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sizechanging

Sizechanging refers to the alteration of an object's physical dimensions, including length, width, height, or volume. It can occur through natural processes, human intervention, or fictional means, and may be temporary or permanent, affecting scale across domains from biology to technology.

In biology and medicine, size changes arise from growth, development, aging, edema, or atrophy. Cells can increase

In physics and materials science, size changes occur through thermal expansion, contraction, phase transitions, swelling of

In computing and digital media, resizing and morphing are common operations. Dynamic data structures resize their

In culture and fiction, sizechanging is a frequent trope, featuring characters or objects that alter size for

or
decrease
in
size
in
response
to
nutrients,
hormones,
or
osmotic
pressure.
Tissues
and
organs
may
change
size
due
to
disease,
injury,
or
environmental
conditions.
polymers,
or
mechanical
deformation.
Some
materials
are
designed
to
change
size
under
specific
stimuli,
such
as
temperature,
electric
or
magnetic
fields,
or
chemical
triggers
(for
example,
shape
memory
alloys
and
hydrogels).
capacity,
images
and
fonts
are
scaled
for
display
at
different
resolutions,
and
animations
may
include
objects
changing
size
as
part
of
visual
effects.
narrative
or
symbolic
purposes.
Discussions
about
sizechanging
often
touch
on
physics
plausibility,
ethics,
and
the
practical
consequences
of
scale
changes
in
real
systems.