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Cycles of Time | A Wisdom Archive on Cycles of Time |  | Cycles of Time A selection of articles related to Cycles of Time |  |
| We recommend this article: Cycles of Time - 1, and also this: Cycles of Time - 2. |
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Cycles of Time |  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Chinese calendar - HolidaysThe Chinese calendar year has nine main festivals, seven determined by the lunisolar calendar, and the other two derived from the solar agricultural calendar. (Note that the farmers actually used a solar calendar, and its twenty-four terms, to determine when to plant crops, due to the inaccuracy of the lunisolar traditional calendar. However, the traditional calendar has also come to be known as the agricultural calendar.)
The two special holidays are the Tomb-Sweeping Festival (Qingming Festival and the Winter Solstice Festival, fall ...
See also:Chinese calendar, Chinese calendar - History, Chinese calendar - Legendary beginnings, Chinese calendar - Early history, Chinese calendar - The Taichuli calendar, Chinese calendar - The true sun and moon, Chinese calendar - The Gregorian Reform and the 1929 time change, Chinese calendar - Calendar rules, Chinese calendar - Year markings, Chinese calendar - Regnal years, Chinese calendar - The stem-branch cycle, Chinese calendar - Solar year versus lunar year, Chinese calendar - Hours of the day, Chinese calendar - The Chinese zodiac, Chinese calendar - Solar term, Chinese calendar - Holidays, Chinese calendar - Purpose of the intercalary months, Chinese calendar - The relevance of the calendar today, Chinese calendar - Practical uses, Chinese calendar - Cultural issues Read more here: » Chinese calendar: Encyclopedia II - Chinese calendar - Holidays |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Eddy Merckx - Personal life and personalityIn 1967 Merckx married Claudine Acou. They had two children: a daughter (Sabrina) and a son (Axel, who also became a professional cyclist). Their marriage was held entirely in French, as Merckx's mother had asked the priest to perform the entire ceremony in French. At the time, she had no idea the choice of language would end up being a contentious issue in Belgium, where many people identify themselves according to the language that they speak.
Despite this early incident, Merckx is nationally considered a perfect ambassador for his ...
See also:Eddy Merckx, Eddy Merckx - Racing career, Eddy Merckx - Successes in stage racing & single day races, Eddy Merckx - Setbacks and lesser days, Eddy Merckx - Hour Record, Eddy Merckx - The Greatest cyclist of all times?, Eddy Merckx - After retirement, Eddy Merckx - Personal life and personality, Eddy Merckx - Trivia & cultural references, Eddy Merckx - Significant victories by race, Eddy Merckx - Grand Tours, Eddy Merckx - Other tours, Eddy Merckx - Classic cycle races, Eddy Merckx - World titles, Eddy Merckx - Track races, Eddy Merckx - Significant victories by year, Eddy Merckx - 1964, Eddy Merckx - 1966, Eddy Merckx - 1967, Eddy Merckx - 1968, Eddy Merckx - 1969, Eddy Merckx - 1970, Eddy Merckx - 1971, Eddy Merckx - 1972, Eddy Merckx - 1973, Eddy Merckx - 1974, Eddy Merckx - 1975, Eddy Merckx - 1976, Eddy Merckx - 1977 Read more here: » Eddy Merckx: Encyclopedia II - Eddy Merckx - Personal life and personality |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Stanley Rader - Proposals by Stanley RaderBecause Stanley Rader had gained the financial confidence of Herbert W. Armstrong beginning in 1956, he was able to reverse the plans of Garner Ted Armstrong and inject his own instead. Using his inside knowledge and great personal influence on Herbert Armstrong, Stanley Rader remodeled the Worldwide Church of God to sustain any sudden and dramatic change which would once again damage the donation income flow, such as the scandal ...
See also:Stanley Rader, Stanley Rader - Brief biography, Stanley Rader - 1971 sex scandal, Stanley Rader - 1972 time cycle ends, Stanley Rader - 1972 financial crisis, Stanley Rader - Proposals by Garner Ted Armstrong, Stanley Rader - Proposals by Stanley Rader, Stanley Rader - 1975 conversion, Stanley Rader - Ambassador for World Peace, Stanley Rader - Business relationships, Stanley Rader - 1978 excommunication, Stanley Rader - 1979 retaliation, Stanley Rader - Response by Stanley Rader, Stanley Rader - Receivership, Stanley Rader - 60 Minutes, Stanley Rader - Rader's apparent victory, Stanley Rader - Author, Stanley Rader - Stanley Rader Sues Steven Spielberg, Stanley Rader - Resignation, Stanley Rader - Death of Stanley Rader, Stanley Rader - Timeline of Change Read more here: » Stanley Rader: Encyclopedia II - Stanley Rader - Proposals by Stanley Rader |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Menstrual cycle - Menstruation in other mammalsA regular menstrual cycle as described here only occurs in the great apes. Menstrual cycles vary in length from an average of 29 days in orangutans to an average of 37 days in chimpanzees.
Females of other mammalian species go through certain episodes called "estrus" or "heat" in each breeding season. During these times, ovulation occurs and females become receptive to mating, a fact advertised to males in some way. If no fertilisation takes place, the uterus reabsorbs the endometrium: no menstrual bleeding occurs. Significant differe ...
See also:Menstrual cycle, Menstrual cycle - The normal menstrual cycle in humans, Menstrual cycle - Menstruation, Menstrual cycle - Follicular phase, Menstrual cycle - Ovulation, Menstrual cycle - Luteal phase, Menstrual cycle - Menstrual symptoms, Menstrual cycle - The fertile window, Menstrual cycle - Hormonal control, Menstrual cycle - Hidden ovulation, Menstrual cycle - The ovary as an egg-bank, Menstrual cycle - The anovulatory menstrual cycle, Menstrual cycle - Cycle abnormalities, Menstrual cycle - Frequency, Menstrual cycle - Flow, Menstrual cycle - Duration, Menstrual cycle - The birth control pill, Menstrual cycle - Etymology and the lunar month, Menstrual cycle - Menstrual products, Menstrual cycle - Debate, Menstrual cycle - Culture and menstruation, Menstrual cycle - Mysticism, Menstrual cycle - Religion, Menstrual cycle - Menstruation in other mammals, Menstrual cycle - Notes Read more here: » Menstrual cycle: Encyclopedia II - Menstrual cycle - Menstruation in other mammals |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Menstrual cycle - Culture and menstruation
Menstrual cycle - Mysticism.
Mystics have sometimes elaborated "equivalencies", analogising the waxing and waning of the moon with influences on human menstruation. In this spiritual, moon goddess, or astrological context some women call menstruation their "moontime". Some ancient views also regarded menstruation as a cleansing of the body: compare bloodletting as a major medical treatment of pre-modern times.
Menstrual cycle - Religion.
...
See also:Menstrual cycle, Menstrual cycle - The normal menstrual cycle in humans, Menstrual cycle - Menstruation, Menstrual cycle - Follicular phase, Menstrual cycle - Ovulation, Menstrual cycle - Luteal phase, Menstrual cycle - Menstrual symptoms, Menstrual cycle - The fertile window, Menstrual cycle - Hormonal control, Menstrual cycle - Hidden ovulation, Menstrual cycle - The ovary as an egg-bank, Menstrual cycle - The anovulatory menstrual cycle, Menstrual cycle - Cycle abnormalities, Menstrual cycle - Frequency, Menstrual cycle - Flow, Menstrual cycle - Duration, Menstrual cycle - The birth control pill, Menstrual cycle - Etymology and the lunar month, Menstrual cycle - Menstrual products, Menstrual cycle - Debate, Menstrual cycle - Culture and menstruation, Menstrual cycle - Mysticism, Menstrual cycle - Religion, Menstrual cycle - Menstruation in other mammals, Menstrual cycle - Notes Read more here: » Menstrual cycle: Encyclopedia II - Menstrual cycle - Culture and menstruation |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Chinese calendar - Solar termChinese months follow the phases of the moon. As a result, they do not accurately follow the seasons of the solar year. To assist farmers to help farmers decide when to plant or harvest crops, the drafters of the calendar put in 24 seasonal markers, which follow the solar year, and are called jiéqì 節氣.
The term Jiéqì is usually translated as "Solar Terms" (lit. Nodes of Weather). Each node is the instant when the sun reaches one of twenty-four equally spaced points along the ecliptic, including the solstices and ...
See also:Chinese calendar, Chinese calendar - History, Chinese calendar - Legendary beginnings, Chinese calendar - Early History, Chinese calendar - The Taichuli calendar, Chinese calendar - The True Sun and Moon, Chinese calendar - The Gregorian Reform and the 1929 time change, Chinese calendar - Calendar Rules, Chinese calendar - Year Markings, Chinese calendar - Regnal Years, Chinese calendar - The Stem-Branch Cycle, Chinese calendar - Solar Year versus Lunar Year, Chinese calendar - Hours of the Day, Chinese calendar - The Chinese Zodiac, Chinese calendar - Solar term, Chinese calendar - Holidays, Chinese calendar - Purpose of the Intercalary Months, Chinese calendar - The relevance of the calendar today, Chinese calendar - Practical uses, Chinese calendar - Cultural issues Read more here: » Chinese calendar: Encyclopedia II - Chinese calendar - Solar term |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Chinese calendar - Solar termChinese months follow the phases of the moon. As a result, they do not accurately follow the seasons of the solar year. To assist farmers to help farmers decide when to plant or harvest crops, the drafters of the calendar put in 24 seasonal markers, which follow the solar year, and are called jiéqì 節氣.
The term Jiéqì is usually translated as "Solar Terms" (lit. Nodes of Weather). Each node is the instant when the sun reaches one of twenty-four equally spaced points along the ecliptic, including the solstices and ...
See also:Chinese calendar, Chinese calendar - History, Chinese calendar - Legendary beginnings, Chinese calendar - Early history, Chinese calendar - The Taichuli calendar, Chinese calendar - The true sun and moon, Chinese calendar - The Gregorian Reform and the 1929 time change, Chinese calendar - Calendar rules, Chinese calendar - Year markings, Chinese calendar - Regnal years, Chinese calendar - The stem-branch cycle, Chinese calendar - Solar year versus lunar year, Chinese calendar - Hours of the day, Chinese calendar - The Chinese zodiac, Chinese calendar - Solar term, Chinese calendar - Holidays, Chinese calendar - Purpose of the intercalary months, Chinese calendar - The relevance of the calendar today, Chinese calendar - Practical uses, Chinese calendar - Cultural issues Read more here: » Chinese calendar: Encyclopedia II - Chinese calendar - Solar term |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Business cycle - Alternative Interpretations of Business Cycles
Business cycle - Austrian School.
The Austrian School of economics rejects the suggestion that the business cycle is an inherent feature of an unregulated economy and argues that it is caused by intervention in the money supply. Austrian School economists, following Ludwig von Mises, point to the role of the interest rate as the price of investment capital, guiding investment decisions. In an unregulated (free-market) economy, it is posited that the interest rate reflects the actual time preference of lenders and ...
See also:Business cycle, Business cycle - Types of business cycle, Business cycle - Traditional business cycle models, Business cycle - Politically-based business cycle models, Business cycle - Preventing Business Cycles, Business cycle - Alternative Interpretations of Business Cycles, Business cycle - Austrian School, Business cycle - Marxist Views, Business cycle - Cycles or fluctuations?, Business cycle - Problems of Measurement Read more here: » Business cycle: Encyclopedia II - Business cycle - Alternative Interpretations of Business Cycles |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Vehicular cycling - NegotiationMany cycling experts explain the concept of negotiation, and its role in traffic cycling vehicularly, when merging across multiple lanes of traffic. The basic idea is to gain control of one lane at a time, and negotiate for the right of way in the adjacent lane before moving into and controlling it. This is an important vehicular cycling skill because it alleviates the cyclist from having to execute a pedestrian style left turn, which involves switching mode ...
See also:Vehicular cycling, Vehicular cycling - Principle, Vehicular cycling - Origins of Vehicular Cycling, Vehicular cycling - Using the full lane, Vehicular cycling - Destination and Speed Positioning, Vehicular cycling - Looking Back, Vehicular cycling - Negotiation, Vehicular cycling - The VC Attitude, Vehicular cycling - Common Misconceptions About VC, Vehicular cycling - VC is cycling as if you're a car, Vehicular cycling - VC is needlessly blocking cars, Vehicular cycling - VC means not riding in bicycle lanes, Vehicular cycling - VC means you have to follow the letter of the law, Vehicular cycling - VC Authoritative Sources, Vehicular cycling - VC Alternatives, Vehicular cycling - VC Education, Vehicular cycling - VC Advocacy, Vehicular cycling - Footnotes, Vehicular cycling - Bibliography Read more here: » Vehicular cycling: Encyclopedia II - Vehicular cycling - Negotiation |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Vehicular cycling - NegotiationMany cycling experts explain the concept of negotiation, and its role in traffic cycling vehicularly, when traversing across multiple lanes of traffic. The basic idea is to gain control of one lane at a time, and negotiate for the right-of-way in the adjacent lane before moving into and controlling it. This is an important vehicular cycling skill because it alleviates the cyclist from having to execute a pedestrian style left turn, which involves switching mode ...
See also:Vehicular cycling, Vehicular cycling - Principle, Vehicular cycling - Origins of Vehicular Cycling, Vehicular cycling - Using the full lane, Vehicular cycling - Destination and Speed Positioning, Vehicular cycling - Looking Back, Vehicular cycling - Negotiation, Vehicular cycling - The VC Attitude, Vehicular cycling - Common Misconceptions About VC, Vehicular cycling - VC is cycling as if you're a car, Vehicular cycling - VC is needlessly blocking cars, Vehicular cycling - VC means not riding in bicycle lanes, Vehicular cycling - VC means you have to follow the letter of the law, Vehicular cycling - VC Authoritative Sources, Vehicular cycling - VC Alternatives, Vehicular cycling - VC Education, Vehicular cycling - VC Advocacy, Vehicular cycling - Footnotes, Vehicular cycling - Bibliography Read more here: » Vehicular cycling: Encyclopedia II - Vehicular cycling - Negotiation |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Eddy Merckx - Racing career
Eddy Merckx - Successes in stage racing & single day races.
Merckx started competing in 1961. Three years later he became world champion in the amateur category, before turning professional in 1965. In 1966 he won the first of seven editions of the race Milan-San Remo. A year later he became world champion in the professional category in Heerlen, The Netherlands and would win this title twice more.
In 1968 Merckx started his domination of the Grand Tours by becoming the first Belgian to win the Giro d'I ...
See also:Eddy Merckx, Eddy Merckx - Racing career, Eddy Merckx - Successes in stage racing & single day races, Eddy Merckx - Setbacks and lesser days, Eddy Merckx - Hour Record, Eddy Merckx - The Greatest cyclist of all times?, Eddy Merckx - After retirement, Eddy Merckx - Personal life and personality, Eddy Merckx - Trivia & cultural references, Eddy Merckx - Significant victories by race, Eddy Merckx - Grand Tours, Eddy Merckx - Other tours, Eddy Merckx - Classic cycle races, Eddy Merckx - World titles, Eddy Merckx - Track races, Eddy Merckx - Significant victories by year, Eddy Merckx - 1964, Eddy Merckx - 1966, Eddy Merckx - 1967, Eddy Merckx - 1968, Eddy Merckx - 1969, Eddy Merckx - 1970, Eddy Merckx - 1971, Eddy Merckx - 1972, Eddy Merckx - 1973, Eddy Merckx - 1974, Eddy Merckx - 1975, Eddy Merckx - 1976, Eddy Merckx - 1977 Read more here: » Eddy Merckx: Encyclopedia II - Eddy Merckx - Racing career |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Eclipse cycle - Eclipse cyclesComments:
Fortnight
When there is an eclipse, there is a fair chance that at the next syzygy there will be another eclipse: the Sun and Moon have moved about 15° w.r.t. the nodes (the Moon opposite to where it was the first time), but the luminaries may still be within bounds to make an eclipse.
For example, the total lunar eclipse of 15 May 2003 was followed by the partial solar eclipse of 31 May 2003.
Month
Similarly, two events one month apart have the Sun and Moon at two positions on either ...
See also:Eclipse cycle, Eclipse cycle - General explanation, Eclipse cycle - Eclipse conditions, Eclipse cycle - Recurrence, Eclipse cycle - Periodicity, Eclipse cycle - Numerical values, Eclipse cycle - Eclipse cycles, Eclipse cycle - Frequency, Eclipse cycle - Saros and inex, Eclipse cycle - Literature Read more here: » Eclipse cycle: Encyclopedia II - Eclipse cycle - Eclipse cycles |
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| |  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Honeybee - Products of the honeybee
Honeybee - Pollination.
Main article: Pollination management
The honeybee's primary commercial value is as a pollinator of crops. Orchards and fields have grown larger; at the same time wild pollinators have dwindled. In several areas of the world the pollination shortage is compensated by migratory beekeeping, with beekeepers supplying the hives during the crop bloom and moving them after bloom is complete. In many higher latitude locations it is difficult or impossible to winter over enough bees, ...
See also:Honeybee, Honeybee - Other honey collecting insects, Honeybee - Origin and distribution of the genus Apis, Honeybee - Beekeeping, Honeybee - Honeybee life cycle, Honeybee - Products of the honeybee, Honeybee - Pollination, Honeybee - Honey, Honeybee - Beeswax, Honeybee - Pollen, Honeybee - Propolis, Honeybee - Hazards to honeybee survival, Honeybee - Honeybee predators, Honeybee - Insects, Honeybee - Reptiles and Amphibians, Honeybee - Birds, Honeybee - Mammals, Honeybee - Honeybee Communication, Honeybee - Sources, Honeybee - Trivia, Honeybee - Designated state insect Read more here: » Honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Honeybee - Products of the honeybee |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Gus Bell - CareerA native of Louisville, Kentucky and graduate of Bishop Benedict Joseph Flaget High school, Bell played nine of his 15 seasons with Cincinnati and was the oldest member of a rare three-generation major league family. His son, Buddy, is a former third baseman, coach and manager, and his grandsons, David and Mike, are a pair of infielders.
Bell was one of the most feared hitters throughout the 1950s and was a highly ranked outfielder as well. He provided an one-two punch along with Ralph Kiner for the Pirates. Later, he fit snugly into ...
See also:Gus Bell, Gus Bell - Career, Gus Bell - Highlights, Gus Bell - Facts Read more here: » Gus Bell: Encyclopedia II - Gus Bell - Career |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Assertion computing - Disabling assertionsAssertions can be enabled or disabled, usually on a program-wide basis; languages which distinguish different types of assertion – e.g. pre- and postconditions – usually allow these to be disabled independently. If assertions are disabled, assertion failures are ignored. Since assertions are primarily a development tool, they are often disabled when the program is released. Because some versions of the program will include assertions and some will not, it is essential that disabling assertions does not change the meaning of the program. ...
See also:Assertion computing, Assertion computing - Usage, Assertion computing - Assertions in design by contract, Assertion computing - Assertions for run-time checking, Assertion computing - Assertions during the development cycle, Assertion computing - Static Assertions, Assertion computing - Disabling assertions, Assertion computing - Comparison with error handling Read more here: » Assertion computing: Encyclopedia II - Assertion computing - Disabling assertions |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Assertion computing - Comparison with error handlingIt is worth distinguishing assertions from routine error handling. Assertions should be used to document logically impossible situations — if the "impossible" occurs, then something fundamental is clearly wrong. This is distinct from error handling: most error conditions are possible, although some may be extremely unlikely to occur in practice. Using assertions as a general-purpose error handling mechanism is usually unwise: assertions do not allow for graceful recovery from errors, and an assertion failure will often halt the program's execution a ...
See also:Assertion computing, Assertion computing - Usage, Assertion computing - Assertions in design by contract, Assertion computing - Assertions for run-time checking, Assertion computing - Assertions during the development cycle, Assertion computing - Static Assertions, Assertion computing - Disabling assertions, Assertion computing - Comparison with error handling Read more here: » Assertion computing: Encyclopedia II - Assertion computing - Comparison with error handling |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Tide - TimingIn most places there is a delay between the phases of the Moon and its effect on the tide. Springs and neaps in the North Sea, for example, are two days behind the new/full Moon and first/third quarter, respectively. The reason for this is that the tide originates in the southern oceans, the only place on the globe where a circumventing wave (as caused by the tidal force of the Moon) can travel unimpeded by land.
The resulting effect on the amplitude, or height, of the tide travels across the oceans. It is known that it travels as a s ...
See also:Tide, Tide - Tidal terminology, Tide - Timing, Tide - Tidal physics, Tide - Tidal amplitude and cycle time, Tide - Tidal lag, Tide - Alternative explanation, Tide - Tides & fluids, Tide - Tides and navigation, Tide - Other tides Read more here: » Tide: Encyclopedia II - Tide - Timing |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Tide - Tides & fluidsTides and tidal effects happen in general whenever a mass with some volume moves in a gravitational field that is not uniform. This is, they always happen. For example, in one way or the other, all objects moving in space will see some form of tidal forces. By acting on an ideal rigid body, by definition tides will not deform the body. Many bodies which are moving within the solar system, for example, are not rigid but merely balls of gas or fluids, hovering in empty space (Sometimes they have a very thin solid crust). Tidal forces generate ...
See also:Tide, Tide - Tidal terminology, Tide - Timing, Tide - Tidal physics, Tide - Tidal amplitude and cycle time, Tide - Tidal lag, Tide - Alternative explanation, Tide - Tides & fluids, Tide - Tides and navigation, Tide - Other tides Read more here: » Tide: Encyclopedia II - Tide - Tides & fluids |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Tide - Other tidesIn addition to oceanic tides, there are atmospheric tides as well as terrestrial tides (land tides), affecting the rocky mass of the Earth. Atmospheric tides may be negligible for everyday phenomena, drowned by the much more important effects of weather and the solar thermal tides. However, there is strictly no upper limit to the Earth's atmosphere, and the tidal pull increases with the distance from the Earth's centre. Theoretically, the Earth's atmosphere extends beyond the Roche limit of the Earth in the Moon's gravit ...
See also:Tide, Tide - Tidal terminology, Tide - Timing, Tide - Tidal physics, Tide - Tidal amplitude and cycle time, Tide - Tidal lag, Tide - Alternative explanation, Tide - Tides & fluids, Tide - Tides and navigation, Tide - Other tides Read more here: » Tide: Encyclopedia II - Tide - Other tides |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Tide - Other tidesIn addition to oceanic tides, there are atmospheric tides as well as terrestrial tides (land tides), affecting the rocky mass of the Earth. Atmospheric tides may be negligible for everyday phenomena, drowned by the much more important effects of weather and the solar thermal tides. However, there is no strict upper limit to the Earth's atmosphere, and the tidal pull increases with the distance from the Earth's centre. Theoretically, the Earth's atmosphere extends beyond the Roche limit of the Earth in the Moon's gravitat ...
See also:Tide, Tide - Tidal terminology, Tide - Timing, Tide - Tidal physics, Tide - Tidal amplitude and cycle time, Tide - Tidal lag, Tide - Alternative explanation, Tide - Tides & fluids, Tide - Tides and navigation, Tide - Other tides Read more here: » Tide: Encyclopedia II - Tide - Other tides |
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|  |  |  | Cycles of Time: Encyclopedia II - Software development cycle - Development Cycle1. Requirements and Specifications
2. Design
3. Development
4. Implementation
5. Maintenance
Software development cycle - 1. Requirements analysis Phase.
This phase involves the three pillars of successful software project development: Time,Budget, Specifications. This is the step where a client/user, software systems designer and software project manager would create the initial design document, determine the objectives, set the mission/vision, estimate the ...
See also:Software development cycle, Software development cycle - Introduction, Software development cycle - The Doghouse Approach:, Software development cycle - The House Approach:, Software development cycle - The Multi-Story Office Building Approach:, Software development cycle - Development Cycle, Software development cycle - 1. Requirements analysis Phase, Software development cycle - 2. Design phase, Software development cycle - 3. Developing and unit testing phase, Software development cycle - 4. Integration and system testing, Software development cycle - 5. Maintenance Read more here: » Software development cycle: Encyclopedia II - Software development cycle - Development Cycle |
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