• Hess (novel by Enquist)

    Per Olov Enquist: …method, first became noticeable in Hess (1966) and was carried out with great effectiveness in Legionärerna (1968; The Legionnaires, 1973), a study of the extradition of Baltic soldiers from Sweden to the Soviet Union after the end of World War II. A year later the book was awarded the Nordic…

  • Hess Oil and Chemical Corporation (American company)

    Amerada Hess Corporation: …in 1969 by merging with Hess Oil and Chemical Corporation (founded 1925).

  • Hess’s law (chemistry)

    Hess’s law, rule first enunciated by Germain Henri Hess, a Swiss-born Russian chemist, in 1840, stating that the heat absorbed or evolved (or the change in enthalpy) in any chemical reaction is a fixed quantity and is independent of the path of the reaction or the number of steps taken to obtain

  • Hess, András (printer)

    Chronica Hungarorum: …issued from the press of András Hess in Buda, now Budapest, on June 5, 1473. Hess, who was probably of German origin, dedicated the book to his patron, László Karai, provost of Buda, who had invited him to Hungary from Rome.

  • Hess, Dame Myra (British pianist)

    Dame Myra Hess was an English pianist known for her interpretations of the works of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, and Robert Schumann. Hess studied at the Guildhall School of Music and at the Royal Academy of Music under Tobias Matthay. She made her concert debut in London in 1907 and in the United

  • Hess, Germain Henri (Russian chemist)

    Germain Henri Hess was a chemist whose studies of heat in chemical reactions formed the foundation of thermochemistry. After practicing medicine for several years in Irkutsk, Russia, Hess became professor of chemistry in 1830 at the Technological Institute, University of St. Petersburg. His early

  • Hess, Harry Hammond (American scientist)

    continental drift: …early 1960s, the American geophysicist Harry H. Hess proposed that new oceanic crust is continually generated by igneous activity at the crests of oceanic ridges—submarine mountains that follow a sinuous course of about 65,000 km (40,000 miles) along the bottom of the major ocean basins. Molten rock material from Earth’s…

  • Hess, Moritz (German author and Zionist)

    Moses Hess was a German journalist and socialist who influenced Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels and who was an important early proponent of Zionism. (Read George Bernard Shaw’s 1926 Britannica essay on socialism.) Hess’s first published work, Heilige Geschichte der Menschheit von einem Jünger

  • Hess, Moses (German author and Zionist)

    Moses Hess was a German journalist and socialist who influenced Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels and who was an important early proponent of Zionism. (Read George Bernard Shaw’s 1926 Britannica essay on socialism.) Hess’s first published work, Heilige Geschichte der Menschheit von einem Jünger

  • Hess, Rudolf (German Nazi leader)

    Rudolf Hess was a German National Socialist who was Adolf Hitler’s deputy as party leader. He created an international sensation when in 1941 he secretly flew to Great Britain on an abortive self-styled mission to negotiate a peace between Britain and Germany. The son of a merchant, Hess served in

  • Hess, Victor Francis (Austrian physicist)

    Victor Francis Hess was an Austrian-born physicist who was a joint recipient, with Carl D. Anderson of the United States, of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1936 for his discovery of cosmic rays—high-energy radiation originating in outer space. Educated at the University of Graz, Hess received his

  • Hess, Walter Richard Rudolf (German Nazi leader)

    Rudolf Hess was a German National Socialist who was Adolf Hitler’s deputy as party leader. He created an international sensation when in 1941 he secretly flew to Great Britain on an abortive self-styled mission to negotiate a peace between Britain and Germany. The son of a merchant, Hess served in

  • Hess, Walter Rudolf (Swiss physiologist)

    Walter Rudolf Hess was a Swiss physiologist, who received (with António Egas Moniz) the 1949 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for discovering the role played by certain parts of the brain in determining and coordinating the functions of internal organs. Originally an ophthalmologist

  • Hesse (state, Germany)

    Hessen, Land (state) in the west-central part of Germany. Hessen is bounded by the states of Lower Saxony to the north, Thuringia to the east, Bavaria to the southeast, Baden-Württemberg to the south, Rhineland-Palatinate to the west, and North Rhine–Westphalia to the northwest. Its capital is

  • Hesse, Eva (American artist)

    Eva Hesse was a German-born American painter and sculptor known for using unusual materials such as rubber tubing, fibreglass, synthetic resins, cord, cloth, and wire. Hesse had a prolific yet short career, and her influence since her death at age 34 has been widespread. Born into a German Jewish

  • Hesse, Hermann (German writer)

    Hermann Hesse was a German novelist and poet who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1946. The main theme of his work is the individual’s efforts to break out of the established modes of civilization so as to find an essential spirit and identity. Hesse grew up in Calw and in Basel. He

  • Hesse-Cassel (former landgraviate, Germany)

    Hesse-Kassel, former landgraviate of Germany, formed in 1567 in the division of old Hesse. In 1567 Hesse was partitioned among four sons of Landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, Hesse-Kassel going to William IV the Wise. Hesse-Kassel was the largest, most important, and most northerly of the four Hesse

  • Hesse-Darmstadt (former landgraviate, Germany)

    Hesse-Darmstadt, former landgraviate, grand duchy, and state of Germany. It was formed in 1567 in the division of old Hesse; after Hesse-Kassel was absorbed by Prussia in 1866, Hesse-Darmstadt was usually known simply as Hesse. Hesse-Darmstadt was originally only the small territory of Upper

  • Hesse-Kassel (former landgraviate, Germany)

    Hesse-Kassel, former landgraviate of Germany, formed in 1567 in the division of old Hesse. In 1567 Hesse was partitioned among four sons of Landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, Hesse-Kassel going to William IV the Wise. Hesse-Kassel was the largest, most important, and most northerly of the four Hesse

  • Hessel, Johann F. C. (German mineralogist)

    point group: …demonstrated by a German mineralogist, Johann F.C. Hessel, in 1830. Each possible combination is called a point group, or crystal class. A crystal can be assigned to one of these point groups on the basis of its external shape, or morphology. The addition of translational changes will yield a total…

  • Hesselberg, Melvyn Edouard (American actor)

    Alexander Hall: The Columbia years: The comedy featured Melvyn Douglas and Joan Blondell as a husband-and-wife crime-fighting team who spar in the best William Powell–Myrna Loy tradition. I Am the Law (1938) cast Edward G. Robinson against type as a special prosecutor who fights corruption in city government, while Douglas and Blondell reteamed…

  • Hessen (state, Germany)

    Hessen, Land (state) in the west-central part of Germany. Hessen is bounded by the states of Lower Saxony to the north, Thuringia to the east, Bavaria to the southeast, Baden-Württemberg to the south, Rhineland-Palatinate to the west, and North Rhine–Westphalia to the northwest. Its capital is

  • Hessen-Cassel (former landgraviate, Germany)

    Hesse-Kassel, former landgraviate of Germany, formed in 1567 in the division of old Hesse. In 1567 Hesse was partitioned among four sons of Landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, Hesse-Kassel going to William IV the Wise. Hesse-Kassel was the largest, most important, and most northerly of the four Hesse

  • Hessen-Darmstadt (former landgraviate, Germany)

    Hesse-Darmstadt, former landgraviate, grand duchy, and state of Germany. It was formed in 1567 in the division of old Hesse; after Hesse-Kassel was absorbed by Prussia in 1866, Hesse-Darmstadt was usually known simply as Hesse. Hesse-Darmstadt was originally only the small territory of Upper

  • Hessen-Kassel (former landgraviate, Germany)

    Hesse-Kassel, former landgraviate of Germany, formed in 1567 in the division of old Hesse. In 1567 Hesse was partitioned among four sons of Landgrave Philip the Magnanimous, Hesse-Kassel going to William IV the Wise. Hesse-Kassel was the largest, most important, and most northerly of the four Hesse

  • hessian (textile)

    jute: …of finer quality being called burlap, or hessian. Burlap bags are used to ship and store grain, fruits and vegetables, flour, sugar, animal feeds, and other agricultural commodities. High-quality jute cloths are the principal fabrics used to provide backing for tufted carpets, as well as for hooked rugs (i.e., Oriental…

  • Hessian fly (insect)

    Hessian fly, (Mayetiola destructor), small fly in the gall midge family, Cecidomyiidae (order Diptera), that is very destructive to wheat crops. Though a native of Asia it was transported into Europe and later into North America, supposedly in the straw bedding of Hessian troops during the American

  • hessite (mineral)

    sulfide mineral: …and selenides among which is hessite (Ag2Te), the ore mineral of silver.

  • Hessling, Catherine (French actress)

    Jean Renoir: Early years: …one of his father’s models, Andrée Heurschling, a few months after the painter’s death, and went with her to live in Marlotte, a village near Paris in which his father had once painted.

  • hessonite (mineral)

    hessonite, translucent, semiprecious, reddish-brown variety of grossular (q.v.), a garnet

  • Hester, Devin (American football player)

    Deion Sanders: …in 2014 by kick returner Devin Hester.)

  • Hestia (Greek mythology)

    Hestia, in Greek religion, goddess of the hearth, daughter of Cronus and Rhea, and one of the 12 Olympian deities. When the gods Apollo and Poseidon became suitors for her hand she swore to remain a maiden forever, whereupon Zeus, the king of the gods, bestowed upon her the honour of presiding over

  • Heston, Charlton (American actor)

    Charlton Heston was an American actor who was known for his chiseled features and compelling speaking voice and for his numerous roles as historical figures and famous literary characters. Heston decided to become an actor after impulsively auditioning for a high-school play. His stage experience

  • Heston, Leonard (American behavioral geneticist)

    behaviour genetics: Methods of study: …1966 by American behavioral geneticist Leonard Heston showed that children adopted away from their schizophrenic biological mothers at birth were just as likely to become schizophrenic (about 10 percent) as were children reared by their schizophrenic biological mothers. A 20-year study begun in the 1970s in the United States of…

  • Heston, William Martin (American athlete)

    Willie Heston was a U.S. collegiate halfback who played with Fielding Yost’s University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) teams that from 1901 through 1904 scored 2,326 points in 44 games to their opponents’ 40 points. Heston graduated from Grant’s Pass (Oregon) High School and played football at San Jose

  • Heston, Willie (American athlete)

    Willie Heston was a U.S. collegiate halfback who played with Fielding Yost’s University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) teams that from 1901 through 1904 scored 2,326 points in 44 games to their opponents’ 40 points. Heston graduated from Grant’s Pass (Oregon) High School and played football at San Jose

  • Hesychasm (Eastern Orthodoxy)

    Hesychasm, in Eastern Christianity, type of monastic life in which practitioners seek divine quietness (Greek hēsychia) through the contemplation of God in uninterrupted prayer. Such prayer, involving the entire human being—soul, mind, and body—is often called “pure,” or “intellectual,” prayer or

  • Hesychius of Alexandria (Greek lexicographer)

    Hesychius of Alexandria was an author of the most important Greek lexicon known from antiquity, valued as a basic authority for the dialects and vocabularies of ancient inscriptions, poetic text, and the Greek Church Fathers. Although nothing is known of his life, Hesychius indicated the

  • Hesychius Of Jerusalem (Eastern Orthodox monk)

    Hesychius Of Jerusalem was a priest-monk, renowned in the Eastern Church as a theologian, biblical commentator, and preacher. He played a prominent role in the 5th-century controversy on the nature of Christ and was acclaimed as having annotated the whole of sacred Scripture. Serving as a priest in

  • Hesychius Of Miletus (Byzantine historian)

    Hesychius Of Miletus was a Byzantine historian and literary biographer whose chronicle of world history influenced later Byzantine historical accounts and provided singular data on the history of Constantinople. His works are also a valuable source for the history of Greek literature. A native of

  • HET (telescope, Texas, United States)

    Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET), telescope that is one of the largest in the world, with a mirror measuring 11.1 by 9.8 metres (36.4 by 32.2 feet). It is located on Mount Fowlkes (2,024 metres [6,640 feet]) at the University of Texas at Austin’s McDonald Observatory near Fort Davis, Texas, U.S. The

  • Het uur U (poetry by Nijhoff)

    Martinus Nijhoff: “Awater” and Het uur U (1942; “U-Hour”), the story of a stranger’s shattering effect on a self-satisfied community, firmly establish Nijhoff as one of Europe’s foremost 20th-century poets.

  • hét, A (Hungarian periodical)

    Hungarian literature: Writers of the late 19th century: The periodical A hét (“The Week”), founded in 1890 by József Kiss, became the organ of a number of gifted writers, including Zoltán Ambrus and Sándor Bródy.

  • hetaera (ancient Greek courtesan)

    hetaira, one of a class of professional independent courtesans of ancient Greece who, besides developing physical beauty, cultivated their minds and talents to a degree far beyond that allowed to the average Attic woman. Usually living fashionably alone, or sometimes two or three together, the

  • hetaira (ancient Greek courtesan)

    hetaira, one of a class of professional independent courtesans of ancient Greece who, besides developing physical beauty, cultivated their minds and talents to a degree far beyond that allowed to the average Attic woman. Usually living fashionably alone, or sometimes two or three together, the

  • hetairoi (Macedonian cavalry)

    Alexander the Great: Campaign eastward to Central Asia: The Companion cavalry was reorganized in two sections, each containing four squadrons (now known as hipparchies); one group was commanded by Alexander’s oldest friend, Hephaestion, the other by Cleitus, an older man. From Phrada, Alexander pressed on during the winter of 330–329 up the valley of…

  • Hetch Hetchy Reservoir (reservoir, Yosemite National Park, California, United States)

    dam: Rise of environmental and economic concerns: …San Francisco to build a reservoir in Hetch Hetchy Valley. Located more than 900 metres (3,000 feet) above sea level, the Hetch Hetchy site offered a good storage location in the Sierra Nevada for water that could be delivered without pumping to San Francisco via an aqueduct nearly 270 km…

  • HETE-2 (international satellite)

    High Energy Transient Explorer-2 (HETE-2), international satellite designed to study gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), intense flashes of gamma rays from very distant objects. HETE-2 was launched on October 9, 2000, near Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific Ocean by a Pegasus launch vehicle dropped from the

  • Hetepheres (queen of Egypt)

    Hetepheres, ancient Egyptian queen, wife of the king Snefru, who bore the title “Daughter of God” and represented the direct royal blood line of the 4th dynasty (c. 2575–c. 2465 bce). Snefru probably married her in the middle of the reign of his predecessor, Huni, in order to establish his claim to

  • Hetepsekhemwy (king of Egypt)

    ancient Egypt: The 2nd dynasty (c. 2730–c. 2590 bce): …whose first king’s Horus name, Hetepsekhemwy, means “peaceful in respect of the two powers” and may allude to the conclusion of strife between two factions or parts of the country, to the antagonistic gods Horus and Seth, or to both. Hetepsekhemwy and his successor, Reneb, moved their burial places to…

  • Heteralocha acutirostris (extinct bird)

    Callaeidae: ; Creadion carunculatus), and the huia (Heteralocha acutirostris). The first two are rare and in danger of extinction; the huia has been extinct since the early 20th century.

  • Heteranthera (plant)

    mud plantain, any aquatic annual or perennial plant of the genus Heteranthera of the pickerelweed family (Pontederiaceae), consisting of about 10 species, distributed primarily in tropical America. The broad or ribbonlike leaves of these plants have leafstalks that form sheaths around the long

  • Heteranthera dubia (plant)

    mud plantain: Water star grass (H. dubia) is widely distributed throughout North America; it has yellow star-shaped flowers.

  • heterarchy (social science)

    heterarchy, form of management or rule in which any unit can govern or be governed by others, depending on circumstances, and, hence, no one unit dominates the rest. Authority within a heterarchy is distributed. A heterarchy possesses a flexible structure made up of interdependent units, and the

  • Heterenchelyidae

    eel: Annotated classification: Family Heterenchelyidae (mud eels) No fins, mouth large. 2 genera with 8 species. Tropical Atlantic. Family Moringuidae (spaghetti eels) Anus in posterior half of body, degenerate, burrowing. 2 genera with about 6 species. Tropical Indo-Pacific and western Atlantic. Suborder

  • heteroaromatic compound (chemical compound)

    heterocyclic compound: The nature of heteroaromaticity: Aromaticity denotes the significant stabilization of a ring compound by a system of alternating single and double bonds—called a cyclic conjugated system—in which six π electrons generally participate. A nitrogen atom in a ring can carry a positive or a negative charge, or it…

  • heteroatom (chemistry)

    chemical compound: Functional groups: …carbon or hydrogen (termed a heteroatom) is bonded to carbon. All heteroatoms have a greater or lesser attraction for electrons than does carbon. Thus, each bond between a carbon and a heteroatom is polar, and the degree of polarity depends on the difference between the electron-attracting properties of the two…

  • Heterocentrotus mammillatus (invertebrate)

    sea urchin: The slate-pencil urchin (Heterocentrotus mammillatus) of the Indo-Pacific has 12-cm spines that may be 1 cm thick—stout enough to be used for writing. Lytechinus variegatus, a pale-greenish urchin of the southeastern coast of the United States and the Caribbean, and the large, short-spined Psammechinus (sometimes Echinus)…

  • Heterocephalus glaber (rodent)

    naked mole rat, (Heterocephalus glaber), burrowing member of the rodent family Bathyergidae, named for its wrinkled pinkish skin and hairless bodily appearance. Their broad heads contain strong, muscular jaws that support four incisor teeth that are used for digging. They are renowned for their

  • Heteroceridae (insect)

    coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Heteroceridae (variegated mud-loving beetles) About 500 widely distributed species; example Heterocerus. Family Limnichidae (minute marsh-loving beetles) Similar to Dryopidae; a few widely distributed species. Family Lutrochidae

  • heterochain polymer (chemistry)

    major industrial polymers: Heterochain polymers: A wide variety of heterochain polymers—that is, polymers in which the backbone contains elements such as oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, or silicon in addition to carbon—are in commercial use. Many of these compounds are complex in structure. In this section the major heterochain polymer…

  • heterochlorid (protozoan order)

    heterochlorid, any protozoan of the plantlike flagellate order Heterochlorida. Heterochlorids have two flagella of unequal length and chromatophores with yellow to yellow-green pigments. Food reserves are stored as leucosin (a carbohydrate) and lipids. Some genera may be amoeboid during part of the

  • Heterochlorida (protozoan order)

    heterochlorid, any protozoan of the plantlike flagellate order Heterochlorida. Heterochlorids have two flagella of unequal length and chromatophores with yellow to yellow-green pigments. Food reserves are stored as leucosin (a carbohydrate) and lipids. Some genera may be amoeboid during part of the

  • heterocycle (chemistry)

    heterocyclic compound, any of a major class of organic chemical compounds characterized by the fact that some or all of the atoms in their molecules are joined in rings containing at least one atom of an element other than carbon (C). The cyclic part (from Greek kyklos, meaning “circle”) of

  • heterocyclic compound (chemistry)

    heterocyclic compound, any of a major class of organic chemical compounds characterized by the fact that some or all of the atoms in their molecules are joined in rings containing at least one atom of an element other than carbon (C). The cyclic part (from Greek kyklos, meaning “circle”) of

  • heterocyst (cell)

    blue-green algae: …that have specialized cells called heterocysts. The heterocysts are thick-walled cell inclusions that are impermeable to oxygen; they provide the anaerobic (oxygen-free) environment necessary for the operation of the nitrogen-fixing enzymes. In Southeast Asia, nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria often are grown in rice paddies, thereby eliminating the need to apply nitrogen fertilizers.

  • Heterodera rostochiensis (species of nematode)

    plant disease: Nematode diseases: The golden nematode of potatoes (Heterodera rostochiensis) is a menace of the European potato industry. Great efforts have been made to control it. The speck-sized golden cysts that dot infested plant roots are the remains of female bodies. Each cyst may contain up to 500 eggs,…

  • Heterodera schachtii (worm)

    plant disease: Nematode diseases: A related, cyst-forming species, the sugar beet nematode (H. schachtii), is a pest that has restricted acreage of sugar beets in Europe, Asia, and America.

  • Heterodon (reptile, genus Heterodon)

    hognose snake, (genus Heterodon), any of up to five species of North American nonvenomous snakes belonging to the family Colubridae. The snake is named for its upturned snout, which it uses for digging. When threatened, it flattens its head and neck and then strikes with a loud hiss but rarely

  • Heterodon nasicus (snake)

    hognose snake: …America, and the western (H. nasicus), which primarily inhabits the Great Plains and whose range extends from southern Canada to central Mexico. Both species are heavy-bodied and blotchy, and they grow to about 60 to 80 cm (23.6 to 31.5 inches) in length. The southern hognose snake (H. simus),…

  • heterodont (dinosaur family)

    ornithopod: …of several subgroups, including Fabrosauridae, Heterodontosauridae, Hypsilophodontidae, Iguanodontidae, and Hadrosauridae (the duck-billed dinosaurs). The fabrosaurs were the earliest and most primitive of the ornithopods; these small, lightly built dinosaurs reached lengths of 60–120 cm (2–4 feet). The heterodontosaurs began to develop the horny beaks and specialized teeth typical of ornithischians.…

  • Heterodonta (bivalve subclass)

    bivalve: Annotated classification: Subclass Heterodonta Shell highly variable; hinge plate teeth may be reduced or absent; shell comprises crossed-lamellar, complex crossed-lamellar, or prismatic layers, but never nacreous; primitively isomyarian but with wide range of adductor muscle configurations; ctenidia eulamellibranch; mantle margins extensively fused, particularly posteriorly, often to form long…

  • Heterodontidae (shark family)

    chondrichthyan: Annotated classification: Family Heterodontidae (horned sharks, bullhead sharks, Port Jackson sharks) Oviparous; egg case screw-shaped, a double spiral flange extending from the egg’s apex to large end. Teeth in upper and lower jaws alike, those in front incisor-like, those on sides much larger and molar-like. Size up to…

  • Heterodontoidei (shark suborder)

    chondrichthyan: Annotated classification: Suborder Heterodontoidei 5 gill openings on each side of body; anal fin present; 2 dorsal fins, each preceded by a spine. Marine. Late Devonian to present. Family Heterodontidae (horned sharks, bullhead sharks, Port Jackson sharks) Oviparous; egg case screw-shaped, a double spiral flange extending from the…

  • heterodontosaur (dinosaur family)

    ornithopod: …of several subgroups, including Fabrosauridae, Heterodontosauridae, Hypsilophodontidae, Iguanodontidae, and Hadrosauridae (the duck-billed dinosaurs). The fabrosaurs were the earliest and most primitive of the ornithopods; these small, lightly built dinosaurs reached lengths of 60–120 cm (2–4 feet). The heterodontosaurs began to develop the horny beaks and specialized teeth typical of ornithischians.…

  • Heterodontosauridae (dinosaur family)

    ornithopod: …of several subgroups, including Fabrosauridae, Heterodontosauridae, Hypsilophodontidae, Iguanodontidae, and Hadrosauridae (the duck-billed dinosaurs). The fabrosaurs were the earliest and most primitive of the ornithopods; these small, lightly built dinosaurs reached lengths of 60–120 cm (2–4 feet). The heterodontosaurs began to develop the horny beaks and specialized teeth typical of ornithischians.…

  • Heterodontus (fish)

    bullhead shark, (genus Heterodontus), any shark of the genus Heterodontus, known for its broad head, small mouth, and short snout. The genus contains about 11 species and constitutes the family Heterodontidae (order Heterodontiformes). This exclusively marine group is found only in the tropical

  • Heterodontus francisci (fish)

    bullhead shark: …conduct population surveys of the horn shark (H. francisci) of the eastern Pacific Ocean, whitespotted bullhead shark (H. ramalheira) of the western Indian Ocean, and the Oman bullhead shark (H. omanensis) of the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea.

  • Heterodontus mexicanus (shark)

    bullhead shark: The largest species include the Mexican hornshark (Heterodontus mexicanus), found along the western coast of North America, which can grow to 1.7 metres (about 5.6 feet), and the Port Jackson shark (H. portusjacksoni), found in Australian Pacific waters, which can reach a length of 1.65 metres (5.4 feet) fully grown.

  • Heterodontus omanensis (fish)

    bullhead shark: …the Oman bullhead shark (H. omanensis) of the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea.

  • Heterodontus philippi (shark)

    bullhead shark: 6 feet), and the Port Jackson shark (H. portusjacksoni), found in Australian Pacific waters, which can reach a length of 1.65 metres (5.4 feet) fully grown.

  • Heterodontus portusjacksoni (shark)

    bullhead shark: 6 feet), and the Port Jackson shark (H. portusjacksoni), found in Australian Pacific waters, which can reach a length of 1.65 metres (5.4 feet) fully grown.

  • Heterodontus ramalheira

    bullhead shark: …of the eastern Pacific Ocean, whitespotted bullhead shark (H. ramalheira) of the western Indian Ocean, and the Oman bullhead shark (H. omanensis) of the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea.

  • heterodonty (teeth)

    primate: Teeth: …different kinds of teeth (heterodonty)—incisors, canines, and cheek teeth—is characteristic of all primates and indeed of mammals generally. Heterodonty is a primitive characteristic, and primates have evolved less far from the original pattern than most mammals. The principal changes are a reduction in the number of teeth and an…

  • heterodox problem (chess composition)

    chess: Heterodox problems: The 20th century was marked by investigation of heterodox problems and greater elaboration of direct-mate problem themes. These problems, also called fairy chess, are distinguished from the orthodox problems considered so far by their unusual stipulations or by the use of nonstandard rules…

  • Heterodoxia (work by Sábato)

    Ernesto Sábato: …model for social structures, and Heterodoxia (1953; “Heterodoxy”), on the problems of modern civilization and what Sábato saw as an attendant loss of earlier moral and metaphysical foundations.

  • Heterodoxus spiniger (insect)

    louse: Ecology: Heterodoxus spiniger, which is parasitic on domestic dogs in tropical regions, was most likely acquired relatively recently from an Australian marsupial.

  • heteroduplex (biology)

    nucleic acid: General recombination: …not identical will be a heteroduplex—that is, a molecule in which mismatched bases will be present at some positions in the helix. Thus, in the specialized recombination that takes place during meiosis, one round of replication is necessary before the mosaic chromosomes produced by recombination are properly matched. Enzymes are…

  • heterodyne beat (electronics)

    Alexander Meissner: …amplification systems, and developed the heterodyne principle for radio reception. In 1911 Meissner designed the first rotary radio beacon to aid in the navigation of the Zeppelin airships. In 1913 he was the first to amplify high-frequency radio signals by using feedback in a vacuum triode; this principle made it…

  • heterodyne principle (electronics)

    Alexander Meissner: …amplification systems, and developed the heterodyne principle for radio reception. In 1911 Meissner designed the first rotary radio beacon to aid in the navigation of the Zeppelin airships. In 1913 he was the first to amplify high-frequency radio signals by using feedback in a vacuum triode; this principle made it…

  • heteroepitaxy (crystallography)

    crystal: Growth from the melt: Heteroepitaxy, on the other hand, is the growth of one crystal on the substrate of another. Silicon substrates are often used since they are readily available in atomically smooth form. Many different semiconductor crystals can be grown on silicon, such as gallium arsenide, germanium, cadmium…

  • heterogamy (botany)

    cross-pollination, type of pollination in which sperm-laden pollen grains are transferred from the cones or flowers of one plant to egg-bearing cones or flowers of another.Cross-pollination is found in both angiosperms (flowering plants) and gymnosperms (cone-bearing plants) and facilitates

  • heterogamy (biology)

    plant reproductive system: The cellular basis: , heterogamous). The larger gamete, or egg, is nonmotile; the smaller gamete, or sperm, is motile. The last type of gametic difference, egg and sperm, is often designated as oogamy. In oogamous reproduction, the union of sperm and egg is called fertilization. Isogamy, heterogamy, and oogamy…

  • Heterogastridiales (order of fungi)

    fungus: Annotated classification: Order Heterogastridiales Mycoparasitic; basidiocarps may be pycnidioid; example genus includes Heterogastridium. Order Microbotryales Pathogenic in plants (some cause smut); violet teliospores; example genera include Microbotryum and Ustilentyloma.

  • heterogeneous catalysis (chemistry)

    catalysis: Heterogeneous catalysis: Many catalytic processes are known in which the catalyst and the reactants are not present in the same phase—that is, state of matter. These are known as heterogeneous catalytic reactions. They include reactions between gases or liquids or both at the surface of…

  • heterogeneous nucleation (crystallography)

    atmosphere: Condensation: When ice nuclei are present, heterogeneous ice nucleation can occur at warmer temperatures.

  • heterogeneous reaction (chemical reaction)

    heterogeneous reaction, any of a class of chemical reactions in which the reactants are components of two or more phases (solid and gas, solid and liquid, two immiscible liquids) or in which one or more reactants undergo chemical change at an interface, e.g., on the surface of a solid catalyst. The

  • heterogeneous shopping goods (economics)

    marketing: Shopping goods: With heterogeneous shopping goods, product features become more important to the consumer than price. Such is often the case with the purchase of major appliances, clothing, furniture, and high-tech equipment. In this situation, the item purchased must be a certain size or colour and must perform…

  • heterogenesis (biology)

    alternation of generations, in biology, the alternation of a sexual phase and an asexual phase in the life cycle of an organism. The two phases, or generations, are often morphologically, and sometimes chromosomally, distinct. In algae, fungi, and plants, alternation of generations is common. It is

  • Hétérogénie (work by Pouchet)

    Félix-Archimède Pouchet: In his major work, Hétérogénie (1859), he detailed the conditions under which living organisms supposedly were produced by chemical processes such as fermentation and putrefaction. His supporters were primarily among those whose religious or philosophical beliefs required the concept of spontaneous generation. Pouchet’s theory was discredited when Louis Pasteur…