NOUN | a microsecond | microseconds | |
NOUN article.ind sg | pl
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Usage Examples English
- The "Dumey microsecond" is a term of art in the intelligence community of the United States where Dumey spent much of his career.
- It had 4,096 words of memory in Magnetic-core memory (with 2.4 microsecond access time), supplemented by 12,288 words of memory using Williams tubes (with 15 microsecond access time).
- The amplitude can be modeled as a trapezoidal pulse with a one microsecond rise time, one microsecond plateau, and one microsecond fall time.
- The B2500 had a maximum of 60 K bytes of core memory and a 2 microsecond cycle time.
- Vacuum tubes are to be used rather than relays due to tubes’ ability operate in one microsecond vs. 10 milliseconds for relays.
- A flick is approximately 1.42 × 10−9 s, which makes it larger than a nanosecond but much smaller than a microsecond.
- Initially made with 6-microsecond core memory, it had better performance than the IBM 7094 transistor computer.
- Many ad-hoc synchronization schemes exist, so IEEE published a standard Precision Time Protocol IEEE 1588 or "PTP", which allows sub-microsecond synchronization of clocks.
- Technical references to X and Y channels relate only to the spacing of the individual pulses in the DME pulse pair, 12 microsecond spacing for X channels and 30 microsecond spacing for Y channels.
- Using conventional explosive techniques with blasting caps, progress towards achieving simultaneity to within a small fraction of a microsecond was discouraging.
- If a higher-priority section is locked out in one 4-microsecond cycle, when it tries again in the next 4-microsecond cycle, all lower-priority sections are prevented from beginning a new cycle on that memory bank until the higher-priority section has completed its access.
- Scalloping occurs at 150 km/s for an L-band radar with a 1 microsecond pulse.
- In 1956, a team at Manchester University in the United Kingdom began development of MUSE – a name derived from microsecond engine – with the aim of eventually building a computer that could operate at processing speeds approaching one microsecond per instruction, about one million instructions per second.
- A triggered spark gap in an air-gap flash is used to produce photographic light flashes in the sub-microsecond domain.
- Designed for semiconductor memory which was not ready at the time of announcement, the 3705-I had to use 1.2 microsecond core storage; the later 3705-II uses 1.0 microsecond SRAM.
- In datasheets, this parameter is usually indicated as [...] and is generally in the order of up to some volts per microsecond.
- Later generations of receiver design significantly mitigated these limitations; by 2004 technology existed to build receivers capable of detecting and compensating for static multipath interference conditions where a single echo was 10 dB weaker (within a 30 microsecond time difference) or the same strength (the worst case, but within a 12 microsecond range).
- A nanosecond is equal to 1000 picoseconds or [...] microsecond. Time units ranging between 10 [...] and 10 [...] seconds are typically expressed as tens or hundreds of nanoseconds.
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Contains translations by TU Chemnitz and Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (German-English only).
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