tool measurement - meaning and definition. What is tool measurement
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What (who) is tool measurement - definition

TOOL USED TO DRAW OR MEASURE DISTANCES ALONG A STRAIGHT LINE
Rulers; Rular; Rule (measurement tool); Folding ruler; Line gauge; 📏; Measuring stick; Carpenter's rule; Carpenter's ruler; Ruler (tool)
  • A ruler in combination with a letter scale
  • 221x221px
  • frac=8}} carpenter's rule
  • cm}}. Western Han (206 BCE – 8 CE). [[Hanzhong City]], China
  • A variety of rulers
  • A wooden carpenter's rule and other tools found on board the 16th-century [[carrack]] ''[[Mary Rose]]''
  • Archeological Museum]] of [[Istanbul]], Turkey
  • A closeup of a steel ruler
  • Retractable flexible rule or [[tape measure]]

lachrymology         
  • Sober]]" music video, directed by Adam Jones and Fred Stuhr
  • A band logo created by longtime collaborator [[Cam de Leon]],<ref name="Lowe Law 2006" /> this wrench is an example of "[[phallic]] hardware" in Tool's imagery.<ref name="Buffalo News 1997" />
  • Tool live, in 2006
  • Tool's live performances in 2006 included an elaborate light show using ''10,000 Days'' artwork by painter [[Alex Grey]] as a backdrop.
  • Tool logo, 2006
AMERICAN ROCK BAND
Tool band; Lachrymology; Lacrymology; Tool the band; Toolband; Paul d'Amour; Tool 2011 Tour; Tool tours; Tool Winter Tour; Tool 2013 Tour; Tool 2014 Tour; Decem; Decem (album); Decem (Tool album); Evolution (Tool album); Toolband.com
the science of crying as a therapy
Tool seemed to make up the theory of lachrymology.
Measurement in quantum mechanics         
  • Stern–Gerlach experiment: Silver atoms travelling through an inhomogeneous magnetic field, and being deflected up or down depending on their spin; (1) furnace, (2) beam of silver atoms, (3) inhomogeneous magnetic field, (4) classically expected result, (5) observed result
INTERACTION OF A QUANTUM SYSTEM WITH A CLASSICAL OBSERVER
Measurement in Quantum mechanics; Quantum measurement; Measurement of quantum entanglement; Quantum Measurement Problem; Measurement in quantum theory; Von Neumann measurement scheme; Lüders rule; Quantum measurement theory
In quantum physics, a measurement is the testing or manipulation of a physical system to yield a numerical result. The predictions that quantum physics makes are in general probabilistic.
unmetered         
  • Measuring instruments in fiction: [[Captain Nemo]] and Professor Aronnax contemplating thermometers, barometers, clocks, etc. in [[Jules Verne]]'s 1869-1870 science fiction novel ''[[Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea]]''
  • An [[echocardiogram]] processed into a three dimensional representation.
  • scales]]: An instrument for measuring mass in a force field by balancing forces.
  • A measuring instrument for [[radio waves]]: the 64-meter radio telescope at [[Parkes Observatory]], [[Australia]], as seen in 1969, when it was used to receive live televised video from [[Apollo 11]]
  • A Cathode-ray tube
  • [[Vitruvian Man]] by [[Leonardo da Vinci]], [[Gallerie dell'Accademia]], [[Venice]] (1485-90)
  • Measurement results (a) brittle (b) ductile with breaking point (c) ductile without breaking point.
  • electromagnetic spectrum]].
  • The [[electromagnetic spectrum]]
  • The electrochemical cell: A device for measuring substance potentials.
  • An instrument for detecting net charges, the [[electroscope]].
  • An active [[calorimeter]] lacking a temperature measurement device.
  • Love Meter]] and [[strength tester machine]] at a [[Framingham, Massachusetts]] rest stop.
  • [[Watch]], a time measurement device
  • A cloud chamber detecting alpha-rays.
  • mercury]] (Hg) [[barometer]] in the [[gravitational field]] of the earth.
  • prism]].
  • A [[measuring cup]], a common instrument used to measure volume.
  • A spirometer, inhaling into pipe a fills volume b, the rest balances forces.
DEVICE FOR MEASURING A PHYSICAL QUANTITY
Physics instrumentation; Measurement instrument; Metering device; List of measuring devices; Measuring device; Electronic instrumentation; Measurement instruments; Measuring tools; Mesuring tools; Measuring tool; Meter (device); Metring; Metred; Unmetered; Metered; Measurement device; Measuring Instruments; Measuring instruments; Speed measurement; Speed indicator; Measurement tool; Angle measurement; Angle measuring instrument; Angular measuring instrument; Angle measuring instruments; Dimensional instruments; List of measuring instruments; Dimensional measurement; Velocity measurement
An unmetered service for something such as water supply or telephone access is one that allows you to use as much as you want for a basic cost, rather than paying for the amount you use.
Clients are not charged by the minute but given unmetered access to the Internet for a fixed fee.
ADJ

Wikipedia

Ruler

A ruler, sometimes called a rule, line gauge, or scale, is an instrument used to make distance measurements whereby a user estimates a distance by reading from a series of markings called "rules" along an edge of the device. Commonly the instrument is rigid and the edge itself is a straightedge ("ruled straightedge") which additionally allows one to draw straight lines. Some rulers such as cloth or paper tape measures are non-rigid. Specialty rulers exist that have flexible edges that retain a chosen shape and these find use in sewing, arts, and crafts.

Rulers have been used since ancient times. They are commonly made from metal, wood, fabric, paper, and plastic. They are crucially important in the design and construction of buildings. Their ability to quickly and easily measure lengths makes them important to textile industry and to retailers where amounts of string, fabric, and paper goods can be cut to size. Children learn basic use of rulers at the elementary school level and are often part of a student's school supplies. At the high school level rulers are often used as straightedges for geometric constructions in Euclidean geometry. Rulers are ubiquitous in the engineering and construction industries, often in the form of a tape measure, and are used for making and reading technical drawings. Since much technical work is now done on computer, many software programs implement virtual rulers to help the user estimate virtual distances.