absorption control - meaning and definition. What is absorption control
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What (who) is absorption control - 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.
Absorption (pharmacology)         
MOVEMENT OF A DRUG INTO THE BLOODSTREAM OR LYMPH
Absorption (Pharmacokinetics); Drug absorption; Bloodstream absorption; Absorption into the bloodstream; Absorption (pharmacokinetics); Instantaneous absorption; Zero-order absorption; Zero order absorption; First-order absorption; First order absorption; Instantaneous absorption rate; First-order absorption rate; Zero-order absorption rate
Absorption is the journey of a drug travelling from the site of administration to the site of action.
Absorption (electromagnetic radiation)         
  • Rough plot of Earth's atmospheric [[transmittance]] (or opacity) to various wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, including [[visible light]]
WAY IN WHICH THE ENERGY OF A PHOTON IS TAKEN UP BY MATTER; PHYSICAL PROCESS OF ABSORBING LIGHT, WHILE ABSORBANCE DOES NOT ALWAYS MEASURE ABSORPTION: IT MEASURES ATTENUATION (OF TRANSMITTED RADIANT POWER)
Molecular absorption; Absorption of Light; Optical absorption; Absorption (optics); Absorption (light); Absorption of electromagnetic radiation; Light absorption; Absorption (of electromagnetic radiation); Absorption of light; Radiation absorption
In physics, absorption of electromagnetic radiation is how matter (typically electrons bound in atoms) takes up a photon's energy — and so transforms electromagnetic energy into internal energy of the absorber (for example, thermal energy). A notable effect is attenuation, or the gradual reduction of the intensity of light waves as they propagate through a medium.

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.