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Vincent Uriel Muirhead has written:

'Flow field around a finite cone with shock' -- subject(s): Aeronautics

'Flow field around a finite cone with shock' -- subject(s): Aeronautics

'Flow field around a finite cone with shock' -- subject(s): Aeronautics

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The electric field of a finite cylinder is the force per unit charge experienced by a charged particle at any point outside the cylinder. It is calculated using the formula for the electric field of a charged line of charge density.

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The number of elements of a pid may be finite or countably infinite...or infinite also....but a finite field is always a pid

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In finite element analysis, a field variable represents a physical quantity that varies over the domain of the finite element mesh. Examples include displacement, temperature, stress, and strain. Field variables are computed at specific points within each element and are used to describe the behavior of the system being analyzed.

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The strength of the magnetic field generated by a finite current-carrying wire is directly proportional to the current flowing through the wire and inversely proportional to the distance from the wire. The direction of the magnetic field can be determined using the right-hand rule, where the thumb points in the direction of the current and the fingers curl in the direction of the magnetic field.

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It is a finite number.

It is a finite number.

It is a finite number.

It is a finite number.

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The formula to calculate the magnetic field due to a finite wire is given by the Biot-Savart law, which states that the magnetic field (B) at a point near a current-carrying wire is directly proportional to the current (I) in the wire and inversely proportional to the distance (r) from the wire. The formula is: B ( I) / (2 r), where is the permeability of free space.

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prove that every subset of a finite set is a finite set?

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There are a finite number of apartments.

Finite numbers may be large or small.

There are a finite number of states.

The number of molds in my fridge is not exactly finite.

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It is finite.

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Coal is a finite resource on Earth.

The finite resources will eventually run out.

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wedderburn's little theorem says all finite division rings are commutative so they are fields. So if it is a finite division ring, then the answer is NO

But for an infinite division ring... I think you can!

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finite is an object , and they are also singular in nature

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I would guess that is because it has a finite number of different states. (It is also known as a finite-state machine.)

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anomalous finite verbs

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finite population multiplier finite population multiplier

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All real numbers are finite. Infinity is not a number.

All real numbers are finite. Infinity is not a number.

All real numbers are finite. Infinity is not a number.

All real numbers are finite. Infinity is not a number.

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because they are finite;)

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Yes, 5,664,280 is a finite number.

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all finite set is countable.but,countable can be finite or infinite

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A finite integral domain ( D ) has no zero divisors and is commutative. Since ( D ) is finite, for any non-zero element ( a \in D ), the set ( { a, 2a, 3a, \ldots, na } ) (where ( n ) is the number of elements in ( D )) must eventually repeat due to the pigeonhole principle. Thus, there exists an integer ( k ) such that ( ka = 0 ), but since ( D ) has no zero divisors, this implies ( k = 0 ) or ( a = 0 ), meaning every non-zero element has a multiplicative inverse. Therefore, ( D ) is a field.

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The domain is infinite but the range is finite.

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The number of stars is finite.

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Oil is a finite resource.

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False. G may be a finite group without sub-groups.

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No, "didn't" is not a finite verb; it is a contraction of "did not." The finite verb in the sentence would be "did," as it shows tense and agrees with the subject.

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A finite set has a finite number of elements, an infinite set has infinitely many.

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Yes, regular languages are finite in nature because they can be described by a finite set of rules or patterns.

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A discrete topology on the integers, Z, is defined by letting every subset of Z be open If that is true then Z is a discrete topological space and it is equipped with a discrete topology.

Now is it compact?

We know that a discrete space is compact if and only if it is finite. Clearly Z is not finite, so the answer is no. If you picked a finite field such a Z7 ( integers mod 7) then the answer would be yes.

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A lot of them would be finite.

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It is a set which contains a finite number of elements.

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No, not all finite languages are regular.

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No, not every finite language is regular.

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In mathematics, a finite set is a set that has a finite number of elements. For example, (2,4,6,8,10) is a finite set with five elements. The number of elements of a finite set is a natural number (non-negative integer), and is called the cardinality of the set.

A set that is not finite is called infinite. For example, the set of all positive integers is infinite: (1,2,3,4, . . .)

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Every computer has a finite amount of memory.

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A Spectrum of Finite Scale was created in 2001.

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Yes, finite numbers are always countable.

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No. The shapes used for tessellation must be finite. A quadrant is not finite.

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Example sentence - There is a finite amount of monies in the account.

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There is only a finite number of opportunities in your life.

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An empty set is considered a finite set because it contains zero (0) elements and zero is a finite number.

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