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capacity
(redirected from heat capacity)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
Capacity
Credit grantors' measurement of a person's ability to repay loans.

Capacity
The theoretical maximum number of products a company can produce at a given time. For example, an oil pump may have a capacity of X barrels per day, meaning that it cannot produce more than X. Companies rarely operate at full capacity, both to allow themselves leeway in the event of increased demand and because capacity may not be possible at a given time because of worker illness, machinery maintenance, or other reasons.

capacity

The legal ability of parties to enter into contracts.
• Full capacity. Having unlimited ability to enter into binding contracts of all types.
• Limited capacity. Having the ability to enter into binding contracts for certain things, such as a minor's contracts for necessities, but also having the ability to disaffirm other contracts upon reaching legal age, for example.
• No capacity. Having no ability to enter into contracts, such as one who has been adjudicat- ed as mentally incompetent.



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This thick, dense cookware is known for its unparalleled heat capacity and even distribution, and also provides an important nutrient in the form of iron leached into food.
The measurements of thermal conductivity, heat capacity and thermal diffusivity play an important role in the rubber industry, mainly in tire construction, because these values and their changes directly influence the instantaneous value of viscosity, loss factor tg[delta], and because of that, the adhesion of the tire to a road surface.
Any contaminants in the water will degrade the cooling surfaces and reduce the heat capacity of the system.
 
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