mach

listen to the pronunciation of mach
İngilizce - Türkçe
uçağın ses hızına oranla hızı
Mach number Mah sayısı
mach number
(Askeri) MAK SAYISI: Bir cismin, içinde bulunduğu ortamdaki ses hızına oranı
mach number
mach sayısı
mach front
(Askeri) Bak. "Mac stem"
mach hold mode
(Askeri) MAK KONTROL MODU: Bir uçuş kontrol sisteminde, uçağın mak sayısı cinsinden ifade edilen uçuş kontrol hızının otomatik olarak korunduğu bir kontrol modu
mach no/yes
(Askeri) MACH HAYIR/EVET: Bir hava önleme görevinde, "Azami hıza çıktım ve hedefime yaklaşıyorum/yaklaşmıyorum" anlamına gelen bir kod
mach number
(isim) mak sayısı
mach number indicator
(Askeri) Bak. "machmeter"
mach region
(Çevre) mach bölgesi
mach stem
(Askeri) MAK DALGASI: Bir patlama sonucunda olaydan meydana gelen ve yansıyan şok dalgalarının birleşmesiyle oluşan şok dalgası. Terim genel olarak, havada oluşup, dünya yüzeyinden yansıyan infilak dalgası referans olarak alınarak kullanılır. İdeal durumda, mak dalgası yansıdığı yüzeye diktir ve biraz dışbükey (konveks) tir. Aynı zamanda "mach front" da denir
mach trim compensator
(Askeri) MAK TRİM KOMPANSATÖRÜ: Bir uçuş kontrol sisteminde, mak sayısının bir fonksiyonu olarak, iniş çıkış ayarını otomatik olarak kontrol eden bir alt sistem
mach wave
(Askeri) Bak. "Mach stem"
reinforced mach front
(Çevre) takviyeli mach cephesi
İngilizce - İngilizce
the Mach number
Ernst Mach, Austrian physicist 1838 - 1916
a ratio of the speed (of an object, etc.) to the speed of sound in the fluid or other medium through which the object travels. Usually used to describe supersonic speeds

The jet traveled at Mach 3.

{i} family name; Ernst Mach (1838-1916), Austrian physicist and philosopher who presented the Mach number for the first time
Mach is used as a unit of measurement in stating the speed of a moving object in relation to the speed of sound. For example, if an aircraft is travelling at Mach 1, it is travelling at exactly the speed of sound. Mach number. a unit for measuring speed, especially of an aircraft, in relation to the speed of sound. Mach 1 is the speed of sound, Mach 2 is twice the speed of sound etc (Ernst Mach (1838-1916), Austrian scientist)
Ernst Mach, Czech physicist 1838
A speed measurement 1 Mach = the speed of sound Approximately 1100 feet per second at sea level
speed ratio to speed of sound
Austrian physicist and philosopher who introduced the Mach number and who founded logical positivism (1838-1916)
speed of sound One Mach=1,116 feet per second at sea level
Multiprocessor, multitasking OS with a Unix external interface developed by Carnegie-Mellon's computer science department Mach is the kernel used by the OSF/1 and NeXTStep
Mach number is the relative velocity of a fluid compared to its sonic velocity Mach numbers less than 1 correspond to sub-sonic velocities, and Mach numbers > 1 correspond to super-sonic velocities
(n ) an operating system based on Berkely UNIX developed by Carnegie Mellon University
This is a variant of the architecture, short for machine It is essentially the same as BFD's use of mach
a code used on the label of a container (suck as sack or pallet) that identifies the contents as machinable parcels
a number representing the ratio of the speed of a body (as an aircraft) to the speed of sound in a surrounding medium (as air)
An open source operating system, using by NeXT and others See also HURD
{i} number which shows the speed of an object in relation to the speed of sound
A central component of the kernel that provides such basic services and abstractions as threads, tasks, ports, interprocess communication (IPC), scheduling, physical and virtual address space management, virtual memory, and timers
MACH number (speed ratio to speed of sound)
Machine MECH - Mechanism MED - Medium MKIII - Mark 3 MKIV - Mark 4 mm - Millimeter MNT - Mount MNTG - Mounting M/S - Machine Screw MWD - Mid Wheel Drive
Mach number
The ratio of the velocity of a body to that of sound in the surrounding medium
Mach's principle
the principle that the inertia of a body arises from its relation to the totality of all other bodies in the universe
Mach meter
{i} device measuring speeds above the speed of sound (named after the Austrian physicist Ernst Mach)
Mach number
The ratio of the speed of an object to the speed of sound in the surrounding medium. For example, an aircraft moving twice as fast as the speed of sound is said to be traveling at Mach 2
Mach's principle
Hypothesis that the inertial forces acting on a body in accelerated motion are determined by the quantity and distribution of matter in the universe. Albert Einstein found its suggested connection between geometry and matter helpful in formulating his theory of general relativity; unaware that George Berkeley had proposed similar views in the 18th century, he attributed the idea to Ernst Mach. He abandoned the principle when he realized that inertia is assumed in the geodesic equation of motion (see geodesy) and need not depend on the existence of matter elsewhere in the universe
mach number
{i} number which shows the speed of an object in relation to the speed of sound
mach number
the ratio of the speed of a moving body to the speed of sound
critical Mach number
(Havacılık) In aerodynamics, the critical Mach number (Mcr) of an aircraft is the lowest Mach number at which the airflow over a small region of the wing reaches the speed of sound
Ernst Mach
born Feb. 18, 1838, Chirlitz-Turas, Moravia died Feb. 19, 1916, Haar, Ger. Austrian physicist and philosopher. After earning a doctorate in physics in 1860, he taught at the Universities of Vienna and Graz as well as Charles University in Prague. Interested in the psychology and physiology of sensation, in the 1860s he discovered the physiological phenomenon known as Mach's bands, the tendency of the human eye to see bright or dark bands near the boundaries between areas of sharply differing illumination. He later studied movement and acceleration and developed optical and photographic techniques for measuring sound waves and wave propagation. In 1887 he established the principles of supersonics and the Mach number, the ratio of the velocity of an object to the velocity of sound. He also proposed the theory of inertia known as Mach's principle. In Contributions to the Analysis of the Sensations (1886), he asserted that all knowledge is derived from sensory experience or observation
Ernst Mach
{i} (1838-1916) Austrian physicist and philosopher who presented the Mach number for the first time
Türkçe - İngilizce

mach teriminin Türkçe İngilizce sözlükte anlamı

gösterge mach sayısı
(Havacılık) indicated mach number
mach