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early and cold
The freight car was cold, early in the morning.
The south of the country is most exposed to cold winds during the winter period ( early May to late August ) when average temperatures are around.
The best measurements available ( from WMAP ) show that the data is well-fit by a Lambda-CDM model in which dark matter is assumed to be cold ( warm dark matter is ruled out by early reionization ), and is estimated to make up about 23 % of the matter / energy of the universe, while baryonic matter makes up about 4. 6 %.
In cold regions, chives die back to the underground bulbs in winter, with the new leaves appearing in early spring.
Although, in these early years, engines came in a number of configurations, typically Q < sub > H </ sub > was supplied by a boiler, wherein water was boiled over a furnace ; Q < sub > C </ sub > was typically a stream of cold flowing water in the form of a condenser located on a separate part of the engine.
The difference in colour between the red cold population and more heterogeneous hot population was observed as early as in 2002.
ECMWF's monthly and seasonal forecasts provide early predictions of events such as heat waves, cold spells and droughts, as well as their impacts on sectors such as agriculture, energy and health.
An early version of Ray Bradbury's " The Exiles " uses Lovecraft as a character, who makes a brief, 600-word appearance eating ice cream in front of a fire and complaining about how cold he is.
In the early 1960s Simon wrote a paper responding to a claim by the psychologist Ulric Neisser that machines might be able to replicate ' cold cognition ', e. g. processes like reasoning, planning, perceiving, and deciding, but could not replicate ' hot cognition ', including desiring, feeling pain or pleasure, and having emotions.
In the early 1950s the gasoline Gasifier unit was developed, where part on cold weather starts raw gasoline was diverted to the unit where part of the gas was burned causing the other part to become a hot vapor sent directly to the intake valve manifold.
China developed a minimal independent nuclear deterrent entering its own cold war after an idealogical split with the Soviet Union beginning in the early 1960s.
The land named Svalbarð (" cold coast ") by the Vikings in the early medieval book Landnámabók may have been Jan Mayen ( instead of Spitsbergen, renamed Svalbard by the Norwegians in modern times ); the distance from Iceland to Svalbarð mentioned in this book is two days sailing, consistent with the approximate to Jan Mayen and not with the approximate to Spitsbergen.
There he repeated in a different form all that he had already said, for all the world as if he had a gramophone fixed in his brain ... When I took leave, he subjected me to an interminable handshake, meanwhile fixing his cold blue eyes on mine, and repeating almost word for word what he said to me on arrival ... I felt I should never be able to establish any human contact with this man " In early June 1940, when Mussolini informed Hitler that he at long last would enter the war on 10 June 1940, Hitler was most dismissive, in private calling Mussolini a cowardly opportunist who broke the terms of the Pact of Steel in September 1939 when the going looked rough, and was only entering the war in June 1940 after it was clear that France was beaten and it appeared that Britain would soon make peace.
The vine tends to bud early which gives it some risk to cold frost and its thinner skin increases its susceptibility to Botrytis bunch rot.
Many motels began advertising on colorful neon signs that they had air cooling ( a early term for " air conditioning ") during the hot summers or were " heated by steam " during the cold winters.
In the Roman Catholic Church, as well as among many Anglican and Lutheran congregations, palm fronds ( or in colder climates some kind of substitutes ) are blessed with an aspergillum outside the church building ( or in cold climates in the narthex when Easter falls early in the year ).
His early tracks are somewhat ambient, but already feature the rhythm pattern of his seminal 1997 work Modus Operandi, which embodies most of his mid-nineties style: atmospheric, but at the same time very cold and paranoid, consisting mostly of jazz-influenced, highly complex drum patterns and sequenced double bass lines, sometimes with minimalistic synth melodies on top.
* In Europe, the winters of early 1947, February 1956, 1962 – 1963, 1981 – 1982 and 2009 – 2010 were abnormally cold.
In the Chesapeake Bay, researchers found large temperature excursions ( changes from the mean temperature of that time ) during the Medieval Warm Period ( about 950 – 1250 ) and the Little Ice Age ( about 1400 – 1700, with cold periods persisting into the early 20th century ), possibly related to changes in the strength of North Atlantic thermohaline circulation.
The Belgian company Union Minière du Haut Katanga provided the United States with much of the uranium required by the Manhattan Project and the early cold war ( see: history of nuclear weapons ).
In the autumn and early winter of 1944, the weather was cold and wet and often prevented air support.
The concept of the ablative heat shield was described as early as 1920 by Robert Goddard: " In the case of meteors, which enter the atmosphere with speeds as high as 30 miles per second, the interior of the meteors remains cold, and the erosion is due, to a large extent, to chipping or cracking of the suddenly heated surface.
Severe cold and lack of winter snow had destroyed many early winter-wheat seedlings.
The geological record, however, shows a continually relatively warm surface during the complete early temperature record of the earth with the exception of one cold glacial phase about 2. 4 billion years ago.

early and cathode
The technology of manipulating electron beams pioneered in these early tubes was applied practically in the design of vacuum tubes, particularly in the invention of the cathode ray tube by Ferdinand Braun in 1897. and is today employed in sophisticated devices such as electron microscopes, electron beam lithography, and particle accelerators.
This is an historical remnant from the early days of CRT television when CRT screens were manufactured on the bottoms of glass bottles, a direct extension of cathode ray tubes used in oscilloscopes.
In 1943 he was commissioned by the War Artists Advisory Committee to paint glassblowers at a Birmingham factory making cathode ray tubes for the early radar sets.
While early tubes used the directly heated filament as the cathode, most ( but not all ) more modern tubes employed indirect heating.
Many early radio sets had a third battery called the " C battery " ( unrelated to the present-day C cell ) whose positive terminal was connected to the cathode of the tubes ( or " ground " in most circuits ) and whose negative terminal supplied this bias voltage to the grids of the tubes.
This was a cathode ray tube memory, similar in many aspects to an early TV picture tube or oscilloscope tube.
The trick to this method lies in the nature of the cathode ray tube inside the video monitor ( CRTs were the only affordable TV monitors in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when this method was popularized ).
Early cold-cathode devices included the Geissler tube and Plucker tube, and early cathode ray tubes.
RCA, soon thereafter, demonstrated a working iconoscope camera tube and kinescope receiver display tube ( an early cathode ray tube ), the two key components of all-electronic television, to the press on April 24, 1936.
Rosing had filed his first patent on a television system in 1907, featuring a very early cathode ray tube as a receiver, and a mechanical device as a transmitter.
Their largest industrial use was probably in early wireless telegraphy spark-gap radio transmitters and to power early cold cathode x-ray tubes from the 1890s to the 1920s, after which they were supplanted in both these applications by AC transformers and vacuum tubes.
Accordingly, Rosing's system employed a mechanical camera device, but used very early cathode ray tube ( developed in Germany by Karl Ferdinand Braun ) as a receiver.
* late 1925 or early 1926-Vladimir K. Zworykin demonstrates a cathode ray tube television system using Braun tubes at the Westinghouse Electric laboratories in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The early meteorologists had to watch a cathode ray tube.
The early designs of an inverter circuit for a cold cathode fluorescent lamp did not utilize the resonance method of a secondary circuit at all.
During the late 70s and early 80s, he continued his career as head of the Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory at Oxford University, where he identified and developed Li < sub > x </ sub > CoO < sub > 2 </ sub > as the cathode material of choice for the Li-ion rechargeable battery that is now ubiquitous in today's portable electronic devices.
This was particularly important with early experiments with cathode ray tubes, where creating a large spherical glass vessel was necessary.
The effect of oxygen was known early in the 19th century when wet-cell Leclanche batteries absorbed atmospheric oxygen into the carbon cathode current collector.
A Crookes tube is an early experimental electrical discharge tube, invented by English physicist William Crookes and others around 1869-1875, in which cathode rays, streams of electrons, were discovered.
In 1967 he designed the typeface New Alphabet, a design that embraces the limitations of the cathode ray tube technology used by early data display screens and phototypesetting equipment and thus only contains horizontal and vertical strokes.
Philco, the Philadelphia Storage Battery Company ( formerly known as the Spencer Company and later the Helios Electric Company ), was a pioneer in early battery, radio, and television production as well as former employer of Philo Farnsworth, inventor of cathode ray tube television.

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