ตัวกรองผลการค้นหา
คลิกที่แต่ละคำเพื่อดูรายละเอียด
(english) An external force. The term load is sometimes used to describe more general actions such as temperature differentials or movements such as foundation settlements.
(english) The principle stating that a force has the same external effect on an object regardless of where it acts along its line of action.
(Environmental Engineering) The placement of wastes into the land under controlled conditions to minimize their migration or effect on the surrounding environment.
(english) An attractive force between two objects; each object accelerates at a rate equal to the attractive force divided by the object's mass. Objects near the surface of the earth tend to accelerate toward the earth's center at a rate of ; this value is often called the gravitational constant and denoted as g.
(Environmental Engineering) The controlled aerobic degradation of organic wastes into a material which can be used for landscaping, landfill cover, or soil conditioning.
(Software Engineering) an activity that translates the requirements model into a more detailed model that is the guide to implementation of the software
(english) The resultant of a system of forces is a single force or moment whose magnitude, direction, and location make it statically equivalent to the system of forces.
(Environmental Engineering) The suspension of particles by sufficient upward velocity of the fluid. During fluidization the gravity force is overcome by a combination of buoyancy and fluid friction.
(english) A valve that is fit into a hydraulic pipeline to facilitate automatic release of air trapped in the pipeline. See also AIR BLEEDER, MANUAL.
(Environmental Engineering) A fuel derived from the combustible portion of municipal solid waste. The fuel is often processed into small briquettes, similar in size to charcoal.
(Software Engineering) when a defect is introduced early in the software process and remains undetected, it often is amplified into multiple defects later in the software process
(Software Engineering) changing software in a way that improves its internal structure but does not change it external behavior; often conducted iteratively as design evolves into code.