mechanical feeding - определение. Что такое mechanical feeding
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  • частота употребления
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Что (кто) такое mechanical feeding - определение

THE PHENOMENON OF ONE SPECIES LIVING OFF OF THE METABOLIC PRODUCTS OF ANOTHER SPECIES
Syntrophism; Cross feeding; Cross-feeding; Syntrophic
Найдено результатов: 771
Bird feeding         
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture]] to feed birds in the winter.
  • Seabird feeding
  • A man feeding pigeons at [[Esplanadi]] in [[Helsinki]], Finland, in 1921
HUMAN ACTIVITY OF FEEDING WILD BIRDS
Bird-feeding; Fatball; Fatballs; Fat-ball; Fat-balls; Feeding Pigeons; Birdfeeding; Feeding birds
Bird feeding is the activity of feeding wild birds, often by means of a bird feeder. With a recorded history dating to the 6th century, the feeding of wild birds has been encouraged and celebrated in the United States and United Kingdom, with it being the United States' second most popular hobby having National Bird-Feeding Month congressionally decreed in 1994.
Mechanical counter         
  • Early IBM tabulating machine using mechanical counters
  • Mechanical counter wheels showing both sides. The bump on the wheel shown at the top engages the ratchet on the wheel below every turn.
DIGITAL COUNTERS BUILT USING MECHANICAL COMPONENTS
Counter (mechanical); Mechanical counters; Veeder-Root Counter; Veeder-Root counter
Mechanical counters are digital counters built using mechanical components. Long before electronics became common, mechanical devices were used to count events.
Mechanical television         
  • A color televisor. A test card (the famous [[test card F]]) can just be seen through the lens on the right.
  • thumb
  • Ernst Ruhmer demonstrating his experimental television system, which was capable of transmitting 5×5 [[pixel]] images of simple shapes over telephone lines, using a 25-element selenium cell receiver (1909)<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015031441952;view=1up;seq=489 "Another Electric Distance-Seer"], ''Literary Digest'', September 11, 1909, page 384.</ref>
  • Flying spot scanner in a television studio in 1931. This type was used for "head shots" of performers speaking, singing or playing instruments. A bright spot of light projected from the lens at center scanned the subject's face, and the light reflected at each point was picked up by the 8 [[phototube]]s in the dish-shaped mirrors.
  • 315x315px
  • Jenkins Television Co. rotating disk television camera, 1931
  • Television Machine with 4 LED Strips
  • The [[Nipkow disk]]. This schematic shows the circular paths traced by the holes, that may also be square for greater precision. The area of the disk outlined in black shows the region scanned.
A TELEVISION SYSTEM THAT RELIES ON A MECHANICAL SCANNING DEVICE, TO BOTH SCAN AND REPRODUCE THE VIDEO SIGNAL.
Mechanical Television; Electromechanical television; Mechanical TV; Televisor; Baird Televisor; Televisors; Televisory; Mechanical televisions; Baird system; Mechanical scan television
Mechanical television or mechanical scan television is a television system that relies on a mechanical scanning device, such as a rotating disk with holes in it or a rotating mirror drum, to scan the scene and generate the video signal, and a similar mechanical device at the receiver to display the picture. This contrasts with vacuum tube electronic television technology, using electron beam scanning methods, for example in cathode ray tube (CRT) televisions.
Mechanical impedance         
QUOTIENT OF FORCE AND RESULTING SPEED IN THE SAME DIRECTION
Mechanical resistance
Mechanical impedance is a measure of how much a structure resists motion when subjected to a harmonic force. It relates forces with velocities acting on a mechanical system.
Dynamic mechanical analysis         
  • Figure 2. Typical DMA thermogram of an amorphous thermoplastic (polycarbonate). Storage Modulus (E’) and Loss Modulus (E’’) and Loss Factor tan(delta) are plotted as function of temperature.  The glass transition temperature of Polycarbonate was detected to be around 151°C (evaluation according to ISO 6721-11)
TECHNIQUE IN MATERIALS SCIENCE
Dynamic mechanical spectroscopy; Dynamic Mechanical Analyser; DMTA; Dynamic Mechanical Spectroscopy; Dynamic Mechanical Analysis; Dynamic mechanical analyser
Dynamic mechanical analysis (abbreviated DMA) is a technique used to study and characterize materials. It is most useful for studying the viscoelastic behavior of polymers.
History of mechanical engineering         
  • Da Vinci's flying machine concepts
ASPECT OF HISTORY
Draft:History of Mechanical Engineering
Mechanical engineering is a discipline centered around the concept of using force multipliers, moving components, and machines. It utilizes knowledge of mathematics, physics, materials sciences, and engineering technologies.
Mechanical–electrical analogies         
  • A mechanical network diagram of a simple resonator (top) and one possible electrical analogy for it (bottom)
ANY ANALOGY BETWEEN ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL SYSTEMS, USED FOR MODELING
Through and across analogy; Across and through analogy; Trent analogy; Mechanical-electrical analogy; Electro-mechanical analogies; Electrical-mechanical analogies; Electrical analogues of mechanical systems; Mechanical-electrical analogies; Mechanical–electrical analogy
Mechanical–electrical analogies are the representation of mechanical systems as electrical networks. At first, such analogies were used in reverse to help explain electrical phenomena in familiar mechanical terms.
Amazon Mechanical Turk         
  • Worker-HIT-assignment ER_diagram
MICRO-WORK SERVICE SUBSIDIARY OF AMAZON
Turking; Mturk; MTurk; Artificial artificial intelligence; YRUHRN; Amazon Turk; AmazonMechanicalTurk; AmazonTurk; AmazonMechanical; Amazon MTurk; MTurk Requester; Amazon mechanical turk; Amazon’s Mechanical Turk
Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) is a crowdsourcing website for businesses (known as Requesters) to hire remotely located "crowdworkers" to perform discrete on-demand tasks that computers are currently unable to do. It is operated under Amazon Web Services, and is owned by Amazon.
feeding bottle         
  • A "vented" bottle is also sometimes marked as an "anti-[[colic]]" bottle.
  • Baby with feeding bottle, 1922
  • Advertisement for Burr's Improved Nursing Bottle, one brand of "murder bottle"
  • Bottle warmer with thermostat
  •  Alexandra feeding bottle, sold with a screw glass stopper, early 1900s
  • [[Newborn]] drinking milk from a bottle
  • Early medieval infant feeding bottle from Castkedyke Cemetery, Barton upon Humber, from a display at the North Lincolnshire Museum
  • Animal shaped ceramic feeding bottle from [[Regensburg, Germany]] (ca. 1350–800 BCE)
  • Baby bottle nipples (teats) made of clear silicone
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BOTTLE WITH A NIPPLE TO DRINK FROM
Bottle Feeding; Bottle feeding; Bottle-feeding; 🍼; Feeding bottle; Baby bottles; Bottlefeed; Vented bottle; 🧑‍🍼; 👩‍🍼; 👩🏻‍🍼; 👩🏼‍🍼; 👩🏽‍🍼; 👩🏾‍🍼; 👩🏿‍🍼; 👨‍🍼; 👨🏻‍🍼; 👨🏼‍🍼; 👨🏽‍🍼; 👨🏾‍🍼; 👨🏿‍🍼; 🧑🏻‍🍼; 🧑🏼‍🍼; 🧑🏽‍🍼; 🧑🏾‍🍼; 🧑🏿‍🍼
also feeding-bottle (feeding bottles)
A feeding bottle is a plastic bottle with a special rubber top through which a baby can suck milk or other liquids. (mainly BRIT; in AM, use nursing bottle
)
N-COUNT
Feeding disorder         
EATING AND FEEDING DISORDERS IN BABIES AND INFANTS, ACADEMIC REVIEW.
Organic feeding disorders; Organic feeding disorder
A feeding disorder, in infancy or early childhood, is a child's refusal to eat certain food groups, textures, solids or liquids for a period of at least one month, which causes the child to not gain enough weight, grow naturally or cause any developmental delays. Feeding disorders resemble failure to thrive, except that at times in feeding disorder there is no medical or physiological condition that can explain the very small amount of food the children consume or their lack of growth.

Википедия

Syntrophy

In biology, syntrophy, synthrophy, or cross-feeding (from Greek syn meaning together, trophe meaning nourishment) is the phenomenon of one species feeding on the metabolic products of another species to cope up with the energy limitations by electron transfer. In this type of biological interaction, metabolite transfer happens between two or more metabolically diverse microbial species that live in close proximity to each other. The growth of one partner depends on the nutrients, growth factors, or substrates provided by the other partner. Thus, syntrophism can be considered as an obligatory interdependency and a mutualistic metabolism between two different bacterial species.