composite sailing - определение. Что такое composite sailing
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Что (кто) такое composite sailing - определение

ABRUPT, INVOLUNTARY CHANGE IN COURSE
Broaching (sailing); Broach (sailing)
Найдено результатов: 776
Composite material         
  • Carbon fibre composite part.
  • Composites are formed by combining materials together to form an overall structure with properties that differ from that of the individual components
  • The graph depicts the three fracture modes a composite material may experience depending on the angle of misorientation relative to aligning fibres parallel to the applied stress.
  • Plot of the overall strength of a composite material as a function of fiber volume fraction limited by the upper bound (isostrain) and lower bound (isostress) conditions.
  • Concrete is a mixture of adhesive and aggregate, giving a robust, strong material that is very widely used.
  • Composite sandwich structure panel used for testing at NASA
  • doi=10.1016/S0921-5093(00)00909-6}}</ref>
  • Plywood is used widely in construction
MATERIAL MADE FROM A COMBINATION OF TWO OR MORE UNLIKE SUBSTANCES
Composite materials; Composite Material; Composite manufacturing; Quartz-fiber reinforced plastic; Composite Materials; Composition material; Composition materials; Composite material); Types of composite material; Composite fabrication; Composite matrix; Composite reinforcement; Technical fabrics; Layup mold; Composite structures
A composite material (also called a composition material or shortened to composite, which is the common name) is a material which is produced from two or more constituent materials. These constituent materials have notably dissimilar chemical or physical properties and are merged to create a material with properties unlike the individual elements.
Dental composite         
  • The use of flowable composite in early decay of lower molar teeth.
  • A hand-held wand that emits primary blue light (λmax=450-470nm) is used to cure the resin within a dental patient's mouth.
  • [[Glass ionomer cement]] - [[composite resin]] spectrum of restorative materials used in dentistry. Towards the GIC end of the spectrum, there is increasing fluoride release and increasing acid-base content; towards the composite resin end of the spectrum, there is increasing light cure percentage and increased flexural strength.
  • Dental composite resin.
SUBSTANCE USED TO FILL CAVITIES IN TEETH
Composite resin; Composite resin restoration; Acid etch composite resin; Composite filling; Composite fillings; Plastic filling; Tooth colored filling; Dental composites; White filling; Resin composite; Resin-based composite
Dental composite resins (better referred to as "resin-based composites" or simply "filled resins") are dental cements made of synthetic resins. Synthetic resins evolved as restorative materials since they were insoluble, of good tooth-like appearance, insensitive to dehydration, easy to manipulate and inexpensive.
Composite laminate         
  • A small sample of aerospace grade carbon-fibre/epoxy laminate
LAYERS OF COMPOSITE MATERIALS JOINED TO PROVIDE CERTAIN PROPERTIES
Composite laminates
In materials science, a composite laminate is an assembly of layers of fibrous composite materials which can be joined to provide required engineering properties, including in-plane stiffness, bending stiffness, strength, and coefficient of thermal expansion.
Nasdaq Composite         
  • Nasdaq Composite 1971–2021, logarithmic scale
STOCK MARKET INDEX OF THE COMMON STOCKS AND SIMILAR SECURITIES
NASDAQ Composite; Nasdaq composite index; NASDAQ Composite Index; Nasdaq Composite Index; ^IXIC
The Nasdaq Composite (ticker symbol ^IXIC) is a stock market index that includes almost all stocks listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange. Along with the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500, it is one of the three most-followed stock market indices in the United States.
Canoe sailing         
SAILING BY FITTING A SAIL TO A CANOE
Canoe Sailing; Sailing canoe
Canoe sailing refers to the practice of fitting an Austronesian outrigger or Western canoe with sails.
sailing ship         
  • Austronesian vessel]] with [[outrigger]]s and a [[fore-and-aft]] sail
  • lateen rig]]
  • A carved stone relief panel showing a [[Borobudur ship]] (Austronesian) from 8th century [[Java]], depicted with [[outrigger]]s and fore-and-aft [[tanja sail]]s
  • 1848}}
  • Diagram contrasting course made good to windward by tacking a schooner versus a square-rigged ship.
  • [[Schooner]]s became favored for some coast-wise commerce after 1850—they enabled a small crew to handle sails.
  • 1798 sea battle between a French and British [[man-of-war]]
  • Sailing ship at sea, rolling and heeled over from the force of the wind on its sails.
  • The marine [[sextant]] is used to measure the elevation of celestial bodies above the horizon.
  • Victoria]]'', which completed the first global circumnavigation.
  • ship]]
  • 2}} was the largest sailing ship ever built.
  • Seamen aloft, shortening sail
  • Roman warship with sails, oars, and a steering oar
  • Hull form lines, lengthwise and in cross-section from a 1781 plan
LARGE WIND-POWERED WATER VESSEL
Sailing vessel; Sailing ships; Sailing craft; Sail ship; S/v; Sail ships; Sailship; Sail-ship; Sailing-ship; Sailingship; Automated sailing ships; Sailships; Autonomous sailing ship; Automated sailing; Self-sailing ship; Sailing vessels
¦ noun a ship propelled by sails.
sailing ship         
  • Austronesian vessel]] with [[outrigger]]s and a [[fore-and-aft]] sail
  • lateen rig]]
  • A carved stone relief panel showing a [[Borobudur ship]] (Austronesian) from 8th century [[Java]], depicted with [[outrigger]]s and fore-and-aft [[tanja sail]]s
  • 1848}}
  • Diagram contrasting course made good to windward by tacking a schooner versus a square-rigged ship.
  • [[Schooner]]s became favored for some coast-wise commerce after 1850—they enabled a small crew to handle sails.
  • 1798 sea battle between a French and British [[man-of-war]]
  • Sailing ship at sea, rolling and heeled over from the force of the wind on its sails.
  • The marine [[sextant]] is used to measure the elevation of celestial bodies above the horizon.
  • Victoria]]'', which completed the first global circumnavigation.
  • ship]]
  • 2}} was the largest sailing ship ever built.
  • Seamen aloft, shortening sail
  • Roman warship with sails, oars, and a steering oar
  • Hull form lines, lengthwise and in cross-section from a 1781 plan
LARGE WIND-POWERED WATER VESSEL
Sailing vessel; Sailing ships; Sailing craft; Sail ship; S/v; Sail ships; Sailship; Sail-ship; Sailing-ship; Sailingship; Automated sailing ships; Sailships; Autonomous sailing ship; Automated sailing; Self-sailing ship; Sailing vessels
(sailing ships)
A sailing ship is a large ship with sails, especially of the kind that were used to carry passengers or cargo.
American clippers were the ultimate sailing ships.
N-COUNT
Sailing ship         
  • Austronesian vessel]] with [[outrigger]]s and a [[fore-and-aft]] sail
  • lateen rig]]
  • A carved stone relief panel showing a [[Borobudur ship]] (Austronesian) from 8th century [[Java]], depicted with [[outrigger]]s and fore-and-aft [[tanja sail]]s
  • 1848}}
  • Diagram contrasting course made good to windward by tacking a schooner versus a square-rigged ship.
  • [[Schooner]]s became favored for some coast-wise commerce after 1850—they enabled a small crew to handle sails.
  • 1798 sea battle between a French and British [[man-of-war]]
  • Sailing ship at sea, rolling and heeled over from the force of the wind on its sails.
  • The marine [[sextant]] is used to measure the elevation of celestial bodies above the horizon.
  • Victoria]]'', which completed the first global circumnavigation.
  • ship]]
  • 2}} was the largest sailing ship ever built.
  • Seamen aloft, shortening sail
  • Roman warship with sails, oars, and a steering oar
  • Hull form lines, lengthwise and in cross-section from a 1781 plan
LARGE WIND-POWERED WATER VESSEL
Sailing vessel; Sailing ships; Sailing craft; Sail ship; S/v; Sail ships; Sailship; Sail-ship; Sailing-ship; Sailingship; Automated sailing ships; Sailships; Autonomous sailing ship; Automated sailing; Self-sailing ship; Sailing vessels
A sailing ship is a sea-going vessel that uses sails mounted on masts to harness the power of wind and propel the vessel. There is a variety of sail plans that propel sailing ships, employing square-rigged or fore-and-aft sails.
Hang Seng Composite Index Series         
Hang Seng Composite Industry Indices; Hang Seng Composite Industry Indexes; Hang Seng Midcap 50 Index; Hang Seng Composite Index
The Hang Seng Composite Index is a stock market index of the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong and was launched in 2001. It offers an equivalent of Hong Kong market benchmark that covers around the top 95th percentile of the total market capitalisation of companies listed on the Main Board of the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong (“SEHK”).
Short Mayo Composite         
  • Just before the first trans-Atlantic flight, August 1938
  • The pair in Ireland.
PIGGY-BACK LONG-RANGE SEAPLANE/FLYING BOAT COMBINATION BUILT BY SHORT BROTHERS IN THE LATE 1930S
Short-Mayo Composite; Short Maia; Short Mercury; Short S.20 Mercury; Short S.21 Maia; Short S.20; Short S.21; Mayo Composite; Short Mayo
The Short Mayo Composite was a piggy-back long-range seaplane/flying boat combination produced by Short Brothers to provide a reliable long-range air transport service to North America and, potentially, to other distant places in the British Empire and the Commonwealth.

Википедия

Broach (nautical)

A broach is an abrupt, involuntary change in a vessel's course, towards the wind, resulting from loss of directional control, when the vessel's rudder becomes ineffective. This can be caused by wind or wave action. A wind gust can heel (lean) a sailing vessel, lifting its rudder out of the water. Both power and sailing vessels can broach when wave action reduces the effectiveness of the rudder. This risk occurs when traveling in the same general direction as the waves are moving.

The loss of control from either cause usually leaves the vessel beam-on to the sea, and in more severe cases the rolling moment may cause a capsize.

An alternative meaning in the context of submarine operation is an unintended surfacing of a shallow-running submarine in a deep wave trough.