ductile connection - meaning and definition. What is ductile connection
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What (who) is ductile connection - definition

STRONGEST PART OF THE EARTH'S CRUST
Brittle-ductile transition zone; Brittle-ductile boundary

Connection pool         
CACHE OF DATABASE CONNECTIONS MAINTAINED BY THE DATABASE
Connection pooling; Connection Pool
In software engineering, a connection pool is a cache of database connections maintained so that the connections can be reused when future requests to the database are required.
Connection (vector bundle)         
  • A section of a bundle may be viewed as a generalized function from the base into the fibers of the vector bundle. This can be visualized by the graph of the section, as in the figure above.
  • How to recover the covariant derivative of a connection from its parallel transport. The values <math>s(\gamma(t))</math> of a section <math>s\in \Gamma(E)</math> are parallel transported along the path <math>\gamma</math> back to <math>\gamma(0)=x</math>, and then the covariant derivative is taken in the fixed vector space, the fibre <math>E_x</math> over <math>x</math>.
LINEAR CONNECTION ON A VECTOR BUNDLE
Koszul connection; Vector bundle connection; Connection on a vector bundle
In mathematics, and especially differential geometry and gauge theory, a connection on a fiber bundle is a device that defines a notion of parallel transport on the bundle; that is, a way to "connect" or identify fibers over nearby points. The most common case is that of a linear connection on a vector bundle, for which the notion of parallel transport must be linear.
ductility         
  • Al-Mg-Si alloy]]. The local necking and the cup and cone fracture surfaces are typical for ductile metals.
  • s2cid=58893669 }}</ref><!-- This is content from a predatory publisher (intechopen.com); recommend finding an alternative source for a comparable image, but I hesitate to remove the image at this time. -->
  • nodular cast iron]] demonstrates low ductility.
  • Schematic appearance of round metal bars after tensile testing.<br />
(a) Brittle fracture<br />
(b) Ductile fracture<br />
(c) Completely ductile fracture
MEASURE OF A MATERIAL'S ABILITY TO UNDERGO SIGNIFICANT PLASTIC DEFORMATION BEFORE RUPTURE OR BREAKING
Malleable; Maellability; Ductile; Non-malleability; Malleability; Maleable; Ductile yield; Nil ductility temperature; Ductile-brittle transition temperature; Ductile-brittle transition; Low temperature embrittlement; Ductile metal; Tensile ductility; Ductile-to-brittle transition
n.
1.
Tractableness, docility, compliancy, flexibility, yielding disposition.
2.
Extensibility.

Wikipedia

Brittle–ductile transition zone

The brittle-ductile transition zone (hereafter the "transition zone") is the zone of the Earth's crust that marks the transition from the upper, more brittle crust to the lower, more ductile crust. For quartz and feldspar-rich rocks in continental crust, the transition zone occurs at an approximate depth of 20 km, at temperatures of 250–400 °C. At this depth, rock becomes less likely to fracture, and more likely to deform ductilely by creep because the brittle strength of a material increases with confining pressure, while its ductile strength decreases with increasing temperature.