Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Magnetosphere" ¶ 9
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

upward and extension
The extension refers to the extension of the hips upward with outstretched legs as the shoulders drive down, causing the vaulter to be positioned upside down.
There is reason to think, however, that it is the lack of soil rather than climatic conditions that checks the upward extension of the alpine flora.
A superstructure is an upward extension of an existing structure above a baseline.
The default Korean codepage for Windows ( code page 949 ) is a proprietary, but upward compatible extension of EUC-KR referred to as Unified Hangeul Code ( 통합 완성형, Tonghab Wansunghyung ).
An upward response ( extension ) of the hallux is known as Babinski response, Babinski sign, or Koch sign, named after Joseph Babinski ( 1857 – 1932 ), a French neurologist of Polish origin.
With the extension of tenancy rights, the growth of the market economy and with new opportunities for middle class employment, members of cultivator communities, starting with the peasantry, began adopting the name as both a form of upward social mobility and as a means of differentiating themselves from the broader peasantry.
The vertical growth of these salt pillows creates pressure on the upward surface, causing extension and faulting.
* the logic-based extension should be upward compatible with a future extension that will support constraint programming
In the takeoff or jump upward, the jump is executed in a sequence initiated by hip joint extension followed by knee joint extension which begins during the hip joint extension.
All three actions contribute force to the upward jump but the knee joint extension is the major contributor.
There is flexion in the hips, knees and ankles on landing and extension in the joints on the upward return.
When the weight is at mid-thigh, the bar is accelerated upward by powerful hip + knee + ankle extension until the body is fully erect.

upward and ionosphere
The aurorae on Saturn are thought to be connected to the reconnection of the magnetic field under the influence of the Solar wind ( Dungey cycle ), which drives an upward current ( about 10 million amperes ) from the ionosphere and leads to the acceleration and precipitation of energetic ( 1 – 10 kev ) electrons into the polar thermosphere of Saturn.

upward and known
Snowfall tends to form within regions of upward motion of air around a type of low-pressure system known as an extratropical cyclone.
Plants could be said to exhibit a form of equilibrioception, in that when rotated from their normal attitude the stems grow in the direction that is upward ( away from gravity ) while their roots grow downward ( in the direction of gravity ) this phenomenon is known as Gravitropism and it has been shown that for instance Poplar stems can detect reorientation and inclination.
Orographic precipitation, also known as relief precipitation, is precipitation generated by a forced upward movement of air upon encountering a physiographic upland ( see anabatic wind ).
A caltrop ( also known as caltrap, galtrop, cheval trap, galthrap, galtrap, calthrop, crow's foot ) is an antipersonnel weapon made up of two or more sharp nails or spines arranged in such a manner that one of them always points upward from a stable base ( for example, a tetrahedron ).
On its first upward path, it is known as a 0 < sup >+</ sup >.
One improved version of the dip pen, known as the original " ball point ", was the addition of a curved point ( instead of a sharp point ) which allows the user to have slightly more control on upward and sideways strokes.
This type of trompe l ' œil illusionism as specifically applied to ceiling paintings is known as di sotto in sù, meaning " from below, upward " in Italian.
Where the road beyond Kula Lodge makes an abrupt upward tack to Haleakala National Park, the area known as Upper Kula surrounds Kekaulike Avenue.
A number of eMac machines have suffered from what was known as " Raster Shift ", a strange phenomenon where the bottom third or half of the screen goes black, with the rest of image shifting upward and out of the top boundary of the display.
When an object is immersed in a liquid the liquid exerts an upward force which is known as buoyant force and it is proportional to the weight of displaced liquid.
The part of the theorem asserting that a structure has elementary extensions of all larger cardinalities is known as the upward Löwenheim – Skolem Theorem.
There can also be behavioural signs ; in order to relieve the irritation or flow of mucus, patients may wipe or rub their nose with the palm of their hand in an upward motion: an action known as the " nasal salute " or the " allergic salute ".
Just northwest of Glen Aulin, the River presents spectacular waterfalls, including LeConte Falls and Waterwheel Falls, both known for the " waterwheel " phenomenon whereby descending water hits rocks below and wheels back upward.
Being lighter, the warm air mass is unable to displace the cooler air mass and instead is forced upward along the upper boundary of the colder air in a process known as overrunning.
Islamic flags containing the calligraphy of the Quran were commonly used by the Mughal Emperor Akbar, it was the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, who is known to have inlaid the Crescent and Star symbol upon his personal shield, his son Aurangzeb is also known to have used similar shields and flags containing an upward Crescent and Star symbol.
A crew cut where the hair on the top of the head is graduated in length from the front hairline to a chosen point on the mid to back part of the crown as a flat plane, of level, upward sloping or downward sloping inclination is known as a flat top crew cut or flattop.
The more decorative, but slightly less pungent chili, sometimes known as Thai Ornamental, has peppers that point upward on the plant, and go from green to yellow, orange and then red.
Cornrows, also known as braids, are a traditional African style of hair grooming where the hair is braided very close to the scalp, using an underhand, upward motion to produce a continuous, raised row.
Also in 2010, Alexander's team responded to these criticisms, noting that the related dromaeosaur Hesperonychus, which is known from complete hip bones preserved in three dimensions, also shows hip sockets directed partially upward, possibly allowing the legs to splay more than in other dromaeosaurs.
Prior to its replacement in 1991, the bridge, originally called St. Johns River Bridge, opened in 1921 and carried three lanes ( center one reversible ) on a lift bridge of similar design to the Main Street Bridge but was known as the Yellow Monster, largely for its tendency to stick in the upward position.
In Tropic of Ruislip, Leslie Thomas ’ s humorous account of suburban sexual and social mores in the mid 1970s ( adapted for television as Tropic, ATV 1979 ), the steady flow of families from council housing on one side of the railway to an executive estate on the other side served to illustrate what was becoming known asupward mobility ”.
This is then known as a " push rod " if bump travel " pushes " on the rod ( and subsequently the rod must be joined to the bottom of the upright and angled upward ).

upward and also
He also emphasizes line within the work, by displaying the upward growth of the forest with the vertical and diagonal lines of the trunks.
It is also important that the discus thrower keeps their shoulders at the same level during the throw until the end, where the thrower must extend their shoulders upward to get good lift under the discus.
The index finger is also used to apply an upward torque to the frog when tilting the bow.
However, models were upward compatible and most were also downward compatible.
Reporting on these developments in his annual report to the Authority in April 2008, Secretary-General Nandan referred also to the upward trend in demand and prices for cobalt, copper, nickel and manganese, the main metals that would be derived from seabed mining, and he noted that technologies being developed for offshore extraction could be adapted for deep sea mining.
This view does not deny that matter also has causal potency — it does not deny that there is causal power from elementary particles upward, so there is upward causation — but in addition it insists that there is also downward causation.
An alternative recording method not requiring a grid is also in use, where positions on a board are labeled left to right by letters a through h and top to bottom ( far-to-near ) by digits 1 through 8 ( Note that this is the opposite of the chess standard, with numerals running upward away from the side ( White ) that has a through h left to right, and also that the perspective may be that of either player ( with no fixed standard )), so that the very first move of a game may be ( based upon standard starting set-up ) d3, c4, f5 or e6.
From licenses MR and upward there is also a " B " Condition which may apply to your license if you do your testing in a Synchromesh or Automatic Transmission Vehicle.
Sonar may also be used in air for robot navigation, and SODAR ( an upward looking in-air sonar ) is used for atmospheric investigations.
" The request also indicated that the fully loaded weight should not exceed 100, 000 pounds ( 45, 400 kg ), though this would be adjusted upward in practice ; that the bomber have a cruise speed of 500 knots ( 925 km / h ); and that it have a service ceiling of 50, 000 feet ( 15, 200 m ).
The term rotation is also used in aviation to refer to the upward pitch ( nose moves up ) of an aircraft, particularly when starting the climb after takeoff.
Demographic factors also contributed to upward pressure on prices, with the revival ( from around the third quarter of the 15th century ) of European population growth after the century of depopulation and demographic stagnation that had followed the Black Death.
Especially in the later years of the show, cast members who were slimed frequently looked upward into the slime as it was falling so that it covered their faces ( the same was also true of the waterings ).
At germination, roots grow downward due to gravitropism, the growth mechanism of plants that also causes the shoot to grow upward.
Since this definition does not specify velocity, it also applies to objects initially moving upward
" GameSpot also saw it as an improvement to the series, stating " the levels in Sonic 3 offer more interaction than those in previous games, in the form of such things as zip lines, fireman's poles, and giant tree trunks that you can climb by running upward inside of them.
When the Ozark Mountains plateau was later pushed upward again, possibly due to an intra-continental mantle plume that may also have been responsible for some of the abundant ore deposits of the region, the softer dolomite was weathered away to leave the original Precambrian islands largely intact.
If, on top of that, the asker also doesn't know that they should search its expansion before asking someone, then once again, there may be legitimate resentment in his subordinates that they must " manage upward " to such a mollycoddling degree, because the very GIYF principle itself has been shifting into the area of " general knowledge that is lacked only by incompetents.
Risky leveraged behavior like speculation and Ponzi schemes can lead to an increasingly fragile economy, and may also be part of what pushes asset prices artificially upward until the bubble pops.
unbroken, its value is now also driven upward by this fact as well.

0.302 seconds.