021, and will potentially continue in 2023. Some of these changes continue the trend of new unitary authorities being created from other types of local government districts, which was a policy of Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick from 2019.
Structural element         
ENGINEERING TERM; STRUCTURAL PART OF A COMPLEX STRUCTURE
Structural member; Structural component; List of structural elements
Structural elements are used in structural analysis to split a complex structure into simple elements. Within a structure, an element cannot be broken down (decomposed) into parts of different kinds (e.
Structural coloration         
  • Magnificent non-iridescent colours of [[blue-and-yellow macaw]] created by random nanochannels
  • Electron micrograph]] of a fractured surface of [[nacre]] showing multiple thin layers
  • [[Buttercup]] petals exploit both yellow pigment and structural coloration.
  • Butterfly wing at different magnifications reveals microstructured chitin acting as a [[diffraction grating]]
  • Structural coloration through selective mirrors in the [[emerald swallowtail]]
  • One of [[Gabriel Lippmann]]'s colour photographs, "Le Cervin", 1899, made using a monochrome photographic process (a single emulsion). The colours are structural, created by interference with light reflected from the back of the glass plate.
  • [[Robert Hooke]]'s 1665 ''[[Micrographia]]'' contains the first observations of structural colours.
  • Drawing of 'firtree' micro-structures in ''[[Morpho]]'' butterfly wing scale
  • In 1892, [[Frank Evers Beddard]] noted that  ''[[Chrysospalax]]'' golden moles' thick fur was structurally coloured.
  • The most intense blue known in nature: ''[[Pollia condensata]]'' berries
  • A 3-slide series of pictures taken with and without a pair of MasterImage 3D circularly polarized movie glasses of some dead European rose chafers (Cetonia aurata) whose shiny green colour comes from left-polarized light. Note that, without glasses, both the beetles and their images have shiny colour. The right-polarizer removes the colour of the beetles but leaves the color of the images. The left-polarizer does the opposite, showing reversal of handedness of the reflected light.
  • interfere]].
  • Variable ring patterns on mantles of ''Hapalochlaena lunulata''
PRODUCTION OF COLOUR BY MICROSCOPICALLY STRUCTURED SURFACES, BOTH AS A NATURAL PHENOMENON AND IN TECHNOLOGY
Structural color; Structural colour; Schemochrome; Structural colouration; Schemochromatic; Structural colours; Morphotex
Structural coloration in animals, and a few plants, is the production of colour by microscopically structured surfaces fine enough to interfere with visible light, sometimes in combination with pigments. For example, peacock tail feathers are pigmented brown, but their microscopic structure makes them also reflect blue, turquoise, and green light, and they are often iridescent.

Wikipedia

Changes
Examples of use of structural changes
1. How about structural changes at the Mekorot water utility?
2. Dinur wants to anchor the budget‘s structural changes and priorities.
3. Such structural changes take time and are generational alterations.
4. But they stressed the importance of homeowners enlisting a surveyor to make any structural changes.
5. This is the goal of economic reforms and the structural changes that the government is pursuing.