Most vehicles handle nearly identical with slight variations in acceleration and top speed. |
|
He has vision, a tremendous burst of acceleration, he runs low to the ground and he's a very tough-minded player. |
|
You can't beat lightweight wheels for snappy acceleration and climbing power. |
|
The acceleration of productivity growth also resulted from a tight labor market, as firms made better use of their workforces. |
|
Stimulation of a beta receptor causes muscle vasodilation, bronchial relaxation, and cardiac acceleration. |
|
Alloy wheels can provide more responsive acceleration and braking as well as added strength, which can reduce tire deflection in cornering. |
|
It was when the latter came on board that we started to see the acceleration of large scale changes. |
|
Crossbow makes sensors that can report on vibration, tilt, acceleration, temperature, and other factors. |
|
It is analytically worthwhile to highlight the progressive acceleration in debt growth over the past few years. |
|
Or, if you like, a great soccer player is someone who will have very good acceleration, good strength, good eye sight and good coordination. |
|
He said experiencing the power and acceleration of the fighter jet was exhilarating, but physically draining. |
|
The students explained that this involved use of inertial sensors to sense the aircraft acceleration and angular rates. |
|
The chip's software utilises these pipelines for 3D graphics acceleration and to provide video manipulation in 2D mode. |
|
Quickly the acceleration compensators countered the thrust of the engines, and he was comfortable again. |
|
Are the laws of acceleration and composition of forces nothing but arbitrary conventions? |
|
His main historical significance is his acceleration of the settlement of barbarians on Roman territory. |
|
After lift-off, the heavy weight will result in a relatively slow acceleration to the speed for best angle of climb. |
|
A rocket's inertial guidance system measures acceleration along three principal directions. |
|
The acceleration strips the lining of the artery away faster than it can be replenished. |
|
Galileo stands at the center of this fresco, explaining the uniform acceleration of a sphere rolling down an inclined plane. |
|
|
But Earth is very massive compared to the object, so its inertia or resistance to acceleration is much greater. |
|
He then switched the acceleration to cruise control, reached under his seat, and pulled out a steering lock. |
|
The competing forces of gravity at the lower end and outward centripetal acceleration at the farther end keep the cable under tension. |
|
The acceleration of the recombination rate and the strong stimulation of luminescence caused by the membrane potential are well known. |
|
If you don't tailgate and therefore avoid unnecessary braking and acceleration, you can increase consumption by 5-10 per cent. |
|
The acceleration, too, even in the automatic version of the car that I drove, is pin-sharp and has none of the usual executive bagginess. |
|
Futurologists have noted an exponential acceleration in the pace of technological change. |
|
It was a century of unparalleled global expansion of cities, with an attendant acceleration of the process of commodification. |
|
The second possible mechanism is acceleration or retardation of development in the course of phyletic evolution. |
|
Most applications will not require all of the acceleration measurements illustrated. |
|
The output scale factor of an accelerometer is simply how many volts output are provided per g of applied acceleration. |
|
Extreme acceleration is definitely a possibility, and perhaps even inevitable. |
|
The clutch between the engine and traction motor is engaged, and electric motor used for bursts of acceleration. |
|
Without the gravity well for acceleration, the damage would be absorbed by the outer hulls. |
|
The bikes offer superior acceleration and handling at the slight expense of its straight line top speed. |
|
As you reach the first curve, you put your arm over to the side and you feel the acceleration. |
|
Gently increase acceleration and be prepared to change down through the gears to preserve momentum. |
|
The helmsman fired the aft thrusters again, moving the Columbia from a dead stop to full acceleration. |
|
However, an exciting alternative method of acceleration is making great strides towards the next energy regime. |
|
He convened a task force on greater CIA openness, and there was an acceleration in the declassification of records on past covert operations. |
|
|
Performing drills that focus on breathing, timing and acceleration can help a swimmer grasp the finer points of swimming butterfly. |
|
If the planet were stationary, the slow-down effect would be equal to the initial acceleration, so there would be no net gain in speed. |
|
There's a visceral pleasure in shoving the clutch, and unleashing the next wave of acceleration as part of a fluid mechanical process. |
|
The advertised peak power is lower than a conventional drivetrain, yet it achieves the acceleration performance of a much more powerful system. |
|
This acceleration provides evidence consistent with the spillovers from information technologies into non-IT industries. |
|
Despite the minimized acceleration, this still isn't tolerable to humans sitting vertically. |
|
On steeper downgrades, a higher acceleration will be achievable through the assistance of gravity. |
|
The front engine-rear drive layout ensures improved grip and better traction under acceleration as the weight of the car transfers to the rear. |
|
Roller coasters are also good demonstrators of speed, velocity, and acceleration. |
|
For land transportation the nimbleness and lightning acceleration of the shopping-bike was decided upon unanimously. |
|
In the vaned impeller, the fluid undergoes an abrupt acceleration and change of direction as it enters the rotor. |
|
But their size makes them unwieldy in city streets, and their acceleration is not tremendous. |
|
Instead of continuing my acceleration for the pass I start slowing my cadence, unweighting the back wheel and making attempts to slow down quick. |
|
The laws of gravity, optics, and acceleration represent averages, not the quirky behavior of each single nanoparticle. |
|
Four-channel ABS from Bosch combined with electronic traction control regulate wheel slip in both braking and acceleration on low grip surfaces. |
|
He confirmed that there are no photographs of any skid marks or acceleration marks on the roadway. |
|
The prime minister has once again gambled on an explosive acceleration in economic growth that has yet to materialise. |
|
Both of the treads and several wheels couldn't take the sudden acceleration, tearing away noisily and flying off on their own short trajectories. |
|
Eaton expects the device to boost fuel economy by letting the engine idle during initial acceleration. |
|
They have pace, speed, acceleration, penetration, and that priceless asset, mobility. |
|
|
No compromises on acceleration, towing capacity, cargo space, fuel economy, or emissions. |
|
In city driving, nearly 50 percent of the energy needed to power your car goes to acceleration. |
|
The Ford exhaust system will improve your vehicle's acceleration and passing power, and at the same, help improve its fuel mileage. |
|
The page states Newton's second law of motion as mass and acceleration having a relationship of inverse proportionality. |
|
The force on an object is the product of its mass multiplied by its acceleration. |
|
But after just a minute of acceleration, it would be able to top out any vehicle ever built. |
|
One of the terms used in estimating the clearance time of the heavy vehicle is its average acceleration in starting gear. |
|
A dampened response of heart rate acceleration and recovery reflected her deconditioned state. |
|
Power Boost cleans and decokes the engine for better performance, better acceleration, smoother running, lower emissions and improved economy. |
|
There was just more power, more acceleration, more speed and more of that amazing noise. |
|
We spent some time testing out the motor, checking idle speed, acceleration, different speeds and trim and then stopped for lunch. |
|
We've learnt at The Sunday Times never to take manufacturers' claims for top speed and acceleration at face value. |
|
The crash sensors and diagnostic unit measure deceleration, not acceleration. |
|
The acceleration of geophysical processes and frequency of geophysical events have caused problems to communities exposed to them. |
|
The difference in acceleration and top speeds make it like comparing Del boy's Reliant van with a Ferrari. |
|
Mr. Lalan says that sudden stoppage of the vehicle and sudden acceleration are not advisable. |
|
The need for the dark energy has been invoked by a need to explain the acceleration of distant galaxies. |
|
Because dark energy can turn gravity into a repulsive force, it could account for this acceleration. |
|
The control system for the shock absorber damping regulator uses wheel acceleration sensors to monitor road conditions through vehicle movement. |
|
As earthbound primates, humans generally interpret the concept of acceleration within the boundaries of rectilinear translation. |
|
|
I hope it will be the vehicle for acceleration in improvements in the railway system. |
|
This equation of acceleration also applies to the motion of the satellite as it moves around the planet. |
|
Aristotle had no mathematical machinery for dealing with the concept of acceleration, so he analysed only states of uniform velocity. |
|
They needed to imagine a special motionless container in order to understand such physical concepts as velocity and acceleration. |
|
The supernova observations call out for some gravitationally repulsive substance to drive the cosmic acceleration. |
|
The Joint Dark Energy Mission is designed to study the details of the universe's acceleration. |
|
Stability during the free fall is a problem, particularly during the high acceleration phases of entry into denser atmosphere. |
|
But if that object were to have double the force applied to it, it would double its acceleration. |
|
An object in equilibrium will not experience acceleration, and will either remain at rest, or continue moving at a constant velocity. |
|
Newton's second law says the amount of force needed to accelerate the tableware is directly related to the rate of acceleration. |
|
Mass, instantaneous velocity, acceleration, magnetic forces, and energy puzzled them much more. |
|
If that only applies to accelerating bodies then surely time dilation is dependent on acceleration and not velocity. |
|
During acceleration the seat was pressing against your back because there was a net forward force. |
|
His work led him to study the acceleration of convergence of Fourier series and the approximate solutions to differential equations. |
|
That is a fortyfold acceleration in the population growth rate, and there is no precedent for that. |
|
The physicist uses the strobe effect to measure the speed or acceleration of objects, or to take pictures of very fast moving objects. |
|
What we call gravity, Newton showed was nothing more than a special type of acceleration. |
|
The acceleration of the Universe can be seen in the redshifts of distant supernovae. |
|
For that to be possible, gravity and acceleration must be exactly equivalent to one another. |
|
Assuming an activation energy of 0.9, this would correspond to an acceleration factor equal to 7.906. |
|
|
Additional accelerometers can measure the vehicle's linear accelerations and angular acceleration about the spin axis. |
|
In a passenger car, a linear accelerometer located near the front axle measures higher lateral acceleration than in the center or rear side. |
|
Smooth acceleration occurred whether you used the auto box, the paddle shift or the Tiptronic system. |
|
Both a jet engine and a rocket engine function by expelling hot gases opposite to the direction of desired acceleration. |
|
With quick acceleration and a smooth, fluid stride, Holt can run by most defenders. |
|
The interaction of the acceleration of gravity on the mass of our body produces the force which is called weight. |
|
The roads are abrasive and there is so much acceleration out of corners that there is always the danger of excessive wheelspin. |
|
Race cars are usually fitted with spoilers and ground effects to improve aerodynamics and thus, its acceleration and fuel economy. |
|
The steering is beefy, the turn-in very sharp, the brakes can stop you on a sixpence, and the acceleration is just mind blowing. |
|
Is this an acceleration effect, like flooding the engine with petrol before starting a journey, or is it an unsustainable curve? |
|
There is a politically correct hostility against streaming students and against grade acceleration. |
|
Each downstroke of the wing of birds produces a small upward acceleration of the body to support the weight of the body and overcome drag. |
|
A newton has a mass unit of kilograms and an acceleration unit of meters squared per second. |
|
Another drill that can aid in the acceleration for recovery is swimming butterfly with a flutter kick. |
|
For more rigorous demonstration of the forces involved, Dial also used two accelerometers to measure the acceleration in the forward and vertical directions. |
|
And if the effect of acceleration was stronger in some patches than others, that would mean less or more clumping up of galaxies. |
|
Jones, the face of the burgeoning organization, has been taken aback by the acceleration of interest. |
|
Smartphone apps like Grindr have been able to parlay that acceleration of trust into a big business. |
|
But it still leaves unexplained why the rate of house price increases should be accelerating at all, and how reliable and sustainable this acceleration is. |
|
In older powerful cars the job of achieving maximum acceleration without losing traction was down to the driver, but today it is managed by the traction control system. |
|
|
We run very closely-spaced gear ratios to maximise the car's acceleration, and this means the ratio between engine speed and car speed is higher than at a more normal circuit. |
|
I looked expectantly at the speedo, thinking the sheer luxury of the vehicle was masking the sensation of speed and acceleration that must surely be happening all around it. |
|
When batteries become significantly low, the unit limits top speed and acceleration to alert the operator to drive the vehicle to a charging location. |
|
To this day, the combination of acceleration, dynamic performance and braking power offered by the current 911 Turbo continues to set the model apart from its peers. |
|
A spokesman for Shell said tests on 37 cars on the British market found most showed benefits in acceleration and power, and one in eight customers was now buying Optimax. |
|
And yet the Charade's plucky 1.0 litre engine will deliver you the fastest acceleration and the best maximum speed available in this class of car. |
|
The phenomenon flies in the face of a national trend that has seen a general slowdown in residential property price acceleration after years of spectacular growth. |
|
The revenue acceleration that powered profit gains was widespread. |
|
Also at around this time there was a curious amalgam of serious and exploitation films concerned with atomic war and the acceleration of nuclear experiments. |
|
The centripetal acceleration of this system rapidly became very high. |
|
The first thing he recognized was that the forces we feel upon acceleration and the forces we feel when under the control of gravity are one and the same. |
|
Einstein warmed to the idea that the gravitational field of the rest of the Universe might explain centrifugal and other inertial forces resulting from acceleration. |
|
The pinning structure is a rotary feeder which includes a plurality of flexible bristles extending radially from a roller into engagement with the acceleration belt. |
|
Some private economists believe the central bank should become more aggressive in raising interest rates, which haven't kept up with the recent acceleration in prices. |
|
The records do not support the idea of a sudden acceleration, and satellite altimetry suggests almost no change of sea level during the past decade. |
|
Initially they will accelerate, but they will soon reach a constant terminal velocity when the air resistance around them offsets their downward acceleration. |
|
The accelerometers and gyroscopes in an INS measure linear acceleration and angular orientation rates very accurately and with minimum time delay. |
|
Having an auto obviously means you can't rev the engine, drop the clutch and set off with tyres squealing as you try for maximum acceleration off the line. |
|
It is thus important to determine the order of magnitude of the acceleration effect on biogenic weathering by soil microorganisms, lichens and vascular plants. |
|
We look hopefully at markings on our map like Pablo's Rapid and Dead Man Rapid, but they prove to be little more than riffles and a slight acceleration in the current. |
|
|
I am aware of no compromises regarding acceleration and roominess. |
|
The authors concluded that sternal acceleration ballistocardiogram combined with hemodynamic and demographic data in a probabilistic model shows promise. |
|
It comes equipped with a thermoelectric projectile acceleration system. |
|
Accelerometers are mechanical devices that respond to acceleration. |
|
The dark energy might decay after a while to a negative value, creating an inward acceleration that leads to a big crunch before things get so dull. |
|
It has the turning circle of a JCB and the acceleration to match. |
|
The three most fuel-costly activities are rough braking, rapid acceleration, and speeding above 70 mph. |
|
Remarkably it also offered no wheel spin on violent acceleration, although it would be a different matter in the wet with the road legal track tyres fitted. |
|
In fact, speed is not a requirement for maneuverability as illustrated with the rigid-bodied boxfish and the fast start acceleration of fish from rest. |
|
The other position sense is the vestibular sense, which tells us about balance, about where we are in relation to gravity, and about acceleration or deceleration. |
|
So the normally stable proton can decay into a neutron, a positron, and a neutrino if continuously fed enough energy through constant, extreme acceleration. |
|
As the wind progresses up the windward slope of the dune form, streamlines are compressed by the dune body, causing an acceleration of flow towards the crest. |
|
During initial acceleration, the high-pressure fluid is released. |
|
For example, motion-analysis software superimposes video on a grid to determine joint angles and can calculate such things as torque and acceleration. |
|
The phonemic patterning and the parallelism of phrase vocalize a concealed anxiety about the momentum and acceleration of this technological revolution. |
|
Repetitive episodes of coronary artery spasm and paroxysms of hypertension may result in endothelial damage, coronary artery dissection, and acceleration of atherosclerosis. |
|
He gave up drinking a while ago, but he remains, quite simply and without peer, the worst driver of all time, constantly alternating between sudden acceleration and braking. |
|
Suddenly the sail is flapping and useless, the acceleration is gone, and I'm coasting gently towards the edge of the airfield, still steering with my feet. |
|
Incorporation of these tools into the learning process holds promise for positive reinforcement and possibly even acceleration of overall learning. |
|
Finally, several authors have suggested that a fin closing against the body may result in thrust due to the acceleration of a jet of fluid behind the fish. |
|
|
Players noted for their agility, acceleration and throwing accuracy will often field in the infield positions such as point, cover and mid-wicket. |
|
When Einstein first put his theories of relativity together, he included a cosmological constant, a number that accounted for this acceleration of the universe's expansion. |
|
Hinged between the second and third wheels so it bends at the forefoot like a running shoe, it provides a better push-off than normal skates as well as superfast acceleration. |
|
And it does that acceleration part rather well, pulling like a jet engine lined up at a runway's start right from the low end of the rev-counter scale. |
|
Unlike traditional transmissions, the 7-speed will skip up to three gear ratios if necessary during downshifts, providing quick, smooth acceleration. |
|
It does take some experience with balance and acceleration to keep a snowmobile on keel in the deep woods. |
|
Stability is defined mechanically as resistance to both linear and angular acceleration, or resistance to disruption of equilibrium. |
|
Curve Mode, longitudinal acceleration and pedal position all control upshift prevention. |
|
Do staff members have stock options that might have an acceleration clause regarding certain events such as a change of control? |
|
Among other aspects, the Sukuk benefits from a change of control, a negative pledge and a cross acceleration clause provision. |
|
Doppler shift caused by skin acceleration was recorded during each procedure. |
|
Starting at the zero-gravity of earth's core, accumulative acceleration is easily built up in a four-thousand-mile tube. |
|
The Airbus BizLab welcomes applications for acceleration programmes in Hamburg from start-ups. |
|
They leaned back in the acceleration chairs before the ship's controls and Ronny listened to the other's spacelore. |
|
It has three sensors which track steps, acceleration, and altitude. |
|
That return, and that acceleration, are not coincidences either. |
|
The direction of the tool path changes progressively and local acceleration and deceleration of the tool are minimized. |
|
In English units, the density is given in pounds per cubic foot so acceleration due to gravity is inherent in the unit of weight. |
|
However the intensification of Allied bombing caused the dispersion of production and prevented an efficient acceleration of expansion. |
|
From this viewpoint, the English Civil War provided the basis for a major acceleration of enclosures. |
|
|
Baker of Bury worked on drums, and Hargreaves used parallel scrolling to achieve smoother acceleration and deceleration. |
|
The equation proposed indicates that, acceleration required for initial fluidisation is a sole function of the friction angle of the soil. |
|
Faster than a Venus Flytrap snapping shut, the bunchberry dogwood's acceleration is about 800 times the force astronauts go through on take-off. |
|
The interplay of acceleration due to the trampoline and weightlessness becomes apparent. |
|
The 1960s and 1970s saw an acceleration in the decolonisation of Africa and the Caribbean. |
|
The key to FPGA acceleration is the exploitation of parallelism in the algorithm to be accelerated. |
|
The cars are capable of lateral acceleration in excess of six g in corners. |
|
Due to the acceleration during the jump, an acceleration force takes effect in addition to the usual gravitational force. |
|
Note that the change in the change in U is constant even when the displacement and acceleration are zero. |
|
This was largely due to acceleration of ice streams such as Pine Island Glacier. |
|
Applications of differential calculus include computations involving velocity and acceleration, the slope of a curve, and optimization. |
|
Hence, it appears that there are other forces that enter the equations of motion solely as a result of the relative acceleration. |
|
Because nuclear testing is seen as furthering nuclear arms development, many are opposed to future testing as an acceleration of the arms race. |
|
In particular, besides the Coriolis acceleration, the centrifugal force plays an essential role. |
|
The vector formula for the magnitude and direction of the Coriolis acceleration is derived through vector analysis and is. |
|
The gravity of Earth is the acceleration that is imparted to objects due to the distribution of mass within the Earth. |
|
This is done to exploit the topographic acceleration as the wind accelerates over a ridge. |
|
This acceleration of the current takes place in the direction of waves and dominant wind. |
|
Optimized for rapid acceleration, these motors have a rotor that is constructed without any iron core. |
|
Note the mostly nonexistent acceleration lane in the road joining from the bottom right. |
|
|
Traditional singers who sang in stately homes tended to sing in a Welsh language that had strict rules about metre, rhyme, and acceleration. |
|
Propeller engines handle larger air mass flows, and give them smaller acceleration, than jet engines. |
|
Activating SMYD3 transactivates a set of genes associated with cell-cycle regulation, and this leads to the acceleration of cancer cell growth. |
|
In addition, CIFS acceleration works seamlessly with F5's TDR technology to further boost acceleration on repeated CIFS data transfers. |
|
The primary benefit of negative pressure wound therapy is the acceleration of wound healing. |
|
Tanner CB, Jackson ML Nomographs of sedimentation times times for soil particles under gravity or centrifugal acceleration. |
|
All these operations are computationally intensive and, depending on the bandwidth needed, may require hardware acceleration. |
|
The contact sport athletes wore special helmets that recorded the acceleration speed and other data at the time of any head impact. |
|
In fairness, acceleration against Anil Kumble's nagging accuracy and Harbhajan's quirkish bounce was invariably the kamikaze option. |
|
A microcomputer-based timer and data acquisition device for measuring sprint speed and acceleration in cursorial animals. |
|
The strength of the gravitational field is numerically equal to the acceleration of objects under its influence. |
|
In Newtonian physics, however, no such acceleration can occur unless at least one of the objects is being operated on by a force. |
|
The muscular engine utilizes an overhead cam to help boost acceleration, while the long-stroke design helps deliver more torque and horsepower. |
|
Under acceleration there is a satisfying but not overloud growl from the exhaust and road roar is well suppressed. |
|
There is a satisfying but not overloud growl from the exhaust under acceleration and road roar is well suppressed. |
|
This was a major departure from Aristotle's belief that heavier objects have a higher gravitational acceleration. |
|
The effects of the load varying velocity, acceleration and deceleration are also discussed. |
|
This will allow you to drive the hammer through the low point, increasing your angular acceleration. |
|
His team has produced electrons with an energy of 1 gigaelectronvolt after about 1 centimeter of acceleration. |
|
Masse of moved electrodes is influential in force of gravitative and moved acceleration. |
|
|
Swift and seamless acceleration through an eight speed auto box and a remarkably grippy drive are what make the Sportbrake tick. |
|
Thus, the net force applied to a body produces a proportional acceleration. |
|
With a curb weight of 780kg, a very low centre of gravity, and a powerful engine, Slingshot delivers heart pounding acceleration and astonishing cornering power. |
|
As a consequence, for example, within a shell of uniform thickness and density there is no net gravitational acceleration anywhere within the hollow sphere. |
|
Given acceleration, it produced Newton's second law of motion. |
|
Cavium Networks has announced that it is shipping the NITROX Lite family of processors and the NITROX XL line of PCI and PCI-X acceleration boards. |
|
This is followed by increased angular acceleration of the thigh while the knee flexes and the whole leg is being accelerated in the forward direction. |
|
As soon as the jumper leaves the trampoline, he is under a free fall condition, which means that the jumper seems weightless and does not feel the acceleration due to gravity. |
|
This top-of-the-line Arctic Cat ATV is capable of strong midrange acceleration and impressive torque, due to a powerful V-Twin, four-stroke engine. |
|
Built by a real hot rodder, Richard Ruth, for the movie Two Lane Blacktop, Falfa's '55 is a genuine street rod built primarily for quick acceleration. |
|
The Road Test Summary now includes a special leaderboard dedicated to the top performing cars in 0-60 acceleration, i mile time, slalom and skidpad. |
|
The handling is predictably excellent, the suspension giving a subtly tauter, racer-like feel, with minimal pitching under acceleration and braking. |
|
We find evidence that economic, social, governance, and institutional variables are significantly different during acceleration and deceleration episodes. |
|
In addition to forward and vertical acceleration of the whole-body center of mass, walking also involves mediolateral acceleration of the center of mass. |
|
And if you want a quick burst of acceleration when on the move, the kickdown function is instantaneous and accompanied by a great soundtrack from the engine. |
|
It has been shown that fruits like persimmon have high tannin content, and it affects the acceleration of secretion of intestinal juice and intestinal contraction. |
|
Both prototype physical structures demonstrated resiliency to shock and acceleration in recent air gun tests conducted at Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey. |
|
The six-speed manual gearbox can be notchy if you rush it but the change is light and a shorter differential gear ratio on the Sport delivers sharper in-gear acceleration. |
|
A tenant could very well go along with such proposal when the owner's concession is more attractive than either paying a buyout or incurring an acceleration clause liability. |
|
The scalar field that was introduced to the cosmology in various models has also been considered as a candidate of dark energy for the acceleration of the universe. |
|
|
Paired with Toyota's unintrusive constant variable automatic transmission it offers prompt and smooth, if not explosive, acceleration and refined cruising. |
|
The conclusions suggest that despite last year's growth spurt and an acceleration of economic reforms, the European Union is still far from matching America's economic clout. |
|
He is known for his physical fitness, pace, skill, heading ability, stamina and agility, with a capacity to regularly get past defenders due to his acceleration. |
|
I have been in a Group N rally car before but nothing could prepare me for the sheer speed, acceleration and deceleration of these awsome rally machines. |
|
It is actually equal to the gravitational acceleration at that point. |
|
Coriolis acceleration is also responsible for the propagation of many types of waves in the ocean and atmosphere, including Rossby waves and Kelvin waves. |
|
When considering atmospheric or oceanic dynamics, the vertical velocity is small, and the vertical component of the Coriolis acceleration is small compared to gravity. |
|
Ultra Posi is located inside the transaxle and receives input from existing brake, wheel-speed, steering wheel, throttle, yaw and lateral acceleration sensors. |
|
The boosters produce an acceleration of 20 metres per second per second. |
|
Agreement of the two approaches demonstrates that one could start from the general expression for fictitious acceleration above and derive the trajectories shown here. |
|
The second law can also be stated in terms of an object's acceleration. |
|
The formula implies that the Coriolis acceleration is perpendicular both to the direction of the velocity of the moving mass and to the frame's rotation axis. |
|
The Coriolis effect is the behavior added by the Coriolis acceleration. |
|
This advanced, super charged, electric motor sends the ESR750H PPV to speeds of up to 28 mph and can deliver up to 7 HP in short acceleration bursts. |
|
The actual power is then computer calculated based on the rotational inertia of the roller, its resultant acceleration rates and power applied by the Power Absorbing Unit. |
|
On the third attempt of a nonstandard maneuver, the Seahawk rapidly diverged in yaw, driving the AFGS into an acceleration control mode vice the normal rate control mode. |
|
While gravity is not a force but an acceleration, a Shadow 200 with that type of acceleration would reach a Mach number of 457 two seconds after launch. |
|
The power available from falling water can be calculated from the flow rate and density of water, the height of fall, and the local acceleration due to gravity. |
|
ElectricAccelerator Huddle taps into teams' unused CPU capacity to form a virtual build acceleration pool, including a high-performance on-demand virtual filesystem. |
|
Paired with Toyota's unintrusive constant variable automatic transmission, it offers prompt and smooth, if not explosive, acceleration and refined cruising. |
|
|
This continuing racial divergence in education has been set in social concrete by the exhaustion of busing policies and the acceleration of voluntary resegregation. |
|
A writ of acceleration is a type of writ of summons that enables the eldest son of a peer to attend the House of Lords using one of his father's subsidiary titles. |
|
Microsoft ISA Server builds on Microsoft Windows 2000 security and directory for policy-based security, acceleration, and management of internetworking. |
|