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1 mono- 30 triaconta- 2 di- 31 hentriaconta- 3 tri- 32 dotriaconta- 4 tetra- 33 tritriaconta- 5 penta- 34 tetratriaconta- 6 hexa- 40 tetraconta- 7 hepta- 50 pentaconta- 8 octa- 60 hexaconta- 9 nona- 70 heptaconta- 10 deca- 80 octaconta- 11 undeca- 90 nonaconta- 12 dodeca- 100 hecta- 13 trideca- 200 dicta- 14 tetradeca- 300 tricta- 15 pentadeca-
XO-2 is a binary star system about 490 light-years (150 parsecs) away in the constellation Lynx. It consists of two components, XO-2N and XO-2S , both of which host planetary systems . [ 9 ]
14-30 mm focal length (approximately equivalent field of view of a 21-45 mm lens when used on a DX format camera) S-Line lens; Autofocus using a stepping motor (STM), focus-by-wire manual focus ring; 14 elements in 12 groups (including 4 ED glass, 4 aspherical, elements with Nano Crystal Coat and a fluorine-coated front lens element)
The qutrit is analogous to the classical radix-3 trit, just as the qubit, a quantum system described by a superposition of two orthogonal states, is analogous to the classical radix-2 bit. There is ongoing work to develop quantum computers using qutrits [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] and qudits in general.
[1] O-8 One O-2 with the 400 hp (300 kW) Curtiss R-1454 radial engine instead of the intended Packard inverted-Vee engine. It later became an O-2A. [1] O-9 One O-2 refitted with the 500 hp (370 kW) Packard 3A-1500 geared engine. It resembled the O-7 but had a four- rather than two-bladed propeller. It later became an O-2A. [1] XO-14
XO-6b orbits XO-6, a faint 10th magnitude star in the constellation Camelopardalis. [5] Due to its magnitude, this star is too faint to be seen with the naked eye, but can be seen with a telescope. [citation needed] XO-6 is a F-type main-sequence star with about 1.5 times the mass of the Sun. It is also radiating 4 times as bright, and is ...
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It takes only 4.188 days (or 100.5 hours) to orbit at an orbital distance of 0.0488 AU). [1] [2] The planet XO-5b is named Makropulos. The name was selected in the NameExoWorlds campaign by the Czech Republic, during the 100th anniversary of the IAU. Makropulos is the name from Karel Čapek's play Věc Makropulos (The Makropulos Affair). [4] [5]