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toroid
[′tȯr‚ȯid]McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
toroid
Also found in: Dictionary, Thesaurus, Wikipedia.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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On the other hand, if the thickness of the toroid is negated (r = 0), the toroidal solenoid is reduced to a ring, and the helical solenoid is reduced to a helix.
(2) Simultaneously with the angular motion sensor, a gravity-sensitive sensor (sensitive to the inclination angle), for example, an accelerometer, is placed on the platform: let, for simplicity, the accelerometer sensitivity axis is directed along the OY axis, that is, it lies in the toroid plane.
proposed the conceptual truss design MSRR-ORTHOBOT [87] with telescopic links having split toroids at two ends and with one toroid connected to link via revolute joint.
In three dimensions, this region corresponds to a toroid, or spherical ring, with cross-sectional radius [r.sub.2] and external radius [approximately equal to] a.
DNA fragmentation was found to discrete into smaller fragments in the 20-25 kb range rather than much larger 50-kb toroid fragments detected by other studies [3,34].
Rather than a toroid, the plasma in their reactor forms a column 100 cm long with a 1cm radius that can persist for as long as it is needed.
ATLAS End Cap Toroid Cold Mass being assembled at Building 191, November 2006
Finally, all three pairs of discs fuse around the larval esophagus, forming a toroid of juvenile tissue (torus stage, Maslakova, 2010a, table 1) at 36-44 d.
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