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- Q1246948 subject Q7168448.
- Q1246948 subject Q7232484.
- Q1246948 abstract "Granularity (also called "graininess", the quality of being grainy) is the extent to which a material or system is composed of distinguishable pieces or grains. It can either refer to the extent to which a larger entity is subdivided, or the extent to which groups of smaller indistinguishable entities have joined together to become larger distinguishable entities. For example, a kilometer broken into centimeters has finer granularity than a kilometer broken into meters. In contrast, molecules of photographic emulsion may clump together to form distinct noticeable granules, reflecting coarser granularity.Coarse-grained materials or systems have fewer, larger discrete components than fine-grained materials or systems. A coarse-grained description of a system regards large subcomponents while a fine-grained description regards smaller components of which the larger ones are composed.The terms granularity, coarse, and fine are relative, used when comparing systems or descriptions of systems. An example of increasingly fine granularity: a list of nations in the United Nations, a list of all states/provinces in those nations, a list of all cities in those states, etc.The terms fine and coarse are used consistently across fields, but the term granularity itself is not. For example, in investing, more granularity refers to more positions of smaller size, while photographic film that is more granular has fewer and larger chemical "grains." Similarly, sugar that is more granular has fewer and larger grains.".
- Q1246948 wikiPageExternalLink annurev-physchem-032210-103458.
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- Q1246948 wikiPageWikiLink Q7140503.
- Q1246948 wikiPageWikiLink Q7168448.
- Q1246948 wikiPageWikiLink Q7232484.
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- Q1246948 wikiPageWikiLink Q815844.
- Q1246948 wikiPageWikiLink Q901663.
- Q1246948 type Thing.
- Q1246948 comment "Granularity (also called "graininess", the quality of being grainy) is the extent to which a material or system is composed of distinguishable pieces or grains. It can either refer to the extent to which a larger entity is subdivided, or the extent to which groups of smaller indistinguishable entities have joined together to become larger distinguishable entities. For example, a kilometer broken into centimeters has finer granularity than a kilometer broken into meters.".
- Q1246948 label "Granularity".
- Q1246948 seeAlso Q5369991.