Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Frequency response" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

contrast and for
The sequence may involve a sharp contrast: for example, a quiet meditative sway of the body succeeded by a violent leap ; ;
When Heidegger and Sartre speak of a contrast between being and existence, they may be right, I don't know, but their language is too philosophical for me.
A true university, like most successful marriages, is a unity of diversities Without forcing all components into a single pattern, the preparation of a master plan is an opportunity to consider interrelation of knowledge at its highest level, which a university -- in contrast to a multiversity -- should stand for.
Even when they are finished, however, the contrast will remain, for Istanbul is the only city in the world that is built upon two continents.
In contrast, 20 of the 21 lines in the Completion Profile ( excluding center 5 for boys and 4 for girls ) are bunched and extend over a much shorter period, approximately 30 months for boys and 40 months for girls.
In contrast, for the girl the epiphysis was slightly advanced at Onset and delayed at Completion.
In contrast to this voluntary-control explanation for nonreactivity given by the Kohnstamm-positive subjects, the Kohnstamm-negative subjects offered an involuntary-control hypothesis to explain nonreactivity.
But the use of stress in comparison and contrast, for example, can undermine distinctions such as these.
Their experience is quite in contrast with that of children of upper- and upper-middle-class native-born parents, who are more likely to regard education as good for its own sake and to discount the vocational emphases in the curriculum.
In contrast, the dynamic program produces this policy and a whole family of policies for any smaller number of stages.
But there was a contrast even more decisive than a hunger for fact between the Trial in Jerusalem and those in Moscow and New York.
There was considerable contrast between this Mulligan performance and that of Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers, who are able to generate a tremendous sound for such a small group.
The Declaration's emphasis on freedom and equality for all, in contrast to the Constitution's tolerance of slavery, shifted the debate.
By contrast, the cursive developed out of the Nabataean alphabet in the same period soon became the standard for writing Arabic, evolving into the Arabic alphabet as it stood by the time of the early spread of Islam.
In contrast to the elaborate stowage procedures for earlier anchors, stockless anchors are simply hauled up until they rest with the shank inside the hawsepipes, and the flukes against the hull ( or inside a recess in the hull ).
In contrast, free expansion is an isothermal process for an ideal gas.
In contrast, the Danes preferred to choose easy targets, mapping cautious forays designed to avoid risking all their accumulated plunder with high-stake attacks for more.
Still, in contrast with oligarchical societies, there were no real property qualification for voting.
Chinese languages treat these two phones differently ; for example in Mandarin, ( written b in Pinyin ) and ( written p ) contrast phonemically.
However, they may become aware of the differences if, for example, they contrast the pronunciations of the following words:
In contrast to romantic theorists Sircello argued for the objectivity of beauty and formulated a theory of love on that basis.
Don Chisciotte was a mix of ballet and opera buffa, and the lead female roles in L ' amore innocente were designed to contrast and highlight the different traditions of operatic writing for soprano, even borrowing stylistic flourishes from opera-seria in the use of coloratura in what was a short pastoral comedy more in keeping with a Roman Intermezzo.

contrast and feedback
Both the boom and the burst phases of the bubble are examples of a positive feedback mechanism, in contrast to the negative feedback mechanism that determines the equilibrium price under normal market circumstances.
In contrast, positive feedback is feedback in which the system responds so as to increase the magnitude of any particular perturbation, resulting in amplification of the original signal instead of stabilization.
In contrast, a system that has negative gain around the loop has negative feedback.
In contrast, Nyquist and Bode, when they built on Black ’ s work, referred to negative feedback as that with the sign reversed.
Augmented feedback: in contrast to inherent feedback, augmented feedback is information that supplements or “ augments ” the inherent feedback.
By contrast the car's cruise control uses closed loop feedback, which classifies it as a servomechanism.
This is in contrast to infinite impulse response ( IIR ) filters, which may have internal feedback and may continue to respond indefinitely ( usually decaying ).
In contrast, the frequency of oscillation is set by μ, that is, by the feedback parameter through βA < sub > 0 </ sub >.
A control system which has only feed-forward behavior responds to its control signal in a pre-defined way without responding to how the load reacts ; it is in contrast with a system that also has feedback, which adjusts the output to take account of how it affects the load, and how the load itself may vary unpredictably ; the load is considered to belong to the external environment of the system.
In contrast ' cruise control ' adjusts the output in response to the load that it encounters, by a feedback mechanism.
This implied that contrasta gain or loss of positive feedback from the other person — has more effect on liking than the absolute level of feedback.
By contrast, the Illinois group had used a C-46 belonging to the Air Force and flown by AF pilots only by pre-arrangement, resulting, in the eyes of those researchers, in limitation to a less-than-desirable frequency of flight tests of their equipment, hence a low bandwidth of feedback from tests.
This ending received a large amount of feedback ; in which one side praised it for its groundbreaking, unorthodox dour ending in a comedy drama, in contrast to TVB's usual endings ( also known as the " happily-ever-after-plus " ending.
Atrial natriuretic peptide forms a parallel negative feedback loop in an endocrinological contrast to the renin-angiotensin system.
This is in contrast to some older reactor designs, where the natural tendency for the reaction was to accelerate rapidly from increased temperatures, such that either electronic feedback or operator triggered intervention was necessary to prevent damage to the reactor.
Other changes appear to be the result of coupled ocean-atmosphere feedback in which, for example, easterly winds cause the sea surface temperature to fall in the east, enhancing the zonal heat contrast and hence intensifying easterly winds across the basin.
In contrast, a neural circuit is a functional entity of interconnected neurons that is able to regulate its own activity using a feedback loop ( similar to a control loop in cybernetics ).
In contrast, the problem of deleting edges from a directed graph to make it acyclic, the feedback arc set problem, is NP-complete.

contrast and apparatus
In contrast, Khrushchev tried to strengthen the central party apparatus by focusing on the Central Committee.
The towns in contrast possessed neither the apparatus nor the funds for the provision of basic social services.
The rings, also known as steady rings ( in contrast to flying rings ), is an artistic gymnastics apparatus and the event that uses it.
The entire apparatus was known as the ' Model T spark coil ' ( in contrast to the modern ignition coil which is only the actual coil component of the system ).
With Puskás's apparatus, by contrast, half a million people could clearly hear the programme coming from the exchange.
These include: the ' apparatus ' ( a tool that changes the meaning of the world in contrast to what he calls mechanical tools that work to change the world itself ); the ' functionary ' ( the photographer or operator of the camera who is bound by the rules it sets ); the ' programme ' ( a ' system in which chance becomes necessity ' and a game ' in which every virtuality, even the least probable, will be realized of necessity if the game is played for a sufficiently long time ', (' Our Programme ' ( 1983 ), POP 2. 2, p. 211 ); the ' technical image ' ( the first example of which is the photograph, with its particular kind of significant surface that looks like a traditional image but harbours encoded and obscure concepts that cannot be ' immediately ' deciphered, ( see ' Towards a Philosophy of Photography ', Reaktion Books, 2000, pp 14-20 )).

0.958 seconds.