Sinusoids, small blood vessels between the radiating rows of hepatocytes, convey oxygen-rich hepatic arterial blood and nutrient-rich portal venous blood to the hepatocytes and eventually drain into the central vein, which drains into the hepatic vein.
- What is a sinusoidal function example?
- What is sinusoid and its properties?
- What defines a sinusoid?
- Where is the sinusoids?
What is a sinusoidal function example?
A sinusoidal function is one with a smooth, repetitive oscillation. "Sinusoidal" comes from "sine", because the sine function is a smooth, repetitive oscillation. Examples of everyday things which can be represented by sinusoidal functions are a swinging pendulum, a bouncing spring, or a vibrating guitar string.
What is sinusoid and its properties?
The sinusoid (i.e., A cos(ωt+θ)) is a unique signal with a number of special properties. A sinusoid can be completely defined by three values: its amplitude A, its phase θ, and its frequency ω (or 2πf).
What defines a sinusoid?
A sinusoid is a signal that has a form of a sine wave. The shape of the supply voltage for power distribution is known as a sinusoid as it resembles a sine or cosine waveshape.
Where is the sinusoids?
Sinusoids are found in the liver, lymphoid tissue, endocrine organs, and hematopoietic organs such as the bone marrow and the spleen. Sinusoids found within terminal villi of the placenta are not comparable to these; they possess a continuous endothelium and complete basal lamina.