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1 tions of adjective-noun phrases (e.g., "dark diamond").
2 d in the diet-induced animal model of NAFLD (DIAMOND).
3 iclase that is commonly trapped in superdeep diamond.
4 f both properties challenging, especially in diamond.
5 sation of solid-state quantum photonics with diamond.
6  system of 27 coupled (13)C nuclear spins in diamond.
7 e to the hardness and chemical resistance of diamond.
8  chemical inertness, and biocompatibility of diamond.
9 rs realized with nitrogen vacancy centres in diamond.
10 been little research into such approaches in diamond.
11 m it into fluids, magmas, volcanic gases and diamonds.
12 one of the most important sources of natural diamonds.
13 led into the deep mantle to potentially form diamonds.
14  influence spectators to choose the three of diamonds.
15 nts benefitted from the emergent features of Diamonds.
16 re identified better than Xs when flanked by Diamonds.
17 ilized and concentrated to form lower-mantle diamonds.
18 toughness up to five times that of synthetic diamond(10), even greater than that of magnesium alloys.
19 hbour particles, which is required for cubic diamond(15,17).
20  regions related by symmetry - also toughens diamond(2).
21  return missions or inclusions in deep Earth diamonds, a nondestructive method is preferred.
22    We then use the DIseAse Module Detection (DIAMOnD) algorithm to expand the proto-modules into comp
23 erstanding of nitrogen-containing defects in diamond-alone and in association with vacancies, hydroge
24 alysis of human fecal microbiomes when using DIAMOND, an alignment tool that is up to 20,000 times fa
25  specific strengths surpassing those of bulk diamond and average performance improvements up to 639%
26 Formula: see text] for both room temperature diamond and heated diamond to 500 K.
27 rogen and phosphorus-doped (semi-conducting) diamond and hydrogen-terminated undoped diamond electrod
28 search driven by the prospects of harnessing diamond and its colour centres as suitable hardware for
29  ultralarge elastic deformation in nanoscale diamond and machine learning of its electronic and phono
30 ut only internally generated noise, only the diamond and not the FFL evolves.
31     The coexistence of large monocrystalline diamonds and nanodiamonds in a highly shocked ureilite c
32 hydrous ringwoodite and ice VII in superdeep diamonds and the relatively low water content in bulk MT
33                                              Diamonds and their inclusions are unique fragments of de
34 acent chevrons either pointing in opposite ('Diamonds' and 'Xs'), or the same (both up or down) direc
35 ngle- and double-network versions of gyroid, diamond, and "plumber's nightmare".
36 l of nitrogen incorporation in the resulting diamond, and how the diamond produced by either method c
37 g electrochemical oxidation at a boron-doped diamond anode with a low potential for the generation of
38 e lower than reported values for boron-doped diamond anodes.
39 (2)O hydrate, based on Raman spectroscopy in diamond anvil cell and ab initio molecular dynamics simu
40 ) Br(5) ; pressure-dependent Raman-PL with a diamond anvil cell as a dynamic probe further rules out
41 ) via direct reactions between elements in a diamond anvil cell at pressures exceeding 100 GPa is rep
42 a reaction between rhenium and nitrogen in a diamond anvil cell at pressures from 40 to 90 GPa and is
43 mples of various average grain sizes using a diamond anvil cell coupled with radial X-ray diffraction
44 ide CeH(9) at 80-100 GPa in the laser-heated diamond anvil cell coupled with synchrotron X-ray diffra
45                               Here we report diamond anvil cell experiments that identify the followi
46 ique, and then integrated into a 500 um size diamond anvil cell for high-pressure studies.
47  spectroscopies, measured up to 2.1 GPa in a diamond anvil cell on single crystals, are in excellent
48 ze this rare compound under compression in a diamond anvil cell with laser heating.
49 g experiments of Nb and Ta in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell, at pressure and temperature conditio
50  observed over a broad pressure range in the diamond anvil cell, from 140 to 275 gigapascals, with a
51                                      Using a diamond anvil cell, monocrystalline (TaSe(4) )(2) I is c
52 e partitioning experiments in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell, we show that carbon becomes signific
53 X-ray powder diffraction of samples within a diamond anvil cell.
54 X-ray diffraction using a resistively heated diamond anvil cell.
55 rees C at approximately 1 GPa pressure using diamond anvil cells (DACs) with heating capabilities.
56 amorphous silicates compressed statically in diamond anvil cells (up to 157 GPa at room temperature)
57                   High-pressure synthesis in diamond anvil cells can yield unique compounds with adva
58 ossbauer source spectroscopy in laser-heated diamond anvil cells to investigate the magnetic transiti
59 ts up to 105.2 GPa at room temperature using diamond anvil cells.
60 the temperature plateau seen in laser-heated diamond-anvil cell (DAC) experiments at temperatures hig
61 40 GPa through a combination of laser-heated diamond-anvil cell experiments and first-principles mole
62 large-volume devices and in one laser-heated diamond-anvil cells experiment, in which the speckle met
63 ynchrotron X-ray diffraction in laser-heated diamond-anvil cells, and theoretically, using ab initio
64 achieved by sandwiching a sample between two diamond anvils and using a ramped laser pulse to slowly
65 NV) color centers directly into the culet of diamond anvils.
66    An ever-growing fraction of the supply of diamond appearing on the world market is now lab-grown.
67 and future research directions of conductive diamond are discussed and outlined.
68     Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) quantum defects in diamond are sensitive detectors of magnetic fields.
69 hat among wide band gap materials 4H-SiC and diamond are two optimal semiconductors due to the combin
70                                              Diamond as a chemically inert material allows treatment
71 inciples by which individual concepts (e.g., diamond, baseball) combine into more complex phrases (e.
72 ction and found to be triply interpenetrated diamond-based dia topology.
73 chemical vapour deposition to produce 'black diamond' (bD) nanostructures.
74 an sp(2)-bonded carbon microspot boron doped diamond (BDD) electrode for voltammetric measurement of
75 anisms for biofouling control at boron-doped diamond (BDD) electrode surfaces polarized at low applie
76 ones, directly integrated into a boron-doped diamond (BDD) electrode, is investigated.
77 ndows of polished and unpolished boron doped diamond (BDD) electrodes with hydrogen and oxygen termin
78           We investigated fragments of three diamond-bearing ureilites (two from the Almahata Sitta p
79 ap transitions can be achieved reversibly in diamond below threshold strain levels for phonon instabi
80                                              Diamond Blackfan Anemia (DBA) is a congenital bone marro
81 linical use of steroids for the treatment of Diamond Blackfan anemia (DBA), the mechanisms through wh
82 present the case of a 34-year-old woman with Diamond-Blackfan anaemia (DBA).
83                                              Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a congenital erythrobla
84                                              Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) was the first ribosomopath
85 riants in ribosomal protein (RP) genes drive Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA), a bone marrow failure syn
86  proteins have thus far been associated with Diamond-Blackfan anemia, a rare inherited bone marrow fa
87 ratosis congenita), and ribosome biogenesis (Diamond-Blackfan anemia, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome).
88             In contrast to observations from Diamond-Blackfan anemia, we detected no evidence of sign
89 quitous in both natural and laboratory-grown diamond, but the number and nature of the nitrogen-conta
90 hically precise patterning of large areas of diamond by self-assembled masks and their release into u
91                              The hardness of diamond can be increased through nanostructuring strateg
92 th retracted sticky patches, colloidal cubic diamond can be self-assembled using patch-patch adhesion
93 e into more complex phrases (e.g., "baseball diamond") can illuminate not only how the brain combines
94                               Inclusion-free diamonds cannot provide information on depth of formatio
95 ance while protecting the top surface of the diamond channel from dry etch damage.
96 trument is based on a commercially available diamond chip, into which an NV ensemble is ion-implanted
97 re, we present a protocol for fabricating NV diamond chips and for constructing and operating a simpl
98 bo-current is generated by sliding an N-type diamond coated tip on a P-type or N-type Si wafers.
99 ) probes for force spectroscopy using robust diamond-coated spheres, i.e., colloidal particles.
100       We found superior performance with all Diamonds compared to all Xs, indicating that display uni
101  report the structural characterization of a diamond composite hierarchically assembled with coherent
102                  Neoproterozoic West African diamonds contain sulfide inclusions with mass-independen
103 aces at around 50% of the value for the flat diamond control.
104  reported as a bis-mu-oxo Fe(IV)(2)(mu-O)(2) diamond core but was recently described to have an open
105 eported a high-valent Co(III,IV)(2)(mu-O)(2) diamond core complex (1) that is highly reactive with sp
106 ing 9,10-dihydroanthracene (DHA) compared to diamond core complexes of other first-row transition met
107               Our findings indicate that the diamond core isomerization is likely a practical enzymat
108 culations showed that both species possess a diamond core structure with a short Co...Co distance of
109  out that a Q-like intermediate (high-valent diamond-core bis-mu-oxo-[Fe(IV)](2) unit) is involved in
110 ical system of [Formula: see text] nuclei in diamond coupled to Nitrogen Vacancy (NV) centers over a
111 d DNP using nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond coupled to substitutional nitrogen impurities, t
112 -assembling colloidal particles in the cubic diamond crystal structure could potentially be used to m
113  polarize target samples in contact with the diamond crystal.
114                  In addition, the bandgap in diamond crystals appears at a refractive index contrast
115 he formation of "large" (as opposed to nano) diamond crystals could have been enhanced by the catalyt
116                             The first single-diamond cubic phase in a liquid crystal is reported.
117 anocrystals show stability with the alpha-Sn diamond cubic structure.
118 wer-mantle mineral inclusions and their host diamonds (deeper than 660 kilometres) have a narrow rang
119 ime characterizes mesoscopic quantum dot and diamond defect systems, as we see no numerical tendency
120   Recently however, an entire suite of other diamond defects has emerged-group IV colour centres-name
121 ues for engineering and characterizing these diamond defects, discuss the current state-of-the-art gr
122 clusions in sublithospheric, or 'superdeep', diamonds (derived from depths greater than 250 kilometre
123 ion methods and fabricate compact and robust diamond devices with unique specifications.
124   This is the first report on the coating of diamond dicing blades with metallic glass (MG) coating t
125                                              Diamond electrochemical devices utilizing micro-scale, u
126 wo different type of electrodes, boron-doped diamond electrode (BDD) and boron-doped carbon nanowalls
127 relative electrochemical window from various diamond electrode types from reported results.
128 ing) diamond and hydrogen-terminated undoped diamond electrodes.
129 in properties of nitrogen-vacancy defects in diamond enable diverse applications in quantum computing
130 g from a multistage process that starts from diamond encapsulation of ferropericlase followed by deco
131 age etched surface roughness of 0.47 nm at a diamond etch rate of 45 nm/min and 16.9:1 selectivity.
132 rospheres were coated with a nanocrystalline diamond film and attached to tipless cantilevers.
133 solvent treatments, whilst pin-holing of the diamond film was observed following RCA-1 treatment.
134  ultra-thin ultra-stiff films, including CVD diamond films (~1000 GPa stiffness), as well as the tran
135 vity to the morphological granularity of the diamond films.
136 on with improved ohmic contacts, will enable diamond FinFETs for various high-power applications.
137 irst time, space charge limited transport in diamond FinFETs with a short channel length was demonstr
138 eived to stand out more strongly from X than Diamond flankers.
139 easured He-Sr-Pb isotope ratios in superdeep diamond fluid inclusions from the transition zone (depth
140 least locally, ultra-depleted at the time of diamond formation, as opposed to the melt-metasomatized,
141 ures >20 GPa in a large planetary body, like diamonds formed deep within Earth's mantle.
142 in the Earth could also provide insight into diamond-forming processes at depth in the planet.
143                                  In geology, diamond forms as part of the deep carbon cycle and typic
144 ombining a pre-test probability (PTP) model (Diamond-Forrester approach using sex, age, and symptoms)
145 nd 0.71 for [50] and [70], respectively) and Diamond-Forrester risk scores (area under the curve=0.68
146 ficient strain pathways that would transform diamond from an ultrawide-bandgap material to a smaller-
147  magnetite grains from a so-called superdeep diamond from the Earth's mantle.
148 pe measurements of mineral inclusions within diamonds from Kankan, Guinea that are derived from depth
149                                      Younger diamonds from the Kaapvaal, Zimbabwe, and West African c
150                                 Here, impact diamonds from the Popigai crater were characterized with
151  grafting of terminal alkenes to surfaces of diamond, glassy carbon, and polymeric carbon dots.
152  superconducting transition was observed for diamond grown on oxygen plasma treated silicon nitride,
153 around 3 billion years ago and reworking and diamond growth around 650 million years ago.
154 face-centred-cubic structures(9,10), because diamond has a much wider bandgap and is less sensitive t
155 hese highly desirable attributes, conductive diamond has found extensive use as an enabling electrode
156                            Colour centres in diamond have emerged as leading solid-state 'artificial
157   Quantum spin sensors like the NV center in diamond have long spin lifetimes and their relaxation ca
158                                       Impact diamonds, however, often exhibit structural disorder in
159                                The origin of diamonds in ureilite meteorites is a timely topic in pla
160 mes, which makes it unlikely that any of the diamonds in ureilites formed in bodies as large as Mars
161  by adjective-noun combinations (e.g., "dark diamond") in male and female human subjects.
162 e carbon is hosted in metals, rather than in diamond, in the reduced, volatile-poor lower mantle(2),
163  that the sulfur isotope record in worldwide diamond inclusions is consistent with changes in tectoni
164                          Seismic studies and diamond inclusions(6,7) have shown that recycled materia
165  carbon and nitrogen isotope contents of the diamonds, indicate that carbonated igneous oceanic crust
166 , brightness) in a given noun concept (e.g., diamond) influences how the adjective and noun concepts
167                                              Diamond is a highly attractive coating material as it is
168                                              Diamond is a material of immense technological importanc
169 apour deposition (CVD) grown nanocrystalline diamond is an attractive material for the fabrication of
170 y charged nitrogen-vacancy (NV(-)) defect in diamond is attracting particular current interest in acc
171          However, self-assembly of colloidal diamond is challenging.
172 , the nitrogen vacancy (NV) colour centre in diamond is one of the leading candidates for such applic
173                                        Cubic diamond is preferred for these applications over more ea
174                                              Diamond is the hardest natural material, but its practic
175                   In this letter we report a diamond lateral FinFET fabricated using an ohmic regrowt
176                       Because particles in a diamond lattice are tetrahedrally coordinated, one appro
177 trated demixing and recrystallization into a diamond lattice, implying the breaking of the original c
178  a diffractive element that can generate the diamond lattice.
179 tothermal vibrational nanoprobe developed at Diamond Light Source (DLS), capable of measuring mid-inf
180 esigned to be tunable to long wavelengths at Diamond Light Source has opened the possibility to nativ
181              Follow-up beamtimes at ESRF and Diamond Light Source using submicro-SR-XRF allowed resol
182 a Ni-Cu test sample recorded at I13-1 of the Diamond Light Source, UK.
183   Lubricity between stainless steel (SS) and diamond-like carbon (DLC) is experimentally demonstrated
184                    This work aims to utilize diamond-like carbon (DLC) thin films for bioreceptor imm
185 olid lubricants such as MoS(2), graphite, or diamond-like carbon films demonstrate excellent tribolog
186 turing a unique Ni(2)(OR)(2) (OR = alkoxide) diamond-like core complemented by a mu-iodo bridge betwe
187                 In particular, sp(3) bonded, diamond-like materials represent appealing targets becau
188                                        These diamond-like molecular rods with extraordinarily small t
189 from graphite-like sp(2)-bonded structure to diamond-like sp(3)-bonded structure.
190 (3) -carbon frameworks, and nanothreads with diamond-like structures were synthesized by compressing
191      The laser irradiated spherically curved diamond-like-carbon targets with intensity 4 x 10(18) W/
192 , we applied elastic geothermobarometry to a diamond-magnesiochromite (mchr) host-inclusion pair from
193 ng defects can have a profound effect on the diamond material and its properties.
194 h improvement in ALT and dyslipidemia in the DIAMOND mice.
195                                   Conductive diamond microcrystalline and nanocrystalline films, stru
196                     Interestingly, a 4-node "diamond" motif also emerges as a short spurious signal f
197 hods to overcome constraints of cutting-edge diamond nanofabrication methods and fabricate compact an
198 on (ALD) cycles of zinc oxide onto suspended diamond nanomembranes, strongly reduces the threshold vo
199 le recent experiments have demonstrated that diamond nanoneedles can sustain exceptionally large elas
200 um achievable tensile strain and strength of diamond nanoneedles with various diameters, oriented in
201 tatic self-assembly of a hydrogen-terminated diamond nanoparticle monolayer.
202             We systematically functionalized diamond nanoparticle surfaces with five different cation
203  article, we present phantoms of tissue with diamond nanoparticles dedicated to magnetic resonance ca
204                      Furthermore, the use of diamond nanoparticles in phantoms allowed us to tune the
205  fracture occurs, a crack propagates through diamond nanotwins of the 3C (cubic) polytype along {111}
206                                          The DIAMOND (NCT03227861) study using darunavir/cobicistat/e
207                                          The DIAMOND (NCT03227861) study using darunavir/cobicistat/e
208 fractures, with local transformation into 3C diamond near the fracture surfaces.
209                                          The diamond needles were then chemically terminated with H,
210     To exploit the exceptional properties of diamond, new high quality fabrication techniques are nee
211             Nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers in diamond offer an appealing platform because these parama
212 e volcanic rocks that are the source of most diamonds, offer rare insights into aspects of the compos
213  and growth processes for the fabrication of diamond on silicon nitride devices.
214 ters(5), such as quantum dots and defects in diamond or silicon carbide(6-10), have emerged as promis
215 idence that formation of micrometer(s)-sized diamonds or associated Fe-S-P phases in ureilites requir
216                      Targets were flanked by Diamonds or Xs, resulting in conditions with different l
217  quantum dots or nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond, our proposal does not require any photon assist
218                                              Diamond photonics is an ever-growing field of research d
219 abricate a metasurface composed of nanoscale diamond pillars that acts as an immersion lens to collec
220 hically assembled with coherently interfaced diamond polytypes (different stacking sequences), interw
221                                   Conductive diamond possesses unique features as compared to other s
222 that makes the present technique suitable to diamond powders and settings where the field is heteroge
223 on disease onset and test frequency from the Diamond Princess cruise ship outbreak, to quantify the c
224 ration in the resulting diamond, and how the diamond produced by either method can be further process
225                             However, current diamond quantum optics experiments are restricted to sin
226      The structural characterization of such diamonds remains a challenge.
227 ate spin memory integrated in a nanophotonic diamond resonator(17-19) to implement asynchronous photo
228 l elasticity and Griffith strength limits of diamond, respectively.
229 ty and performance of the NV centre near the diamond's surface are the major obstacle in the practica
230 T), that most NVs are within 3.6 nm from the diamond's surface.
231 ith different commercial beer yeast (Abbaye, Diamond, SafAle, SafLager) in order to monitor the forma
232 ine the bulk temperature of a single crystal diamond sample at an X-Ray free electron laser using ine
233               The burgeoning availability of diamond samples grown under well-defined conditions has
234 h compares favourably with the commonly used diamond sandwich technique and could be important for ne
235 lowing for the optimisation of electrostatic diamond seeding densities.
236  sweat, using a surface-modified boron-doped diamond sensing interface (cross-validated with laborato
237  at 3.6 angstrom resolution, revealed that a diamond-shaped TreS tetramer forms the core of the compl
238                            A nanocrystalline diamond sheet (NDS) attached over the ZnO is described.
239                                          The diamonds show a striking texture pseudomorphing inferred
240  among different layers of the lesions using DIAMOND software against the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes
241 ng and operating a simple, low-cost 'quantum diamond spectrometer' for performing NMR and electron sp
242 ylsiloxane (PDMS) show that the manufactured diamond spheres, even though possessing a rough surface,
243 loidal particles in the self-assembled cubic diamond structure are highly constrained and mechanicall
244                                          The diamond structure was synthesized in a Microwave Plasma
245 ossible to dry the suspension and retain the diamond structure.
246 revealed nanoscale twinning within the cubic diamond structure.
247 dic lattices like gyroid, rotated cubic, and diamond structures.
248 tigated concerning the interaction with flat diamond substrates in air.
249    Despite the relatively low quality of the diamond substrates used and the simplicity of our PIII s
250 .7 to 10 MPa) on 4 different polycrystalline diamond substrates with topography characterized across
251  depending on the availability of equipment, diamond substrates, and user experience.
252 en shown that inversion-symmetric defects in diamond, such as the negatively charged silicon vacancy
253 ization of target fluids in contact with the diamond surface or the use of hyperpolarized particles a
254 of the group IV dopants pre-deposited onto a diamond surface.
255 ion-implanted at a depth of ~10 nm below the diamond surface.
256 sonance spectroscopy of nanoscale samples on diamond surfaces.
257 ectric-contrast photonic crystals with cubic diamond symmetry.
258  caused by mutations in the Shwachman-Bodian-Diamond Syndrome (SBDS) gene.
259                                    Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome (SDS) is a rare and clinically-heteroge
260                                    Shwachman-Diamond syndrome (SDS) is a recessive disorder typified
261 rognosis is poor for patients with Shwachman-Diamond syndrome and myelodysplastic syndrome or acute m
262 tially identified 37 patients with Shwachman-Diamond syndrome and myelodysplastic syndrome or acute m
263 astic syndrome) were known to have Shwachman-Diamond syndrome before development of a myeloid maligna
264 laboration with the North American Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome Registry.
265 nts with the rare genetic disorder Shwachman-Diamond syndrome reproduced key haematopoietic defects a
266 of the allosteric regulator Shwachman-Bodian-Diamond syndrome that cooperates with elongation factor-
267 ias and pancreatic dysfunction) of Shwachman-Diamond syndrome who developed myelodysplastic syndrome
268 ogenesis (Diamond-Blackfan anemia, Shwachman-Diamond syndrome).
269 ome or acute myeloid leukaemia and Shwachman-Diamond syndrome, an inherited bone marrow failure disor
270 ia predisposition in patients with Shwachman-Diamond syndrome.
271  survey recent progress in two complementary diamond synthesis methods-high pressure high temperature
272 er refrigeration, including color centers in diamond that have recently been proposed to realize the
273                                 Slave craton diamonds that formed 3.5 billion years ago do not contai
274  of boron arsenide is second only to that of diamond, the best thermal conductor, which may be of ben
275                      In materials other than diamond, there are several other promising approaches to
276 rconductivity in nanocrystalline boron doped diamond thin films is reported.
277 equent growth of boron-doped nanocrystalline diamond thin films on modified silicon nitride, under CV
278 for both room temperature diamond and heated diamond to 500 K.
279                       Etching and patterning diamond to depths beyond one micron has proven challengi
280         Enabled by high channel quality, the diamond transistor behavior was shown to transit from a
281 ntimate association of large monocrystalline diamonds (up to at least 100 um), nanodiamonds, nanograp
282                                          The diamond uses expression dynamics rather than path length
283 hen coated with a conformal uniform layer of diamond using hot filament chemical vapour deposition to
284 rite arrays of optically active defects into diamond via momentum transfer from a Xe(+) focused ion b
285 er opportunities for tailoring properties of diamond via strain engineering for electronic, photonic,
286  influence of the surface termination of the diamond was investigated concerning the interaction with
287 neous integration of 'quantum microchiplets'-diamond waveguide arrays containing highly coherent colo
288 f hexagonal stacking on the Raman spectra of diamond were investigated computationally and found to b
289      Despite high target-flanker similarity, Diamonds were identified better than Xs when flanked by
290  of target conspicuity, however, showed that Diamonds were not perceived to stand out more strongly f
291                                Inclusions in diamonds, which remain uncorrupted over geological times
292 they can readily probe force interactions of diamond with different substrate materials under varying
293 vides detailed insight into the interface of diamond with other materials and/or solvents.
294 nsight into surface chemistry and physics of diamond with other materials concerning long and short-r
295                                          Can diamond, with an ultrawide bandgap of 5.6 eV, be complet
296 ation engineering to boost spin lifetimes in diamond, with applications including engineered quantum
297 d what an ultrawide bandgap material such as diamond, with many appealing functional figures of merit
298 e destabilizes carbon-bearing metals to form diamond, without disturbing the ambient-mantle stable-is
299 ength, the appropriate e-value threshold for DIAMOND would then need to be more strict than the defau
300 ructive analysis of inclusions in deep Earth diamonds, yielding in situ quantitative information abou

 
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