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pulse and was
Mando, pleading her cause, must have said that Dr. Brown was the most distinguished physician in the United States of America, for our man poured out his symptoms and drew a madly waving line indicating the irregularity of his pulse.
A single measurement of the spin - spin relaxation time Af was obtained at 10 Mc/sec by pulse methods.
The only way Fiedler could get back to earth alive was to fly the pulse jet missile and land it on the airstrip.
Towards the end of the test, she said, " Her pulse is about double what it was when she started.
Once the usefulness of digitalis in regulating the human pulse was understood, it was employed for a variety of purposes, including the treatment of epilepsy and other seizure disorders, which are now considered to be inappropriate treatments.
Once this improved sensor was available, Geiger counter instruments could be produced relatively cheaply because the large output pulse required little electronic processing to give a count rate reading, which was a distinct advantage in the thermionic valve era due to valve cost and power consumption.
Until 2000 the precision of the GPS signal available to non-U. S .- military users was deliberately severely limited by a timing pulse distortion process known as selective availability.
" The doctor also announced, " Her pulse is about double what it was when she started.
The thermal pulse, while being hot enough to ignite flammable material at distance, was short in duration and these fires went out immediately after the flash or were blown out by the blast wave.
Al-Kindi ( c. 801 – 873 CE ) links it with disease-like mental states like anger, passion, hatred and depression, while Avicenna ( 980 – 1037 CE ) diagnosed ḥuzn in a lovesick man if his pulse increased drastically when the name of the girl he loved was spoken.
" Among the popular newspaper rumours about Nurmi was that he had a " freakish heart " with a very low pulse rate.
In Norway, the North American system with the number 1 corresponding to one pulse was used, except from the capital, Oslo, which used the same " inverse " system as in New Zealand.
* In order to generate at the low rpm at which the engines of the day ran, the pulse resulting from each combustion stroke was quite large.
Gagarin, on the other hand, was described as calm ; about half an hour before launch his pulse was recorded at 64 beats per minute.
Harding's pulse was normal and his lung infection had subsided.
Grace was fielding nearby when Summers was struck and took his pulse.
Philosophers distinguished veins from arteries, but thought the pulse was a property of arteries themselves.
As much as anyone, Harmon Austin, a local man of influence, was indispensable to Garfield's success, keeping a finger on the political pulse of the district.
The fact that an electromagnetic pulse is produced by a nuclear explosion was known since the earliest days of nuclear weapons testing.
During the first United States nuclear test on 16 July 1945, electronic equipment was shielded due to Enrico Fermi's expectation of an electromagnetic pulse from the detonation.

pulse and best
* Bessel filter – best pulse response for a given order because it has no group delay ripple
Winold recommends that, " metric structure is best described through detailed analysis of pulse groupings on various levels rather than through attempts to represent the organization with a single term " ( Winold 1975, 217 )
The tradition has survived: the pulse of the town is best felt in the central square, a venue for weavers ' exhibitions, traditional festivities and other events.
Some pigs were placed in elevated cages and provided with suits made of different materials, to test which materials provided best protection from the thermal pulse.
The laser pulse duration cannot be easily measured by optoelectronic methods, since the response time of photodiodes and oscilloscopes are at best of the order of 200 femtoseconds, yet laser pulses can be made as short as a few femtoseconds.

pulse and known
Due to the Fourier limit ( also known as energy-time uncertainty ), a pulse of such short temporal length has a spectrum spread over a considerable bandwidth.
The secondary stations receive this pulse signal from the primary, then wait a preset number of milliseconds, known as the secondary coding delay, to transmit a response signal.
Indeed, MSK is a particular case of the sub-family of CPM known as continuous-phase frequency-shift keying ( CPFSK ) which is defined by a rectangular frequency pulse ( i. e. a linearly increasing phase pulse ) of one symbol-time duration ( total response signaling ).
The pulse is often modulated to achieve better performance using a technique known as pulse compression.
The rotary dial is a device mounted on or in a telephone or switchboard that is designed to send electrical pulses, known as pulse dialing, corresponding to the number dialed.
In military terminology, a nuclear warhead detonated hundreds of kilometers above the Earth's surface is known as a high-altitude electromagnetic pulse ( HEMP ) device.
It results in a pulse amplitude modulated signal, also known as a pulse train.
* 500 BC – Bian Que becomes the earliest physician known to use acupuncture and pulse diagnosis
When such storms have a brief period of severe weather associated with them, it is known as a pulse severe storm.
where f < sub > p </ sub > is the pulse rate, also known as the symbol rate, in symbols / second or baud.
For example, the APOLLO Collaboration photon pulse return graph, shown here, has a pattern consistent with a retroreflector array near a known landing site.
Q-switching, sometimes known as giant pulse formation, is a technique by which a laser can be made to produce a pulsed output beam.
The net result is a short pulse of light output from the laser, known as a giant pulse, which may have a very high peak intensity.
Ultra wideband was formerly known as " pulse radio ", but the FCC and the International Telecommunication Union Radiocommunication Sector ( ITU-R ) currently define UWB in terms of a transmission from an antenna for which the emitted signal bandwidth exceeds the lesser of 500 MHz or 20 % of the center frequency.
The interval from the emission of a pulse to reception of its echo is recorded, and the depth calculated from the known speed of propagation of sound through water.
The fontanelle may pulsate, and although the precise cause of this is not known, it is perfectly normal and seems to echo the heartbeat, perhaps via the arterial pulse within the brain vasculature, or in the meninges.
The value 0. 441 is known as the time-bandwidth product of the pulse, and varies depending on the pulse shape.

0.270 seconds.