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Radius and at
Kutztown's economy is strong and diverse, with workers employed by Kutztown University, the nearby East Penn Manufacturing / Deka, the world's largest independent battery manufacturer, McConway and Torley, a major maker of steel railcar fittings, Radius Toothbrush, digital creative agency Sposto Interactive, and at one time, the brand of athletic shoe known as the Saucony.
The term PNR —" point of no return ," more often referred to by pilots as the " Radius of Action formula " — originated, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, as a technical term in air navigation to refer to the point on a flight at which, due to fuel consumption, a plane is no longer capable of returning to the airfield it took off from.
* Last Animals at the Zoo Hutchinson Radius, London, 1991.
In actuality, however, the stunt scene was filmed at the nearby Hyatt Regency Hotel, using its shorter but similar cylindrically-shaped Radius Tower.
Higher Radius values can cause halos at the edges, a detectable faint light rim around objects.
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 ).

Radius and .
Radius – mass relations for a model white dwarf.
Radius is measured in standard solar radii or kilometers, and mass in standard solar masses.
* 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.
Radius is a straight line or distance from the center to the edge of a curve.
* 6. 366 Mm — Radius of Earth
Helena meets Dr. Gall's new Robot experiment, Radius, and Dr Gall describes his experimental Robotess, Robot Helena.
In this version Radius was played by Patrick Troughton who was later the second actor to play The Doctor in Doctor Who, None of these three productions survive in the BBC's archives.
Radius of gyration or gyradius is the name of several related measures of the size of an object, a surface, or an ensemble of points.
If the height is given in metres, and distance in kilometres, Mean Radius of the Earth is ≈ 6. 37 x 10 < sup > 6 </ sup > metres = 6370 km.
The Radius of Hollow is typically between 1 / 4 " and 1 " depending on the type of skates and the user.
Example of a NuBus graphics card, a Radius PrecisionColor Pro 8 / 24xj.
* XMetaL-An XML editor acquired in the takeover of SoftQuad in 2001 and then sold to Blast Radius in 2004.
At one time there were many manufacturers of graphics accelerators, including: 3dfx ; ATI ; Hercules ; Trident ; Nvidia ; Radius ; S3 Graphics ; SiS and Silicon Graphics.
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.
In the early 1990s, Trek ’ s director of technology, Bob Read, attended an aerospace industry trade show in Salt Lake City, Utah, eventually meeting up with a closed mold tooling company called Radius Engineering.
Radius style electrodes are used for high heat applications, electrodes with a truncated tip for high pressure, eccentric electrodes for welding corners, offset eccentric tips for reaching into corners and small spaces, and finally offset truncated for reaching into the workpiece itself.
He is remembered as a skillful surgeon and for his 1814 paper On the Fracture of the Carpal Extremity of the Radius ; this injury continues to be known as Colles ' fracture.

at and geodetic
Formulae connecting a tangential angle, the angle anchored at the ellipse's center ( called also the polar angle from the ellipse center ), and the parametric angle t < ref > If the ellipse is illustrated as a meridional one for the earth, the tangential angle is equal to geodetic latitude, the angle is the geocentric latitude, and parametric angle t is a parametric ( or reduced ) latitude of auxiliary circle </ ref > are:
An old geodetic pillar ( 1855 ) at Ostend, Belgium
The geodetic and geocentric latitudes are equal at the equator and poles.
The value of the squared eccentricity is approximately 0. 007 ( depending on the choice of ellipsoid ) and the maximum difference of ( φ-ψ ) is approximately 11. 5 minutes of arc at a geodetic latitude of 45 ° 5 ′.
The isometric latitude is zero at the equator but rapidly diverges from the geodetic latitude, tending to infinity at the poles.
The following plot shows the magnitude of the difference between the geodetic latitude, ( denoted as the ' common ' latitude on the plot ), and the auxiliary latitudes other than the isometric latitude ( which diverges to infinity at the poles ).
Usually, the starting reference point is a tide gauge, so at that point the geodetic and tidal datums might match, but due to sea level variations, the two scales may not match elsewhere.
The Geodetic Center, located in Roadside Park at the north end of the city, displays information about the geodetic center of North America, which is located roughly south-southeast of the city, and hosts a replica of the geodetic marker at the site.
The distance from the Earth's center to a point on the spheroid surface at geodetic latitude is:
: This radius of curvature in the prime vertical, which is perpendicular, or normal, to M at geodetic latitude is:
The Earth's radius of curvature along a course at geodetic bearing ( measured clockwise from north ), at is derived from Euler's curvature formula as follows:
His many achievements include the first use of geodetic design in engineering and in the gasbag wiring of Vickers ' R100 in 1930, which, at the time, was the largest airship ever designed.
Some of the ideas he suggested are the same as or closely related to the final design, including idea of supporting the dish at its centre, the geodetic structure of the dish, and the master equatorial control system.
H. C. Schumacher's nephew, Christian Andreas Schumacher ( 1810 – 1854 ), was associated with the geodetic survey of Denmark from 1833 to 1838, and afterwards ( 1844 – 1845 ) improved the observatory at Pulkowa.
It is geocentric and globally consistent within ± 1 m. Current geodetic realizations of the geocentric reference system family International Terrestrial Reference System ( ITRS ) maintained by the IERS are geocentric, and internally consistent, at the few-cm level, while still being metre-level consistent with WGS 84.
Tidal bench mark information at a station provides a translation from the geodetic vertical datum to mean sea level ( MSL ) at that location, then subtracting the tidal prediction yields a surge height above the normal water height.
In polar orbit, with the gyro spin directions also pointing toward HR8703, the frame-dragging and geodetic effects came out at right angles, each gyroscope measuring both.
Francis Everitt gave a plenary talk at the meeting of the American Physical Society announcing initial results: " The data from the GP-B gyroscopes clearly confirm Einstein's predicted geodetic effect to a precision of better than 1 percent.

0.110 seconds.