| NOUN | a radius | radii / radiuses |
NOUN article.ind sg | pl
Neue Wörterbuch-Abfrage: Einfach jetzt tippen!
- Fovea articularis (radii) {f} = articular facet [Fovea articularis (radii)]
alle anzeigen ...Anwendungsbeispiele Englisch
weitere Beispiele ...
- More generally, taking both radii with the same sign (both positive or both negative) yields the inner center, while taking the radii with opposite signs (one positive and the other negative) yields the outer center.
- Solar-like oscillations have been used, among other things, to precisely determine the masses and radii of planet-hosting stars and thus improve the measurements of the planets' masses and radii.
- Moving rightward and descending the periodic table have opposite effects on atomic radii of isolated atoms.
- A similar procedure was later used by Hipparchus, who estimated the mean distance to the Moon as 67 Earth radii, and Ptolemy, who took 59 Earth radii for this value.
- The lanthanide contraction is the greater-than-expected decrease in atomic radii/ionic radii of the elements in the lanthanide series from atomic number 57, lanthanum, to 71, lutetium, which results in smaller than otherwise expected atomic radii/ionic radii for the subsequent elements starting with 72, hafnium.
- The generally reported radii of large cool stars are Rosseland radii, defined as the radius of the photosphere at a specific optical depth of two-thirds.
- 3 solar radii or 11.2 solar radii. It is thought that this variation stems from a difference in dust composition.
- Members of this family differ from members of Periphyllidae in having the four rhopalia (sensory organs) located on the bell margin on the radii, as opposed to between the radii.
- 045 Earth radii (0.065±0.004 Jupiter radii), and its parent star Kepler-124 is estimated to be 68.7% of the mass the Sun, approximately 0.636±0.030 solar radii.
- Workshop on Numerical Ranges and Numerical Radii (WONRA) is a biennial workshop series on numerical ranges and numerical radii which began in 1992.
- The sizes are listed in units of Earth radii (...). All planets listed are smaller than Earth, up to 0.7 Earth radii. The NASA Exoplanet Archive is used as the main data source.
- loosely reflect the radii of particle i and j respectively, their averages can be said to be the effective radii between the two particles at which point repulsive interactions become severe.
- "Zilla diodia" build very fine, vertical orb webs with often more than 50 radii and sticky spiral loops.
- 8 Earth-radii exposed to over 650 Earth incident flux, it is assumed that exoplanets below such radii exposed to such stellar fluxes could have had their envelopes stripped by photoevaporation.
- The radii of curves are larger so that trains can traverse them at higher speeds without increasing the centripetal acceleration felt by passengers.
- but considered "inside out"), in which case if the radii have opposite sign (one circle has negative radius and the other has positive radius) the external and internal homothetic centers and external and internal bitangents are switched, while if the radii have the same sign (both positive radii or both negative radii) "external" and "internal" have the same usual sense (switching one sign switches them, so switching both switches them back).
- These radii are larger than the crystal radii given above (Li+, 90 pm; Cl−, 167 pm).
- Railway rails are quite flexible and bend easily to radii of [...] or more. The jim crow is needed to bend rails to tighter radii, especially near the ends.
- In the x-z-plane the circles of the spheres with centers [...] and radii [...] have the two circles (in diagram grey) with centers [...] and radii [...] as envelopes.
© dict.cc English-German dictionary 2024
Enthält Übersetzungen von der TU Chemnitz sowie aus Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (nur Englisch/Deutsch).
Links auf das Wörterbuch oder auch auf einzelne Übersetzungen sind immer herzlich willkommen!