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Shimadzu Corporation (株式会社 島津製作所, Kabushiki-gaisha Shimadzu Seisakusho) is a Japanese public KK company, manufacturing precision instruments, measuring instruments and medical equipment, based in Kyoto, Japan. It was established in 1875. [6] The American arm of the company, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments, was founded in 1975. [7]
To enable rapid access of specific stars in the catalogue, WCSTools software numbers each star using its Guide Star region number (0001 to 9537) and a five-digit star number within each region, separated by a decimal point. sty2 lists Tycho-2 stars by number or sky region. imty2 lists the Tycho-2 stars within an IRAF or FITS image using the world coordinate system defined in its header.
A schematic of hemoglobin electrophoresis, showing the banding which is typical of various types of hemoglobin. Note that sickle cell disease (SCD) gives a single, bold band whereas sickle cell trait gives two slightly fainter bands. Where SCD is suspected, a number of tests can be used.
WISEA — AllWISE Source Catalog; WISEP — Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer Preliminary Release Source Catalog; WNC / Winn — Winnecke Catalogue of Double Stars; WNO — Washington Observations (double stars) (U.S. Naval Observatory, Washington D.C.) Wo — Woolley Nearby Star Catalogue; Wolf — Catalogue of High Proper Motion Stars
In data management and data warehousing, a slowly changing dimension (SCD) is a dimension that stores data which, while generally stable, may change over time, often in an unpredictable manner. [1] This contrasts with a rapidly changing dimension , such as transactional parameters like customer ID, product ID, quantity, and price, which undergo ...
Tokyo Electron Limited (Japanese: 東京エレクトロン株式会社, Hepburn: Tokyo Erekutoron Kabushiki-gaisha), or TEL, is a Japanese electronics and semiconductor company headquartered in Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan. [4]
The is designed by the 713th research institute under the name 'Project 850' and is powered by two electric motors. The radar TR47C is a derivative of the EFR-1/LR66 J-band radar (NATO code name: Rice Lamp) by Xi'an Research Institute of Navigation Technology, but it is unclear that if this derivative is developed by the same institution.