Bodine Resonant driver - meaning and definition. What is Bodine Resonant driver
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What (who) is Bodine Resonant driver - definition

HISTORIC HOUSE IN NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES
Metlar/Bodine House; Metlar/Bodine House Museum; Metlar-Bodine House; Metlar–Bodine House Museum; Metlar-Bodine House Museum

Frank L. Bodine         
  • Bayonne Free Public Library]]
  • Milner-Rosenwald Academy
AMERICAN ARCHITECT
Frank Bodine
Frank Lee Bodine (April 10, 1874 – after 1930) was an American architect who practiced in Asbury Park, New Jersey and in Orlando, Florida in the first four decades of the twentieth century.
Driver, Suffolk, Virginia         
  • The commercial area of Driver, seen from State Route 125
HUMAN SETTLEMENT IN VIRGINIA, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Driver, VA; Persimmon Orchard, Virginia; Driver, Virginia
Driver is a neighborhood in the independent city of Suffolk, Virginia, United States. It is located at the junction of State Route 337, State Route 125, and State Route 627.
Resonant trans-Neptunian object         
  • 8}} missing the 3:7 (2.333) resonance of Neptune.
  • The orbital period of 2001 XT<sub>254</sub> around the 3:7 (2.333) resonance of Neptune.
  • 245}}'s orbit librating in a 2:9 resonance with [[Neptune]]
  • Distribution of trans-Neptunian objects. Objects occupying the stronger resonances are in red.
  • Orcus]] and [[Pluto]] in a [[rotating frame]] with a period equal to [[Neptune]]'s [[orbital period]] (holding Neptune stationary)
  • Ixion]]
TRANS-NEPTUNIAN OBJECT
Twotino; Resonant TNO; Resonant Trans-Neptunian Object; Twotinos; Resonant Kuiper belt object; Resonant trans-Neptunian Object; Resonant KBO; Resonance with Neptune
In astronomy, a resonant trans-Neptunian object is a trans-Neptunian object (TNO) in mean-motion orbital resonance with Neptune. The orbital periods of the resonant objects are in a simple integer relations with the period of Neptune, e.

Wikipedia

Metlar–Bodine House

The Metlar House, also known as the Knapp House, the Bodine House, or the Metlar–Bodine House, is an historic house, now museum, located along River Road in Piscataway, New Jersey. It is also believed to be haunted. In 2003 a fire badly damaged the house. The museum has undergone major renovations over the past decade and, as of Summer 2014, is once again open to the public.

The Metlar–Bodine House's "Red, White, and Boom" Madeira wine tasting event on July 6, 2014, kicked off its campaign to raise money to build a new educational wing to house the historically significant Ross Hall Wall.

In July 1778, George Washington headquarters were at Ross Hall and his 11,000 patriots camped along the Raritan River in Piscataway. It was there that General Washington wrote the first order for the United States Army to celebrate the 4th of July – a tradition that continues to this day. The troops were ordered to march across the river on Landing Lane Bridge, line the banks of the Raritan in New Brunswick, and shoot their rifles down and up the line in the first organized salute to the nation's independence. They were then given an extra ration of rum and that evening the General had a party for officers (including Alexander Hamilton, the Marquis de Lafayette and Baron Von Stuben) and their ladies at Ross Hall. The building was destroyed in the 1960s but because of its significance, a parlor wall was saved and was exhibited at the New Jersey Historical Society until it was given to the Township and the Metlar–Bodine House in 2000.

Currently, the parlor wall is dismantled and stored in a large warehouse owned by Piscataway Township. The wall must be restored and relocated to a facility that is climate controlled and protected. It is estimated that the wall's restoration and an addition to the Metlar–Bodine House will cost close to $1 million.