Micrometres is an English word. Below you'll find 10+ example sentences showing how it's used in practice.
Micrometres meaning
plural of micrometre
Using Micrometres
- The main meaning on this page is: plural of micrometre
- In the example corpus, micrometres often appears in combinations such as: than micrometres, of micrometres, micrometres in.
Context around Micrometres
- Average sentence length in these examples: 22.7 words
- Position in the sentence: 2 start, 8 middle, 8 end
- Sentence types: 18 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Micrometres
- In this selection, "micrometres" usually appears in the middle of the sentence. The average example has 22.7 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, few, 762, 1500, wide, small and across stand out and add context to how "micrometres" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include 0 840 micrometres main per and 10 000 micrometres in diameter. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "micrometres" sits close to words such as aaditya, aardman and abbess, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with micrometres
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Individual cells are less than 10 micrometres in diameter. (9 words)
These micro labs are 140 x 140 x 60 micrometres small. (11 words)
The naked eye detects particle sizes greater than 7 µm ( micrometres ). (11 words)
In order to focus the shock wave on the center of the target, the target must be made with extremely high precision and sphericity with aberrations of no more than a few micrometres over its surface (inner and outer). (39 words)
The tuning of the laser wavelength of 0.840 micrometres (main per photon) and the PV panel bandgap of main to each other produces an estimated conversion efficiency of 59% and a predicted power density of up to main. (39 words)
In this method the frequencies involved are not constantly locked in phase with each other, instead the crystal axis is flipped at a regular interval Λ, typically 15 micrometres in length. (31 words)
Example sentences (18)
On a normal spring day, fine particle pollution called PM2.5 (pollutants less than 2.5 micrometres wide) average about 20 micrograms per cubic metre.
These micro labs are 140 x 140 x 60 micrometres small.
Some were only 11 micrometres across — about a sixth the diameter of a human hair, the team said.
A trap shooter shooting at distant targets might use 762 micrometres (0.030 inches) of constriction to produce a convert diameter pattern at convert.
Dendrites are thin structures that arise from the cell body, often extending for hundreds of micrometres and branching multiple times, giving rise to a complex "dendritic tree".
Individual cells are less than 10 micrometres in diameter.
In order to focus the shock wave on the center of the target, the target must be made with extremely high precision and sphericity with aberrations of no more than a few micrometres over its surface (inner and outer).
In this method the frequencies involved are not constantly locked in phase with each other, instead the crystal axis is flipped at a regular interval Λ, typically 15 micrometres in length.
In this process, etch depths of hundreds of micrometres are achieved with almost vertical sidewalls.
Special chokes for turkey hunting, which requires long range shots at the small head and neck of the bird, can go as high as 1500 micrometres (0.060 inches).
Spider silk is typically about 1 to 2 micrometres (µm) thick, compared with about 60 µm for human hair, and more for some mammals.
The dust in meteoroid streams is much larger, 300 to 10,000 micrometres in diameter, and falls apart into smaller zodiacal dust grains over time.
The naked eye detects particle sizes greater than 7 µm ( micrometres ).
The PPR also measured in five broadband channels that spanned the spectral range from 17 to 110 micrometres.
These tubular polymers of tubulin can grow as long as 50 micrometres and are highly dynamic.
The tracheae are invaginations of the cuticular exoskeleton that branch ( anastomose ) throughout the body with diameters from only a few micrometres up to 0.8 mm.
The tuning of the laser wavelength of 0.840 micrometres (main per photon) and the PV panel bandgap of main to each other produces an estimated conversion efficiency of 59% and a predicted power density of up to main.
When ground down to sizes less than 10 micrometres, the grains are removed from the inner Solar System by solar radiation pressure.
Common combinations with micrometres
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- than micrometres 3×
- of micrometres 3×
- micrometres in 3×
- to micrometres 3×
- micrometres inches 2×
- micrometres and 2×
- few micrometres 2×
- as micrometres 2×