enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Filler (materials) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filler_(materials)

    Filler materials are particles added to binders (resin, thermoplastics, cement) to make a composite material. Filler materials improve specific properties or make the product cheaper. [1] Coarse filler materials such as construction aggregate and rebar are used in the building industry to make plaster, mortar and concrete.

  3. Vacuum filler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_filler

    A vacuum filler is a machine used for filling pasty products. [1] The pasty products are moved with the aid of a vane cell feed system under a vacuum . Objective

  4. Bunnings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunnings

    Bunnings Warehouse offers a variety of additional services, both in-home and in-store. [41] The in-home services are mainly installations, assembling, quotes and consultancy for multiple products. The in-store services include a hire shop, spare parts enquiry, colour matching, key cutting, pool water testing and gas swapping.

  5. Spacefiller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacefiller

    In Conway's Game of Life and related cellular automata, a spacefiller is a pattern that spreads out indefinitely, eventually filling the entire space with a still life pattern. It typically consists of three components: stretchers that resemble spaceships at the four corners of the pattern, a growing boundary region along the edges of the ...

  6. Space-filling model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space-filling_model

    A space-filling model of n-octane, the straight chain (normal) hydrocarbon composed of 8 carbons and 18 hydrogens, formulae: CH 3 CH 2 (CH 2) 4 CH 2 CH 3 or C 8 H 18.Note, the representative shown is of a single conformational "pose" of a population of molecules, which, because of low Gibbs energy barriers to rotation about its carbon-carbon bonds (giving the carbon "chain" great flexibility ...

  7. Hilbert curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert_curve

    Because it is space-filling, its Hausdorff dimension is 2 (precisely, its image is the unit square, whose dimension is 2 in any definition of dimension; its graph is a compact set homeomorphic to the closed unit interval, with Hausdorff dimension 1). The Hilbert curve is constructed as a limit of piecewise linear curves.

  8. Space-filling curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space-filling_curve

    A space-filling curve's approximations can be self-avoiding, as the figures above illustrate. In 3 dimensions, self-avoiding approximation curves can even contain knots. Approximation curves remain within a bounded portion of n-dimensional space, but their lengths increase without bound. Space-filling curves are special cases of fractal curves ...

  9. Special-purpose acquisition company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special-purpose...

    A special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC; / s p æ k /), also known as a "blank check company", is a shell corporation listed on a stock exchange with the purpose of acquiring (or merging with) a private company, thus making the private company public without going through the initial public offering process, which often carries significant procedural and regulatory burdens.