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In situ

In situ (/ɪn ˈsɪtj, - ˈstj, - ˈs-/; often not italicized in English)[1][2][3] is a Latin phrase that translates literally to "on site"[4] or "in position."[5] It can mean "locally", "on site", "on the premises", or "in place" to describe where an event takes place and is used in many different contexts. For example, in fields such as physics, geology, chemistry, or biology, in situ may describe the way a measurement is taken, that is, in the same place the phenomenon is occurring without isolating it from other systems or altering the original conditions of the test. The opposite of in situ is ex situ.

Aerospace

In the aerospace industry, equipment on-board aircraft must be tested in situ, or in place, to confirm everything functions properly as a system. Individually, each piece may work but interference from nearby equipment may create unanticipated problems. Special test equipment is available for this in situ testing. It can also refer to repairs made to the aircraft structure or flight controls while still in place.

Archaeology

 
Ancient Hohokam arrowhead in situ.

In archaeology, in situ refers to an artifact that has not been moved from its original place of deposition. In other words, it is stationary, meaning "still." An artifact being in situ is critical to the interpretation of that artifact and, consequently, of the culture which formed it. Once an artifact's 'find-site' has been recorded, the artifact can then be moved for conservation, further interpretation and display. An artifact that is not discovered in situ is considered out of context and as not providing an accurate picture of the associated culture. However, the out-of-context artifact can provide scientists with an example of types and locations of in situ artifacts yet to be discovered. When excavating a burial site or surface deposit "in situ" refers to cataloging, recording, mapping, photographing human remains in the position they are discovered.[6]

The label in situ indicates only that the object has not been "newly" moved. Thus, an archaeological in situ find may be an object that was historically looted from another place, an item of "booty" of a past war, a traded item, or otherwise of foreign origin. Consequently, the in situ find site may still not reveal its provenance, but with further detective work may help uncover links that otherwise would remain unknown. It is also possible for archaeological layers to be reworked on purpose or by accident (by humans, natural forces or animals). For example, in a Tell mound, where layers are not typically uniform or horizontal, or in land cleared or tilled for farming.

The term in situ is often used to describe ancient sculpture that was carved in place such as the Sphinx or Petra. This distinguishes it from statues that were carved and moved like the Colossi of Memnon, which was moved in ancient times.

Art

In art, in situ refers to a work of art made specifically for a host site, or that a work of art takes into account the site in which it is installed or exhibited. For a more detailed account see: Site-specific art. The term can also refer to a work of art created at the site where it is to be displayed, rather than one created in the artist's studio and then installed elsewhere (e.g., a sculpture carved in situ). In architectural sculpture the term is frequently employed to describe sculpture that is carved on a building, frequently from scaffolds, after the building has been erected.[7][8] Also commonly used to describe the site specific dance festival "Insitu". Held in Queens, New York.

Astronomy

A fraction of the globular star clusters in our galaxy, as well as those in other massive galaxies, might have formed in situ. The rest might have been accreted from now-defunct dwarf galaxies.

In astronomy, in situ also refers to in situ planet formation, in which planets are hypothesized to have formed at the orbital distance they are currently observed[9] rather than to have migrated from a different orbit (referred to as ex situ formation[10]).

Biology and biomedical engineering

 
Live sea snail, species Nataea, photographed in situ

In biology and biomedical engineering, in situ means to examine the phenomenon exactly in place where it occurs (i.e., without moving it to some special medium).

In the case of observations or photographs of living animals, it means that the organism was observed (and photographed) in the wild, exactly as it was found and exactly where it was found. This means it was not taken out of the area. The organism had not been moved to another (perhaps more convenient) location such as an aquarium.

This phrase in situ when used in laboratory science such as cell science can mean something intermediate between in vivo and in vitro. For example, examining a cell within a whole organ intact and under perfusion may be in situ investigation. This would not be in vivo as the donor is sacrificed by experimentation, but it would not be the same as working with the cell alone (a common scenario for in vitro experiments).

In vitro was among the first attempts to qualitatively and quantitatively analyze natural occurrences in the lab. Eventually, the limitation of in vitro experimentation was that they were not conducted in natural environments. To compensate for this problem, in vivo experimentation allowed testing to occur in the original organism or environment. To bridge the dichotomy of benefits associated with both methodologies, in situ experimentation allowed the controlled aspects of in vitro to become coalesced with the natural environmental compositions of in vivo experimentation.

In conservation of genetic resources, "in situ conservation" (also "on-site conservation") is the process of protecting an endangered plant or animal species in its natural habitat, as opposed to ex situ conservation (also "off-site conservation").

Chemistry and chemical engineering

In chemistry, in situ typically means "in the reaction mixture."

There are numerous situations in which chemical intermediates are synthesized in situ in various processes. This may be done because the species is unstable, and cannot be isolated, or simply out of convenience. Examples of the former include the Corey-Chaykovsky reagent and adrenochrome.

In biomedical engineering, protein nanogels made by the in situ polymerization method provide a versatile platform for storage and release of therapeutic proteins. It has tremendous applications for cancer treatment, vaccination, diagnosis, regenerative medicine, and therapies for loss-of-function genetic diseases.[11]

In chemical engineering, in situ often refers to industrial plant "operations or procedures that are performed in place." For example, aged catalysts in industrial reactors may be regenerated in place (in situ) without being removed from the reactors.

Civil engineering

In architecture and building, in situ refers to construction which is carried out at the building site using raw materials. Compare that with prefabricated construction, in which building components are made in a factory and then transported to the building site for assembly. For example, concrete slabs may be in situ (also "cast-in-place") or prefabricated.

In situ techniques are often more labor-intensive, and take longer, but the materials are cheaper, and the work is versatile and adaptable. Prefabricated techniques are usually much quicker, therefore saving money on labour costs, but factory-made parts can be expensive. They are also inflexible, and must often be designed on a grid, with all details fully calculated in advance. Finished units may require special handling due to excessive dimensions.

The phrase may also refer to those assets which are present at or near a project site. In this case, it is used to designate the state of an unmodified sample taken from a given stockpile.

Site construction usually involves grading the existing soil surface so that material is "cut" out of one area and "filled" in another area creating a flat pad on an existing slope. The term "in situ" distinguishes soil still in its existing condition from soil modified (filled) during construction. The differences in the soil properties for supporting building loads, accepting underground utilities, and infiltrating water persist indefinitely.

Computer science

In computer science an in situ operation is one that occurs without interrupting the normal state of a system[citation needed]. For example, a file backup may be restored over a running system, without needing to take the system down to perform the restore. In the context of a database, a restore would allow the database system to continue to be available to users while a restore happened. An in situ upgrade would allow an operating system, firmware or application to be upgraded while the system was still running, perhaps without the need to reboot it, depending on the sophistication of the system.

Another use of the term in-situ that appears in Computer Science focuses primarily on the use of technology and user interfaces to provide continuous access to situationally relevant information in various locations and contexts.[12][13] Examples include athletes viewing biometric data on smartwatches to improve their performance,[14] a presenter looking at tips on a smart glass to reduce their speaking rate during a speech,[15] or technicians receiving online and stepwise instructions for repairing an engine.

An algorithm is said to be an in situ algorithm, or in-place algorithm, if the extra amount of memory required to execute the algorithm is O(1),[16] that is, does not exceed a constant no matter how large the input ---except for space for recursive calls on the "call stack." Typically such an algorithm operates on data objects directly in place rather than making copies of them.

For example, heapsort is an in situ sorting algorithm, which sorts the elements of an array in place. Quicksort is an in situ sorting algorithm, but in the worst case it requires linear space on the call stack (this can be reduced to log space). Merge sort is generally not written as an in situ algorithm.

In designing user interfaces, the term in situ means that a particular user action can be performed without going to another window[citation needed], for example, if a word processor displays an image and allows the image to be edited without launching a separate image editor, this is called in situ editing.

AJAX partial page data updates is another example of in situ in a Web UI/UX context. Web 2.0 included AJAX and the concept of asynchronous requests to servers to replace a portion of a web page with new data, without reloading the entire page, as the early HTML model dictated. Arguably, all asynchronous data transfers or any background task is in situ as the normal state is normally unaware of background tasks, usually notified on completion by a callback mechanism.

With big data, in situ data would mean bringing the computation to where data is located, rather than the other way like in traditional RDBMS systems where data is moved to computational space.[17] This is also known as in-situ processing.

Design and advertising

In design and advertising the term typically means the superimposing of theoretical design elements onto photographs of real world locations. This is a pre-visualization tool to aid in illustrating a proof of concept.

Earth and atmospheric sciences

In physical geography and the Earth sciences, in situ typically describes natural material or processes prior to transport. For example, in situ is used in relation to the distinction between weathering and erosion, the difference being that erosion requires a transport medium (such as wind, ice, or water), whereas weathering occurs in situ. Geochemical processes are also often described as occurring to material in situ.

In the atmospheric sciences, in situ refers to obtained through direct contact with the respective subject, such as a radiosonde measuring a parcel of air or an anemometer measuring wind, as opposed to remote sensing such as weather radar or satellites.

Economics

In economics, in situ is used when referring to the in place storage of a product, usually a natural resource. More generally, it refers to any situation where there is no out-of-pocket cost to store the product so that the only storage cost is the opportunity cost of waiting longer to get your money when the product is eventually sold. Examples of in situ storage would be oil and gas wells, all types of mineral and gem mines, stone quarries, timber that has reached an age where it could be harvested, and agricultural products that do not need a physical storage facility such as hay.

Electrochemistry

In electrochemistry, the phrase in situ refers to performing electrochemical experiments under operating conditions of the electrochemical cell, i.e., under potential control. This is opposed to doing ex situ experiments that are performed under the absence of potential control. Potential control preserves the electrochemical environment essential to maintain the double layer structure intact and the electron transfer reactions occurring at that particular potential in the electrode/electrolyte interphasial region.

Environmental remediation

In situ can refer to where a clean up or remediation of a polluted site is performed using and stimulating the natural processes in the soil, contrary to ex situ where contaminated soil is excavated and cleaned elsewhere, off site.

Experimental physics

In experimental physics in situ typically refers to a method of data collection or manipulation of a sample without exposure to an external environment. For example, the Si(111) 7x7 surface reconstruction is visible using a scanning tunneling microscope when it is prepared and analyzed in situ.

Experimental psychology

In psychology experiments, in situ typically refers to those experiments done in a field setting as opposed to a laboratory setting.

Gastronomy

In gastronomy, "in situ" refers to the art of cooking with the different resources that are available at the site of the event. Here a person is not going to the restaurant, but the restaurant comes to the person's home.[18]

Law

In legal contexts, in situ is often used for its literal meaning. For example, in Hong Kong, "in situ land exchange" involves the government exchanging the original or expired lease of a piece of land with a new grant or re-grant with the same piece of land or a portion of that.

In the field of recognition of governments under public international law the term in situ is used to distinguish between an exiled government and a government with effective control over the territory, i.e. the government in situ.

Linguistics

In linguistics, specifically syntax, an element may be said to be in situ if it is pronounced in the position where it is interpreted. For example, questions in languages such as Chinese have in situ wh-elements, with structures comparable to "John bought what?" with what in the same position in the sentence as the grammatical object would be in its affirmative counterpart (for example, "John bought bread"). An example of an English wh-element that is not in situ (see wh-movement): "What did John buy?"

Literature

In literature in situ is used to describe a condition. The Rosetta Stone, for example, was originally erected in a courtyard, for public viewing. Most pictures of the famous stone are not in situ pictures of it erected, as it would have been originally. The stone was uncovered as part of building material, within a wall. Its in situ condition today is that it is erected, vertically, on public display at the British Museum in London, England.

Medicine

 
Diagram of an in situ carcinoma, not having invaded beyond the basement membrane.

In cancer/oncology: in situ means that malignant cells are present as a tumor but have not metastasized, or invaded beyond the layer or tissue type where it arose. This can happen anywhere in the body, such as the skin, breast tissue, or lung. For example, a cancer of epithelial origin with such features is called carcinoma in situ, and is defined as not having invaded beyond the basement membrane.

This type of tumor can often, depending on where it is located, be removed by surgery.

In anatomy: in situ refers to viewing structures as they appear in normal healthy bodies. For example, one can open up a cadaver's abdominal cavity and view the liver in situ or one can look at an isolated liver that has been removed from the cadaver's body.

In nursing, "in situ" describes any devices or appliances on the patient's body that remain in their desired and optimal position.

In medical simulation, "in situ" refers to the practice of clinical professionals using high fidelity patient simulators to train for clinical practice in patient care environments, such as wards, operating rooms, and other settings, rather than in dedicated simulation training facilities.

In biomedical, protein nanogels made by the in situ polymerization method provide a versatile platform for storage and release of therapeutic proteins. It has tremendous applications for cancer treatment, vaccination, diagnosis, regenerative medicine, and therapies for loss-of-function genetic diseases.[11]

Mining

In situ leaching or in situ recovery refers to the mining technique of injecting lixiviant underground to dissolve ore and bringing the pregnant leach solution to surface for extraction. Commonly used in uranium mining but has also been used for copper mining.[19]

Petroleum production

In situ refers to recovery techniques which apply heat or solvents to heavy crude oil or bitumen reservoirs beneath the earth's crust. There are several varieties of in situ techniques, but the ones which work best in the oil sands use heat (steam).

The most common type of in situ petroleum production is referred to as SAGD (steam-assisted gravity drainage) this is becoming very popular in the Alberta Oil Sands.

RF transmission

In radio frequency (RF) transmission systems, in situ is often used to describe the location of various components while the system is in its standard transmission mode, rather than operation in a test mode. For example, if an in situ wattmeter is used in a commercial broadcast transmission system, the wattmeter can accurately measure power while the station is "on air."

Space-related

Future space exploration or terraforming may rely on obtaining supplies in situ, such as previous plans to power the Orion space vehicle with fuel minable on the moon. The Mars Direct mission concept is based primarily on the in situ fuel production using Sabatier reaction.

In the space sciences, in situ refers to measurements of the particle and field environment that the satellite is embedded in, such as the detection of energetic particles in the solar wind, or magnetic field measurements from a magnetometer.

Urban planning

In urban planning, in-situ upgrading is an approach to and method of upgrading informal settlements.[20]

Vacuum technology

In vacuum technology, in situ baking refers to heating parts of the vacuum system while they are under vacuum in order to drive off volatile substances that may be absorbed or adsorbed on the walls so they cannot cause outgassing.

Road assistance

The term in situ, used as "repair in situ," means to repair a vehicle at the place where it has a breakdown.

See also

References

  1. ^ , Merriam-Webster, archived from the original on 10 October 2020, retrieved 23 April 2014
  2. ^ Iverson, Cheryl; et al., eds. (2007). "12.1.1 Use of Italics". AMA Manual of Style (10th ed.). Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517633-9.
  3. ^ "4.21 Use of Italics", The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (6th ed.), Washington, DC, USA: American Psychological Association, 2010, ISBN 978-1-4338-0562-2
  4. ^ Lewis & Short Latin Dictionary
  5. ^ Collins Latin Dictionary & Grammar
  6. ^ Byers, Steven (2011). Introduction to Forensic Anthropology (4th ed.). Upper Saddle Ridge, New Jersey: Pearson Education Inc.
  7. ^ Friedland, Elise A.; Sobocinski, Melanie Grunow (3 February 2015). The Oxford Handbook of Roman Sculpture. Oxford University Press. pp. 113–. ISBN 978-0-19-026687-5.
  8. ^ Webb, Pamela A. (1996). Hellenistic Architectural Sculpture: Figural Motifs in Western Anatolia and the Aegean Islands. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 65–. ISBN 978-0-299-14980-2.
  9. ^ Chiang, E.; Laughlin, G. (1 June 2013). "The Minimum-Mass Extrasolar Nebula: In-Situ Formation of Close-In Super-Earths". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 431 (4): 3444–3455. arXiv:1211.1673. Bibcode:2013MNRAS.431.3444C. doi:10.1093/mnras/stt424. ISSN 0035-8711. S2CID 119118397.
  10. ^ D'Angelo, G.; Bodenheimer, P. (2016). "In Situ and Ex Situ Formation Models of Kepler 11 Planets". The Astrophysical Journal. 828 (1): id. 33 (32 pp.). arXiv:1606.08088. Bibcode:2016ApJ...828...33D. doi:10.3847/0004-637X/828/1/33. S2CID 119203398.
  11. ^ a b Ye, Yanqi; Yu, Jicheng; Gu, Zhen (2015). "Versatile Protein Nanogels Prepared by In Situ Polymerization". Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics. 217 (3): 333–343. doi:10.1002/macp.201500296.
  12. ^ Ens, Barrett; Irani, Pourang (2017). "Spatial Analytic Interfaces: Spatial User Interfaces for In Situ Visual Analytics". IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications. 37 (2): 66–79. doi:10.1109/MCG.2016.38. PMID 28113834. S2CID 16567626.
  13. ^ Willett, Wesley; Jansen, Yvonne; Dragicevic, Pierre (August 2016). "Embedded Data Representations" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics. 23 (1): 461–470. doi:10.1109/TVCG.2016.2598608. PMID 27875162. S2CID 915988.
  14. ^ Amini, Fereshteh; Hasan, Khalad; Bunt, Andrea; Irani, Pourang (1 October 2018). "Data representations for in-situ exploration of health and fitness data". Proceedings of the 11th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare. PervasiveHealth. Barcelona, Spain: ACM New York. pp. 163–172. doi:10.1145/3154862.3154879. ISBN 978-1-4503-6363-1.
  15. ^ Tanveer, Iftekhar; Lin, Emy; Hoque, Mohammed (2 October 2018). "Rhema: A Real-Time In-Situ Intelligent Interface to Help People with Public Speaking". Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces. IGU. Atlanta, US: ACM New York. pp. 286–295. ISBN 978-0-7503-0493-1.
  16. ^ Munro, J. Ian; Raman, Venkatesh; Salowe, Jeffrey S. (1990). "Stable in situ sorting and minimum data movement". Bit. 30 (2): 220–234. doi:10.1007/BF02017344. S2CID 45650016.
  17. ^ Alves, Vladimir (August 2014). "In-Situ Processing Presentation" (PDF).
  18. ^ Gillespie, Cailein; Cousins, John A. (2001). European Gastronomy into the 21st Century. Oxford, UK: Elsevier. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-7506-5267-4. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
  19. ^ In Situ Leach (ISL) Mining of Uranium 24 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine. world-nuclear.org
  20. ^ Huchzermeyer, Marie (2009). "The struggle for in situ upgrading of informal settlements: A reflection on cases in Gauteng". Development Southern Africa. 26 (1): 59–74. doi:10.1080/03768350802640099. S2CID 153687182.

situ, confused, with, insitu, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jsto. Not to be confused with Insitu Inc This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources In situ news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In situ ɪ n ˈ s ɪ tj uː ˈ s aɪ tj uː ˈ s iː often not italicized in English 1 2 3 is a Latin phrase that translates literally to on site 4 or in position 5 It can mean locally on site on the premises or in place to describe where an event takes place and is used in many different contexts For example in fields such as physics geology chemistry or biology in situ may describe the way a measurement is taken that is in the same place the phenomenon is occurring without isolating it from other systems or altering the original conditions of the test The opposite of in situ is ex situ Contents 1 Aerospace 2 Archaeology 3 Art 4 Astronomy 5 Biology and biomedical engineering 6 Chemistry and chemical engineering 7 Civil engineering 8 Computer science 9 Design and advertising 10 Earth and atmospheric sciences 11 Economics 12 Electrochemistry 13 Environmental remediation 14 Experimental physics 15 Experimental psychology 16 Gastronomy 17 Law 18 Linguistics 19 Literature 20 Medicine 21 Mining 22 Petroleum production 23 RF transmission 24 Space related 25 Urban planning 26 Vacuum technology 27 Road assistance 28 See also 29 ReferencesAerospace EditIn the aerospace industry equipment on board aircraft must be tested in situ or in place to confirm everything functions properly as a system Individually each piece may work but interference from nearby equipment may create unanticipated problems Special test equipment is available for this in situ testing It can also refer to repairs made to the aircraft structure or flight controls while still in place Archaeology Edit Ancient Hohokam arrowhead in situ In archaeology in situ refers to an artifact that has not been moved from its original place of deposition In other words it is stationary meaning still An artifact being in situ is critical to the interpretation of that artifact and consequently of the culture which formed it Once an artifact s find site has been recorded the artifact can then be moved for conservation further interpretation and display An artifact that is not discovered in situ is considered out of context and as not providing an accurate picture of the associated culture However the out of context artifact can provide scientists with an example of types and locations of in situ artifacts yet to be discovered When excavating a burial site or surface deposit in situ refers to cataloging recording mapping photographing human remains in the position they are discovered 6 The label in situ indicates only that the object has not been newly moved Thus an archaeological in situ find may be an object that was historically looted from another place an item of booty of a past war a traded item or otherwise of foreign origin Consequently the in situ find site may still not reveal its provenance but with further detective work may help uncover links that otherwise would remain unknown It is also possible for archaeological layers to be reworked on purpose or by accident by humans natural forces or animals For example in a Tell mound where layers are not typically uniform or horizontal or in land cleared or tilled for farming The term in situ is often used to describe ancient sculpture that was carved in place such as the Sphinx or Petra This distinguishes it from statues that were carved and moved like the Colossi of Memnon which was moved in ancient times Art EditIn art in situ refers to a work of art made specifically for a host site or that a work of art takes into account the site in which it is installed or exhibited For a more detailed account see Site specific art The term can also refer to a work of art created at the site where it is to be displayed rather than one created in the artist s studio and then installed elsewhere e g a sculpture carved in situ In architectural sculpture the term is frequently employed to describe sculpture that is carved on a building frequently from scaffolds after the building has been erected 7 8 Also commonly used to describe the site specific dance festival Insitu Held in Queens New York Astronomy EditA fraction of the globular star clusters in our galaxy as well as those in other massive galaxies might have formed in situ The rest might have been accreted from now defunct dwarf galaxies In astronomy in situ also refers to in situ planet formation in which planets are hypothesized to have formed at the orbital distance they are currently observed 9 rather than to have migrated from a different orbit referred to as ex situ formation 10 Biology and biomedical engineering Edit Live sea snail species Nataea photographed in situ In biology and biomedical engineering in situ means to examine the phenomenon exactly in place where it occurs i e without moving it to some special medium In the case of observations or photographs of living animals it means that the organism was observed and photographed in the wild exactly as it was found and exactly where it was found This means it was not taken out of the area The organism had not been moved to another perhaps more convenient location such as an aquarium This phrase in situ when used in laboratory science such as cell science can mean something intermediate between in vivo and in vitro For example examining a cell within a whole organ intact and under perfusion may be in situ investigation This would not be in vivo as the donor is sacrificed by experimentation but it would not be the same as working with the cell alone a common scenario for in vitro experiments In vitro was among the first attempts to qualitatively and quantitatively analyze natural occurrences in the lab Eventually the limitation of in vitro experimentation was that they were not conducted in natural environments To compensate for this problem in vivo experimentation allowed testing to occur in the original organism or environment To bridge the dichotomy of benefits associated with both methodologies in situ experimentation allowed the controlled aspects of in vitro to become coalesced with the natural environmental compositions of in vivo experimentation In conservation of genetic resources in situ conservation also on site conservation is the process of protecting an endangered plant or animal species in its natural habitat as opposed to ex situ conservation also off site conservation Chemistry and chemical engineering EditIn chemistry in situ typically means in the reaction mixture There are numerous situations in which chemical intermediates are synthesized in situ in various processes This may be done because the species is unstable and cannot be isolated or simply out of convenience Examples of the former include the Corey Chaykovsky reagent and adrenochrome In biomedical engineering protein nanogels made by the in situ polymerization method provide a versatile platform for storage and release of therapeutic proteins It has tremendous applications for cancer treatment vaccination diagnosis regenerative medicine and therapies for loss of function genetic diseases 11 In chemical engineering in situ often refers to industrial plant operations or procedures that are performed in place For example aged catalysts in industrial reactors may be regenerated in place in situ without being removed from the reactors Civil engineering EditIn architecture and building in situ refers to construction which is carried out at the building site using raw materials Compare that with prefabricated construction in which building components are made in a factory and then transported to the building site for assembly For example concrete slabs may be in situ also cast in place or prefabricated In situ techniques are often more labor intensive and take longer but the materials are cheaper and the work is versatile and adaptable Prefabricated techniques are usually much quicker therefore saving money on labour costs but factory made parts can be expensive They are also inflexible and must often be designed on a grid with all details fully calculated in advance Finished units may require special handling due to excessive dimensions The phrase may also refer to those assets which are present at or near a project site In this case it is used to designate the state of an unmodified sample taken from a given stockpile Site construction usually involves grading the existing soil surface so that material is cut out of one area and filled in another area creating a flat pad on an existing slope The term in situ distinguishes soil still in its existing condition from soil modified filled during construction The differences in the soil properties for supporting building loads accepting underground utilities and infiltrating water persist indefinitely Computer science EditIn computer science an in situ operation is one that occurs without interrupting the normal state of a system citation needed For example a file backup may be restored over a running system without needing to take the system down to perform the restore In the context of a database a restore would allow the database system to continue to be available to users while a restore happened An in situ upgrade would allow an operating system firmware or application to be upgraded while the system was still running perhaps without the need to reboot it depending on the sophistication of the system Another use of the term in situ that appears in Computer Science focuses primarily on the use of technology and user interfaces to provide continuous access to situationally relevant information in various locations and contexts 12 13 Examples include athletes viewing biometric data on smartwatches to improve their performance 14 a presenter looking at tips on a smart glass to reduce their speaking rate during a speech 15 or technicians receiving online and stepwise instructions for repairing an engine An algorithm is said to be an in situ algorithm or in place algorithm if the extra amount of memory required to execute the algorithm is O 1 16 that is does not exceed a constant no matter how large the input except for space for recursive calls on the call stack Typically such an algorithm operates on data objects directly in place rather than making copies of them For example heapsort is an in situ sorting algorithm which sorts the elements of an array in place Quicksort is an in situ sorting algorithm but in the worst case it requires linear space on the call stack this can be reduced to log space Merge sort is generally not written as an in situ algorithm In designing user interfaces the term in situ means that a particular user action can be performed without going to another window citation needed for example if a word processor displays an image and allows the image to be edited without launching a separate image editor this is called in situ editing AJAX partial page data updates is another example of in situ in a Web UI UX context Web 2 0 included AJAX and the concept of asynchronous requests to servers to replace a portion of a web page with new data without reloading the entire page as the early HTML model dictated Arguably all asynchronous data transfers or any background task is in situ as the normal state is normally unaware of background tasks usually notified on completion by a callback mechanism With big data in situ data would mean bringing the computation to where data is located rather than the other way like in traditional RDBMS systems where data is moved to computational space 17 This is also known as in situ processing Design and advertising EditIn design and advertising the term typically means the superimposing of theoretical design elements onto photographs of real world locations This is a pre visualization tool to aid in illustrating a proof of concept Earth and atmospheric sciences EditIn physical geography and the Earth sciences in situ typically describes natural material or processes prior to transport For example in situ is used in relation to the distinction between weathering and erosion the difference being that erosion requires a transport medium such as wind ice or water whereas weathering occurs in situ Geochemical processes are also often described as occurring to material in situ In the atmospheric sciences in situ refers to obtained through direct contact with the respective subject such as a radiosonde measuring a parcel of air or an anemometer measuring wind as opposed to remote sensing such as weather radar or satellites Economics EditIn economics in situ is used when referring to the in place storage of a product usually a natural resource More generally it refers to any situation where there is no out of pocket cost to store the product so that the only storage cost is the opportunity cost of waiting longer to get your money when the product is eventually sold Examples of in situ storage would be oil and gas wells all types of mineral and gem mines stone quarries timber that has reached an age where it could be harvested and agricultural products that do not need a physical storage facility such as hay Electrochemistry EditIn electrochemistry the phrase in situ refers to performing electrochemical experiments under operating conditions of the electrochemical cell i e under potential control This is opposed to doing ex situ experiments that are performed under the absence of potential control Potential control preserves the electrochemical environment essential to maintain the double layer structure intact and the electron transfer reactions occurring at that particular potential in the electrode electrolyte interphasial region Environmental remediation EditIn situ can refer to where a clean up or remediation of a polluted site is performed using and stimulating the natural processes in the soil contrary to ex situ where contaminated soil is excavated and cleaned elsewhere off site Experimental physics EditIn experimental physics in situ typically refers to a method of data collection or manipulation of a sample without exposure to an external environment For example the Si 111 7x7 surface reconstruction is visible using a scanning tunneling microscope when it is prepared and analyzed in situ Experimental psychology EditIn psychology experiments in situ typically refers to those experiments done in a field setting as opposed to a laboratory setting Gastronomy EditIn gastronomy in situ refers to the art of cooking with the different resources that are available at the site of the event Here a person is not going to the restaurant but the restaurant comes to the person s home 18 Law EditIn legal contexts in situ is often used for its literal meaning For example in Hong Kong in situ land exchange involves the government exchanging the original or expired lease of a piece of land with a new grant or re grant with the same piece of land or a portion of that In the field of recognition of governments under public international law the term in situ is used to distinguish between an exiled government and a government with effective control over the territory i e the government in situ Linguistics EditIn linguistics specifically syntax an element may be said to be in situ if it is pronounced in the position where it is interpreted For example questions in languages such as Chinese have in situ wh elements with structures comparable to John bought what with what in the same position in the sentence as the grammatical object would be in its affirmative counterpart for example John bought bread An example of an English wh element that is not in situ see wh movement What did John buy Literature EditIn literature in situ is used to describe a condition The Rosetta Stone for example was originally erected in a courtyard for public viewing Most pictures of the famous stone are not in situ pictures of it erected as it would have been originally The stone was uncovered as part of building material within a wall Its in situ condition today is that it is erected vertically on public display at the British Museum in London England Medicine Edit Diagram of an in situ carcinoma not having invaded beyond the basement membrane In cancer oncology in situ means that malignant cells are present as a tumor but have not metastasized or invaded beyond the layer or tissue type where it arose This can happen anywhere in the body such as the skin breast tissue or lung For example a cancer of epithelial origin with such features is called carcinoma in situ and is defined as not having invaded beyond the basement membrane This type of tumor can often depending on where it is located be removed by surgery In anatomy in situ refers to viewing structures as they appear in normal healthy bodies For example one can open up a cadaver s abdominal cavity and view the liver in situ or one can look at an isolated liver that has been removed from the cadaver s body In nursing in situ describes any devices or appliances on the patient s body that remain in their desired and optimal position In medical simulation in situ refers to the practice of clinical professionals using high fidelity patient simulators to train for clinical practice in patient care environments such as wards operating rooms and other settings rather than in dedicated simulation training facilities In biomedical protein nanogels made by the in situ polymerization method provide a versatile platform for storage and release of therapeutic proteins It has tremendous applications for cancer treatment vaccination diagnosis regenerative medicine and therapies for loss of function genetic diseases 11 Mining EditIn situ leaching or in situ recovery refers to the mining technique of injecting lixiviant underground to dissolve ore and bringing the pregnant leach solution to surface for extraction Commonly used in uranium mining but has also been used for copper mining 19 Petroleum production EditIn situ refers to recovery techniques which apply heat or solvents to heavy crude oil or bitumen reservoirs beneath the earth s crust There are several varieties of in situ techniques but the ones which work best in the oil sands use heat steam The most common type of in situ petroleum production is referred to as SAGD steam assisted gravity drainage this is becoming very popular in the Alberta Oil Sands RF transmission EditIn radio frequency RF transmission systems in situ is often used to describe the location of various components while the system is in its standard transmission mode rather than operation in a test mode For example if an in situ wattmeter is used in a commercial broadcast transmission system the wattmeter can accurately measure power while the station is on air Space related EditFuture space exploration or terraforming may rely on obtaining supplies in situ such as previous plans to power the Orion space vehicle with fuel minable on the moon The Mars Direct mission concept is based primarily on the in situ fuel production using Sabatier reaction In the space sciences in situ refers to measurements of the particle and field environment that the satellite is embedded in such as the detection of energetic particles in the solar wind or magnetic field measurements from a magnetometer Urban planning EditIn urban planning in situ upgrading is an approach to and method of upgrading informal settlements 20 Vacuum technology EditIn vacuum technology in situ baking refers to heating parts of the vacuum system while they are under vacuum in order to drive off volatile substances that may be absorbed or adsorbed on the walls so they cannot cause outgassing Road assistance EditThe term in situ used as repair in situ means to repair a vehicle at the place where it has a breakdown See also Edit Look up in situ in Wiktionary the free dictionary carcinoma in situ ex vivo in silico in utero in vitro in vivo In situ conservation Ex situ conservation List of colossal sculpture in situ List of Latin phrases All pages with titles beginning with In situReferences Edit Merriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary Merriam Webster archived from the original on 10 October 2020 retrieved 23 April 2014 Iverson Cheryl et al eds 2007 12 1 1 Use of Italics AMA Manual of Style 10th ed Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517633 9 4 21 Use of Italics The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association 6th ed Washington DC USA American Psychological Association 2010 ISBN 978 1 4338 0562 2 Lewis amp Short Latin Dictionary Collins Latin Dictionary amp Grammar Byers Steven 2011 Introduction to Forensic Anthropology 4th ed Upper Saddle Ridge New Jersey Pearson Education Inc Friedland Elise A Sobocinski Melanie Grunow 3 February 2015 The Oxford Handbook of Roman Sculpture Oxford University Press pp 113 ISBN 978 0 19 026687 5 Webb Pamela A 1996 Hellenistic Architectural Sculpture Figural Motifs in Western Anatolia and the Aegean Islands Univ of Wisconsin Press pp 65 ISBN 978 0 299 14980 2 Chiang E Laughlin G 1 June 2013 The Minimum Mass Extrasolar Nebula In Situ Formation of Close In Super Earths Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 431 4 3444 3455 arXiv 1211 1673 Bibcode 2013MNRAS 431 3444C doi 10 1093 mnras stt424 ISSN 0035 8711 S2CID 119118397 D Angelo G Bodenheimer P 2016 In Situ and Ex Situ Formation Models of Kepler 11 Planets The Astrophysical Journal 828 1 id 33 32 pp arXiv 1606 08088 Bibcode 2016ApJ 828 33D doi 10 3847 0004 637X 828 1 33 S2CID 119203398 a b Ye Yanqi Yu Jicheng Gu Zhen 2015 Versatile Protein Nanogels Prepared by In Situ Polymerization Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics 217 3 333 343 doi 10 1002 macp 201500296 Ens Barrett Irani Pourang 2017 Spatial Analytic Interfaces Spatial User Interfaces for In Situ Visual Analytics IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications 37 2 66 79 doi 10 1109 MCG 2016 38 PMID 28113834 S2CID 16567626 Willett Wesley Jansen Yvonne Dragicevic Pierre August 2016 Embedded Data Representations PDF IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics 23 1 461 470 doi 10 1109 TVCG 2016 2598608 PMID 27875162 S2CID 915988 Amini Fereshteh Hasan Khalad Bunt Andrea Irani Pourang 1 October 2018 Data representations for in situ exploration of health and fitness data Proceedings of the 11th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare PervasiveHealth Barcelona Spain ACM New York pp 163 172 doi 10 1145 3154862 3154879 ISBN 978 1 4503 6363 1 Tanveer Iftekhar Lin Emy Hoque Mohammed 2 October 2018 Rhema A Real Time In Situ Intelligent Interface to Help People with Public Speaking Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces IGU Atlanta US ACM New York pp 286 295 ISBN 978 0 7503 0493 1 Munro J Ian Raman Venkatesh Salowe Jeffrey S 1990 Stable in situ sorting and minimum data movement Bit 30 2 220 234 doi 10 1007 BF02017344 S2CID 45650016 Alves Vladimir August 2014 In Situ Processing Presentation PDF Gillespie Cailein Cousins John A 2001 European Gastronomy into the 21st Century Oxford UK Elsevier p 72 ISBN 978 0 7506 5267 4 Retrieved 16 June 2014 In Situ Leach ISL Mining of Uranium Archived 24 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine world nuclear org Huchzermeyer Marie 2009 The struggle for in situ upgrading of informal settlements A reflection on cases in Gauteng Development Southern Africa 26 1 59 74 doi 10 1080 03768350802640099 S2CID 153687182 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title In situ amp oldid 1138450210, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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