Exact(2)
Compared with BP1600 specimen retrofitted using external bonding, the strengths of all specimens, except CP300-1 the bonded length of whose ends is 300 mm and which is retrofitted using the embedding in a line, is higher than that of a specimen retrofitted using external bonding.
The foundation of the definition of vectors was Bellavitis' notion of the bipoint, an oriented segment one of whose ends is the origin and the other one a target.
Similar(58)
We are still in the very early stages of two wars whose ends are nowhere in sight.
Furthermore, on the basis of thermodynamic considerations, he predicted what came to be known as the Thomson effect, that heat power (Qτ) is absorbed or evolved along the length of a material rod whose ends are at different temperatures.
An inspection revealed that a number of other large decorations were ready to drop off and that the roof at the crossing was supported by timbers whose ends were all but rotted away.
The immature sugar cane grows up past their shoulders, rows and rows of it, the narrow leaves forming spiny corridors whose ends are so distant they are impossible to see.
We consider monochromatic wave propagation along a long, finite, one-dimensional, slightly non-uniform waveguide, whose ends are connected to uniform semi-infinite waveguides.
Closed-form expressions for the small axial deflection and stress distribution of axially loaded rubber blocks of elliptical cross-section, whose ends are bonded to rigid plates, are derived using a superposition approach.
In this case, the model describes the weakly damped vibrations of an extensible beam whose ends are a fixed distance apart if one end is hinged while a load is attached to the other end [21].
Using this type of data, one of the most significant pre-analysis procedures is to split each continuous trajectory into smaller segments (with a single trip as the smallest unit) whose ends are activities.
Terrestrial arthropods also generally adopt a more stable hanging stance, standing on the underside of their limbs whose ends are at a low angle to the ground (a plantigrade tarsus; Størmer 1970; Fig. 8a).
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