| propagation | An excitable membrane generates and then continues an action potential throughout the entire cell | en |
| propagation | The transmission of radio waves Propagation characteristics depend on frequency and are affected by the environmental conditions, such as terrain and atmospheric conditions, encountered on the path | en |
| propagation | Delay time required for an electrical wave to travel between two points on transmission line | en |
| propagation | The LTMS performs propositional inference, determining whether its Propositional Theory is consistent Propagate the values in the TMS to compute the logical inferences of the current set of Clauses | en |
| propagation | The travel of a signal through a medium such as air or free space | en |
| propagation | Movement through a material e g the movement of sound waves through air | en |
| propagation | Increasing the numbers of plants through cuttings, seeds or divisions | en |
| propagation | Routers are the computers on the web that know where every site is hosted Unfortunately, they are only updated every 12 hours or so That means when you register a new name or change the DNS on an existing name, it takes 24-48 hours before all the computers on the web know about it If you change hosting of a website, some visitors will get your old site while the change propagates Email received during this period may also end up in two places | en |
| propagation | The process of updating all the domain name servers on the Internet with changes to the relationship between domain names and the relevant IP addresses When these change it can take up to 7 days before all the domain name servers have the new information | en |
| propagation | The process of how a radio signal travels from a transmitting source to a receiving station | en |
| propagation | some degree of success in the spread of propaganda | en |
| propagation | the dissemination of something to a larger area or greater number | en |
| propagation | the multiplication or natural increase in a population | en |
| propagation | winning new converts | en |
| propagation | the act of propagating, especially the movement of a wave | en |
| propagation | the continuous successive chain extension in a polymer chain reaction | en |
| propagation | To transmit in the form of a wave | en |
| propagation | the elongation part of transcription | en |
| propagation | The motion of waves through or along a medium Note: For electromagnetic waves, propagation may occur in a vacuum as well as in material media | en |
| propagation | If an exception is thrown within a method, and there is no appropriate exception handler within the method, the exception may be propagated to the caller of the method For a checked exception, the method must contain a throws clause in its header A throws clause is not necessary for an unchecked exception {exception!unchecked} to be propagated | en |
| propagation | the movement of a wave through a medium | en |
| propagation | In electrical practice, the travel of waves through or along a medium The path traveled by the wave in getting from one point to another is known as the propagation path (such as the path through the atmosphere in getting from a transmitting antenna to a receiving antenna, or the path through the waveguides and other microwave devices in getting from an antenna to a receiver) | en |
| propagation | The process whereby the name servers throughout the world have updated their records for a specific domain For example, if you move your domain from one host to another, it will take around 24 hours or so for the new address to broadcast everywhere During that 24 hour period, the traffic is decreasing at the old location and increasing at the new location | en |
| propagation | the act of producing offspring or multiplying by such production | en |
| propagation | the spreading of something (a belief or practice) into new regions | en |
| propagation | The spreading abroad, or extension, of anything; diffusion; dissemination; as, the propagation of sound; the propagation of the gospel | en |
| propagation | The act of propagating; continuance or multiplication of the kind by generation or successive production; as, the propagation of animals or plants | en |
| propagation | scattering, spreading; reproduction, procreation, generation; transmission of an inherited trait; increase in extension; dispersion, dissemination isim | en |
| propagation | The radiation of signal energy through a physical area or space | en |
| propagation | The travel of an electrical waveform along a medium In other words, a surge passing along a power cord to a system | en |
| propagation | The process an electromagnetic wave undergoes as it is radiated from the antenna and spreads out across the physical terrain See also propagation channel | en |
| propagation | The direction of motion of a wave though a medium One dimensional (for example a slinky) waves propagate in a straight line Two dimensional waves may propagate in a straight line (plane waves) or in all directions on a surface (circular waves on a pond/ ripple/tank) Three dimensional waves can propagate in all directions (like a light bulb illuminating a room) Back to Top Back to Wave Index | en |
| propagation | Of a chain letter variation at a given time, the number of receipts in the month following Propagation measures the replicative success of a letter and is presumed to be roughly correlated with its frequency of appearance in our dated collection CLEVO | en |
| propagation | The act of propagating The action of traveling through a material or space | en |
| propagation | Plants can be propagated sexually (via seed) or asexually (through cuttings, layering, grafts, or root/bulb division) Propagation should always be performed with clean, sterilized tools to prevent the spread of disease Plants undergoing asexual propagation undergo stress and special consideration should go toward providing it nutrients that can be easily absorbed (see liquid fertilizers) In the case of cuttings, root hormones or willow water should be considered | en |
| propagation | The process whereby the nameservers throughout the world have updated their records for a specific domain For example, if you move your domain from one host to another, it will take around 24 hours or so for the new address to broadcast everywhere During that 24 hour period, the traffic is decreasing at the old location and increasing at the new location | en |
| propagation | refers to: neural net, learning algorithm The passing of values and errors through the different layers of a neural net during its learning process see also: forwardpropagation, backpropagation | en |
| propagation | the spreading of something (a belief or practice) into new regions the movement of a wave through a medium | en |