statistical acceleration - meaning and definition. What is statistical acceleration
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What (who) is statistical acceleration - definition

FOUR-VECTOR THAT IS ANALOGOUS TO CLASSICAL ACCELERATION
4-acceleration; Four acceleration

Hardware acceleration         
USE OF SPECIALIZED COMPUTER HARDWARE TO PERFORM SOME FUNCTIONS MORE EFFICIENTLY THAN IS POSSIBLE IN SOFTWARE RUNNING ON A MORE GENERAL-PURPOSE CPU
Hardware accelerator; Accelerator board; Hardware mixing; Acceleration hardware; Hardware-accelerated; Hardware Acceleration; Hardware accelerators; Hardware accelerated; Hardware acceleration (computing)
Hardware acceleration is the use of computer hardware designed to perform specific functions more efficiently when compared to software running on a general-purpose central processing unit (CPU). Any transformation of data that can be calculated in software running on a generic CPU can also be calculated in custom-made hardware, or in some mix of both.
Ensemble (mathematical physics)         
  • classical]] systems in [[phase space]] (top). Each system consists of one massive particle in a one-dimensional [[potential well]] (red curve, lower figure). The initially compact ensemble becomes swirled up over time.
  • Visual representation of five statistical ensembles (from left to right): [[microcanonical ensemble]], [[canonical ensemble]], [[grand canonical ensemble]], [[isobaric-isothermal ensemble]], [[isoenthalpic-isobaric ensemble]]
SET OF POSSIBLE STATES
Using statistical ensembles; Using Statistical Ensembles; Ensemble average; Statistical ensemble; Thermodynamic ensemble; Gibbsian ensemble; Statistical Ensemble; Ensemble averaging (statistical mechanics); Ensemble average (statistical mechanics); Statistical ensemble (mathematical physics)
In physics, specifically statistical mechanics, an ensemble (also statistical ensemble) is an idealization consisting of a large number of virtual copies (sometimes infinitely many) of a system, considered all at once, each of which represents a possible state that the real system might be in. In other words, a statistical ensemble is a set of systems of particles used in statistical mechanics to describe a single
Ensemble average         
  • classical]] systems in [[phase space]] (top). Each system consists of one massive particle in a one-dimensional [[potential well]] (red curve, lower figure). The initially compact ensemble becomes swirled up over time.
  • Visual representation of five statistical ensembles (from left to right): [[microcanonical ensemble]], [[canonical ensemble]], [[grand canonical ensemble]], [[isobaric-isothermal ensemble]], [[isoenthalpic-isobaric ensemble]]
SET OF POSSIBLE STATES
Using statistical ensembles; Using Statistical Ensembles; Ensemble average; Statistical ensemble; Thermodynamic ensemble; Gibbsian ensemble; Statistical Ensemble; Ensemble averaging (statistical mechanics); Ensemble average (statistical mechanics); Statistical ensemble (mathematical physics)
In statistical mechanics, the ensemble average is defined as the mean of a quantity that is a function of the microstate of a system, according to the distribution of the system on its micro-states in this ensemble.

Wikipedia

Four-acceleration

In the theory of relativity, four-acceleration is a four-vector (vector in four-dimensional spacetime) that is analogous to classical acceleration (a three-dimensional vector, see three-acceleration in special relativity). Four-acceleration has applications in areas such as the annihilation of antiprotons, resonance of strange particles and radiation of an accelerated charge.