Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
TC – type curve; TCA – total corrosion allowance; TCC – tungsten carbide coating; TCCC – transfer of care, custody and control; TCF – temporary construction facilities; TCF – trillion cubic feet (of gas [citation needed]) TCI – tungsten carbide insert (a type of rollercone drillbit [citation needed]) TCP – tubing conveyed ...
For the particular test on which the test characteristic curve (TCC) shown in Figure 1 is based, the relationship is approximately linear throughout the range of total scores from about 13 to 31. The shape of the TCC is generally somewhat sigmoid as in this example. However, the precise relationship between total scores and person location ...
Digital product definition data practices Y14.42–2002: Digital approval systems Y14.5–2018: Dimensioning and tolerancing Y14.5.1M–1994: Mathematical definition of dimensioning and tolerancing principles Y14.6–2001: Screw thread representation Y32.7–1972: Graphics symbols for railroad maps and profiles
He found an equation that fit these curves, which is now called Paschen's law. [ 3 ] At higher pressures and gap lengths, the breakdown voltage is approximately proportional to the product of pressure and gap length, and the term Paschen's law is sometimes used to refer to this simpler relation. [ 5 ]
Judd's (r,g) diagram. The concentric curves indicate the loci of constant purity. Judd's Maxwell triangle. Planckian locus in gray. Translating from trilinear co-ordinates into Cartesian co-ordinates leads to the next diagram.
In simple cases, this function can be represented as a two-dimensional graph of an independent scalar input versus the dependent scalar output (known as a transfer curve or characteristic curve). Transfer functions for components are used to design and analyze systems assembled from components, particularly using the block diagram technique, in ...
The simplest I–V curve is that of a resistor, which according to Ohm's law exhibits a linear relationship between the applied voltage and the resulting electric current; the current is proportional to the voltage, so the I–V curve is a straight line through the origin with positive slope.
Master curves for the instantaneous modulus E′ and the loss factor tanδ as a function of frequency. The data have been fit to a polynomial of degree 7. The principle of time-temperature superposition requires the assumption of thermorheologically simple behavior (all curves have the same characteristic time variation law with temperature).