Coalescence Explained
Coalesce, coalescence or coalescent can refer to:
Chemistry and physics
- Coalescence (chemistry), the process by which two or more separate masses of miscible substances seem to "pull" each other together should they make the slightest contact
- Coalescence (physics), the merging of two or more droplets, bubbles or particles into one
- Coalescer, device which induces coalescence in a medium
Computer science
- Coalescence (computer science), the act of merging adjacent free blocks of memory to fill gaps caused by memory deallocation
- COALESCE, an SQL function that selects the first non-null from a range of values
- Null coalescing operator, a binary operator that is part of the syntax for a basic conditional expression in several programming languages
- Coalesced hashing, a strategy of hash collision resolution in computing
- Interrupt coalescing, a technique where events which would normally trigger a hardware interrupt are held back until either a certain amount of work is pending or a timeout timer triggers
- Timer coalescing, an energy-saving technique for processors
Other fields of science
- Coalescence (genetics) or the coalescent theory, the merging of genetic lineages backwards to a most recent common ancestor, in other words a model of how alleles sampled from a population may have originated from a common ancestor
- Coalescence (linguistics), also known as fusion (phonetics) or vowel coalescence, a sound change where two or more phonological segments with distinctive features merge into a single segment
- In geography, the process by which urban sprawl produces a linear conurbation
- Microvoid coalescence (materials science), a high energy microscopic fracture mechanism observed in the majority of metallic alloys and in some engineering plastics
Popular culture
See also
- Coalition, when people temporarily work together to achieve a common goal
- Coalesse, a U.S. based furniture company
- Mind coalescence (disambiguation), a term related to collective intelligence