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Radius and convergence
* Radius of convergence

Radius and ),
* Radius ( bone ), one of the two bones in a forearm
* Radius ( graph theory ), the minimum distance from a graph's node to the node that is farthest from it
* Radius ( computer ), a computer hardware firm
* Radius ( music ensemble ), a London music ensemble founded by Tim Benjamin
* Radius ( band ), a band from Los Angeles, California
* Radius ( comics ), a superhero in the Marvel Comics universe
* Radius ( Chrono Cross ), a character in Chrono Cross
* Radius of curvature ( disambiguation ), various meanings
2 ) Arm and Forearm ( 6 bones )-Left and right Humerus ( 2 ) ( Arm ), Ulna ( 2 ) and Radius ( 2 ) ( Fore Arm ).
* Radius ( bone ), a bone of the forearm
This was the only production Mazda Wankel with different rotor dimensions: Radius was 120 mm ( 4. 7 in ) and offset was 17. 5 mm ( 0. 7 in ), but depth remained the same as the 10A at 60 mm ( 2. 4 in ).
The Ogive Radius is not determined by R and L ( as it is for a tangent ogive ), but rather is one of the factors to be chosen to define the nose shape.
Besides Cross and Serle ( keyboards, electronics, samples ), Radius included Sheila Malony ( on keyboards ), Maxine Braham and Carlo Lucius Asciutti ( vocals ).
" Progress in Post-Quantum Physics and Unified Field Theory ", Gravitation and Cosmology: From the Hubble Radius to the Planck Scale ( Series: Fundamental Theories of Physics, Vol 126 ), Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 419 – 430.
Avoid the words Reverb Radius, Reverberation Radius ( omnidirectional source ), Hall Radius for Critical Distance.

Radius and radius
The classical minimum radius for escape assuming light behaved like particles of matter is numerically equal to the Schwarzschild Radius in general relativity.
* Radius affects the size of the edges to be enhanced or how wide the edge rims become, so a smaller radius enhances smaller-scale detail.
The radius of the circle that forms the ogive is called the Ogive Radius and it is related to the length and base radius of the nose cone as expressed by the formula:
an X-ray image of an external fixator being used for reduction of a broken bone, in this case, a Colles ' fracture which involves a Bone fracture | fractured Radius ( bone ) | radius bone.

Radius and where
Access Challenge is also used in more complex authentication dialogs where a secure tunnel is established between the user machine and the Radius Server in a way that the access credentials are hidden from the RAS.
For the hydrogen atom,,, and where is the Bohr Radius, is the principal quantum number and is the azimuthal quantum number.

Radius and series
* Ibanez R series, also known as the Radius series, are famous for having lightweight aerofoil-profiled basswood bodies.
The Radius series is now discontinued.
* Radius series – discontinued, a modified version is now taken over by the Joe Satriani signature series which features a multi-radius neck.
* RS First the Roadster series of fixed bridge strat types with Super 6 single coil pickups then the longlives Roadstar Series with many variants including the Talman, Radius and Saber series

convergence and calculus
In particular, it deals with the analytic properties of real functions and sequences, including convergence and limits of sequences of real numbers, the calculus of the real numbers, and continuity, smoothness and related properties of real-valued functions.
Important results include the Bolzano – Weierstrass and Heine – Borel theorems, the intermediate value theorem and mean value theorem, the fundamental theorem of calculus, and the monotone convergence theorem.
In calculus, often the growth rate of the coefficients of a power series can be used to deduce a radius of convergence for the power series.
Since infinitesimal calculus as we know it did not yet exist then, and the mathematical analysis of the time was inadequate to discuss the convergence issues, this was a hard piece of research, and tentative as well.

convergence and ),
In academic use, an arbitrage involves taking advantage of differences in price of a single asset or identical cash-flows ; in common use, it is also used to refer to differences between similar assets ( relative value or convergence trades ), as in merger arbitrage.
Equipped with the topology of pointwise convergence on A ( i. e., the topology induced by the weak -* topology of A < sup >∗</ sup >), the character space, Δ ( A ), is a Hausdorff compact space.
An example of convergence from the other direction is shown in Srl CILFIT and Lanificio di Gavardo SpA v Ministry of Health ( Corte suprema di Cassazione, Italy, 1982 ), in which Italy's Supreme Court held that questions it has already answered need not be resubmitted.
The utility of Cauchy sequences lies in the fact that in a complete metric space ( one where all such sequences are known to converge to a limit ), the criterion for convergence depends only on the terms of the sequence itself.
In Materialism and Empiriocriticism ( 1908 ), Lenin explained dialectical materialism as three axes: ( i ) the materialist inversion of Hegelian dialectics, ( ii ) the historicity of ethical principles ordered to class struggle, and ( iii ) the convergence of " laws of evolution " in physics ( Helmholtz ), biology ( Darwin ), and in political economy ( Marx ).
Central Japan is marked by the convergence of the three mountain chains — the Hida, Kiso, and Akaishi mountains — that form the Japanese Alps ( Nihon Arupusu ), several of whose peaks are higher than 3, 000 meters.
It turns out that ,< sup > 14 </ sup > at least formally ( modulo such issues as the convergence of the sum ), for every choice of the billiard ball's initial, nonrelativistic wave function before the Cauchy horizon, such a sum over histories produces unique, self-consistent probabilities for the outcomes of all sets of subsequent measurements.
# The convergence of voiced uvular stop ( ق ) and voiced velar fricative ( غ ) in Iranian Persian ( presumably under the influence of Turkic languages like Azeri ), is still kept separate in Dari.
Several methods have been proposed to remedy this by increasing genetic diversity somehow and preventing early convergence, either by increasing the probability of mutation when the solution quality drops ( called triggered hypermutation ), or by occasionally introducing entirely new, randomly generated elements into the gene pool ( called random immigrants ).
* Schmitt, Lothar M ( 2004 ), Theory of Genetic Algorithms II: models for genetic operators over the string-tensor representation of populations and convergence to global optima for arbitrary fitness function under scaling, Theoretical Computer Science 310: 181 – 231
IEEE 802. 1aq ( Shortest Path Bridging SPB ) allows all paths to be active with multiple equal cost paths, provides much larger layer 2 topologies ( up to 16 million compared to the 4096 VLANs limit ), faster convergence times, and improves the use of the mesh topologies through increase bandwidth and redundancy between all devices by allowing traffic to load share across all paths of a mesh network.
CPE generally refers to devices such as telephones, routers, switches, residential gateways ( RG ), set-top boxes, fixed mobile convergence products, home networking adaptors and internet access gateways that enable consumers to access Communications Service Providers ' services and distribute them around their house via a LAN ( Local Access Network ).
It is usually used to describe connections between upper, middle or lower levels ( such as upper-level divergence causing lower level convergence in cyclone formation ), but can sometimes also be used to describe such connections over distance rather than height alone.
Most telephone companies now also function as internet service providers ( ISPs ), and the distinction between a telephone company and an ISP may disappear completely over time, as the current trend for supplier convergence in the industry continues.
Formation of an orogen is accomplished in part by the tectonic processes of subduction, where a continent rides forcefully over an oceanic plate ( noncollisional orogens ), or convergence of two or more continents ( collisional orogens ).
Alternatively, for those familiar with power series ( or Taylor series ), one may think of a formal power series as a power series in which we ignore questions of convergence by not assuming that the variable X denotes any numerical value ( not even an unknown value ).
Topological rings occur in mathematical analysis, for examples as rings of continuous real-valued functions on some topological space ( where the topology is given by pointwise convergence ), or as rings of continuous linear operators on some normed vector space ; all Banach algebras are topological rings.
However, the approach to convergence in a topological space using sequences is sufficient when the space satisfies the first axiom of countability ( as metrizable spaces do ), but generally not otherwise.
) For a near-orthogonal matrix, rapid convergence to the orthogonal factor can be achieved by a " Newton's method " approach due to ( 1990 ), repeatedly averaging the matrix with its inverse transpose.
Located near the convergence of North America's humid continental ( Köppen Dfa ), humid subtropical ( Köppen Cfa ), and semi-arid ( Köppen BSk ) climate zones, Great Bend experiences hot summers and cold, dry winters.
Other enhancements include OLTP-related improvements for distributed platforms, business intelligence / data warehousing-related improvements for z / OS, more self-tuning and self-managing features, additional 64-bit exploitation ( especially for virtual storage on z / OS ), stored procedure performance enhancements for z / OS, and continued convergence of the SQL vocabularies between z / OS and distributed platforms.

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