E Scientific & Educational Abbreviation

E has various meanings in the Scientific & Educational category. Discover the full forms, definitions, and usage contexts of E in Scientific & Educational.

Estimate

Most Common

The process of calculating the cost of a project. This can be a formal and exact process or a quick and imprecise process. The amount of labor, materials, and other costs that a contractor anticipates for a project as summarized in the contractor’s bid proposal for the project. An analysis of a foreign situation, development, or trend that identifies its major elements, interprets the significance, and appraises the future possibilities and the prospective results of the various actions that might be taken.

Scientific & Educational
Electric
Scientific & Educational
Ethyl
Scientific & Educational
Extended
Scientific & Educational
Glutamate

Glutamate is a key compound in cellular metabolism. In humans, dietary proteins are broken down by digestion into amino acids, which serve as metabolic fuel for other functional roles in the body.

Scientific & Educational
Glutamic Acid

Glutamic acid is one of the 20-23 proteinogenic amino acids, and its codons are GAA and GAG. It is a non-essential amino acid. The carboxylate anions and salts of glutamic acid are known as glutamates. In neuroscience, glutamate is an important neurotransmitter that plays the principal role in neural activation.

Scientific & Educational
Efficiency

The ratio of output to input. Volumetric efficiency of a pump is the actual output, in gpm, divided by the theoretical or design output. Means of getting the same or better service while using fewer resources. OR The efficiency of an electrical machine or apparatus is the ratio of its useful power output to its total power input. Efficiency is the percentage of the input power that is actually converted to work output from the motor shaft.

Scientific & Educational
Epinephrine

A hormone produced as a response to stress; also called adrenaline.

Scientific & Educational
Energy

The ability or capacity to do work. OR The capacity for doing work as measured by the capability of doing work (potential energy) or the conversion of this capability to motion (kinetic energy). Energy has several forms, some of which are easily convertible and can be changed to another form useful for work. Most of the world's convertible energy comes from fossil fuels that are burned to produce heat that is then used as a transfer medium to mechanical or other means in order to accomplish tasks.

Scientific & Educational
Extension

Extension: Voluntary arrangements to restructure a firm's debt, under which the payment date is postponed.

Scientific & Educational

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