force polygon

  • 1force polygon — noun : a closed polygon whose sides taken in order represent in magnitude and direction a system of forces in equilibrium …

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  • 2Polygon Window — Aphex Twin Aphex Twin Aphex Twin au Traffic festival à Turin en 2005 Alias AFX, Blue Calx, Bradley Strider, Martin Tressider, Caustic Window, Gak, Soit P.P., Po …

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  • 3Support polygon — For a rigid object in contact with a fixed environment and acted upon by gravity in the vertical direction, its support polygon is a horizontal region over which the center of mass must lie to achieve static stability. For example, for an object… …

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  • 4Delta Force 2 — For the movie, see Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection. Delta Force 2 Developer(s) Novalogic Publisher(s) …

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  • 5Funicular polygon — Funicular Fu*nic u*lar, a. [Cf. F. funiculaire.] [1913 Webster] 1. Consisting of a small cord or fiber. [1913 Webster] 2. Dependent on the tension of a cord. [1913 Webster] 3. (Anat.) Pertaining to a funiculus; made up of, or resembling, a… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 6triangle of forces — a vector diagram whose sides represent three forces in equilibrium compare force polygon …

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  • 7Battle of Passchendaele — For other uses, see Passchendaele (disambiguation). Battle of Passchendaele Third Battle of Ypres Part of the Western Front of the First World War …

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  • 8King's Regiment (Liverpool) — Infobox Military Unit unit name=The King s Regiment (Liverpool) caption=Cap badge of the regiment, featuring the White Horse of Hanover country=United Kingdom type=Line Infantry branch=Army dates=1 July 1881 1 September 1958 size=Varied; see full …

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  • 9Pi — This article is about the number. For the Greek letter, see Pi (letter). For other uses, see Pi (disambiguation). The circumference of a ci …

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  • 10Second moment of area — The second moment of area, also known as the area moment of inertia or second moment of inertia, is a property of a shape that is used to predict its resistance to bending and deflection which are directly proportional. This is why beams with… …

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