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The Lockheed P-2 Neptune (designated P2V by the United States Navy prior to September 1962) is a maritime patrol and anti-submarine warfare (ASW) aircraft. It was developed for the US Navy by Lockheed to replace the Lockheed PV-1 Ventura and PV-2 Harpoon, and was replaced in turn by the Lockheed P-3 Orion.
Physical-to-Virtual ("P2V" or "p-to-v" [1]) involves the process of decoupling and migrating a physical server's operating system (OS), applications, and data from that physical server to a virtual-machine guest hosted on a virtualized platform.
Under these conditions, p 1 V 1 γ = p 2 V 2 γ, where γ is defined as the heat capacity ratio, which is constant for a calorifically perfect gas. The value used for γ is typically 1.4 for diatomic gases like nitrogen (N 2) and oxygen (O 2), (and air, which is 99% diatomic).
p 1 = p 2, p = constant =, = + Isochoric process: V 1 = V 2, V = constant =, = Free expansion = Work done by an expanding gas Process = Net work done in cyclic ...
Here P 1 and V 1 represent the original pressure and volume, respectively, and P 2 and V 2 represent the second pressure and volume. Boyle's law, Charles's law, and Gay-Lussac's law form the combined gas law. The three gas laws in combination with Avogadro's law can be generalized by the ideal gas law.
Lockheed P-2 Neptune, a maritime patrol and anti-submarine warfare aircraft; Physical-to-Virtual, on a virtualized computer platform; See also. PV2 (disambiguation)
This "law" is just a special case of dimensional analysis in which an equation containing 6 dimensional quantities, ,,,,, and 3 independent dimensions, [p], [v], [T] (independent means that "none of the dimensions of these quantities can be represented as a product of powers of the dimensions of the remaining quantities", [47] and [R]=[pv/T ...
For example, if two systems of ideal gases are in joint thermodynamic equilibrium across an immovable diathermal wall, then P 1 V 1 / N 1 = P 2 V 2 / N 2 where P i is the pressure in the ith system, V i is the volume, and N i is the amount (in moles, or simply the number of atoms) of gas.