0 a space between two structures or organs in the body
In the 4-m interspace between the tree rows leaving 50 cm on either side, 6 rows of cowpea were maintained.
This is provided by the observation that the electrostatic energy (3.7) in the interspace is a decreasing function of the sponginess.
Interspace, in one of its leading senses, means a space put between.
We are interested in the poloidal component of the electric field in the interspace between two adjacent chains.
His views in this passage are outwardly conformist: "interspace," "line and limit," and "boundary" come from the vocabulary of the classic insistence that mind and matter are distinct.
It may be (as it formally proposes) that it is "destined" that an "interspace" should ever lie between mind and body, but the choice of that new word is artful.
This fibrous tissue consists of longitudinal outer ribs whose interspace defines the starting area of egg tunnels for certain of the species involved in this study.
No detailed assessment of the potential benefits of interspacing trees and aero-generators has been made.