Citations:axiis

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English citations of axiis

Noun: "(rare) plural of axis"[edit]

1992 1994 1999 2014 2015 2022
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
    • 1992 July 11, Bill Richardson, “Time's Arrow - An Approach”, in alt.sci.physics.new-theories[1] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-10-16:
      My information says that time (and therefore events) are measurable to 10e-34 second after the big bang. It also says the universe will also expand forever, as the mass in the centre is not great enough to attract the universe back to the centre via gravity. If this is the case, then time (within the system) is measureable,[sic] as from a starting point, whereas the other cartesian axiis are continually expanding in two directions / axis. Therefore, as you say, an eternal view is required to view time in any other dimension, by definition. If this is the case, then the only future we may know in advance is possibility, from information received from bodies that have already passed that way before ous.[sic] The choice which future we take is ours. Any information transfer from past to present, as you have enlightened me, is limited by the dimensions, ie a lot must fit into a little. I think we need a new model to view this, as the information is obviously around us, but we haven't learnt to maximise its benefit yet.
    • 1994 May 31, Carl Laurence Gonsalves, “Can I yaw using only pitch & roll?”, in comp.graphics.algorithms[2] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-10-16:
      Yes, I considered this. The above will work provide all three axiis are the same: either all relative or all absolute. If one is absolute and the other is relative then it's not possible to get yaw. I was assuming the existing system was consistent though...
    • 1999 April 24, Michael E. Carver, “possible? seperate[sic] axis for TM GP-1?”, in rec.autos.simulators[3] (Usenet), retrieved 2022-10-16:
      What I have done is used a double pole double positon switch to allow me to switch between both pedals on one axis (the normal one), and the pedals on two seperate[sic] axiis. It works very well.
    • 2014 November 12, Aaron Holwick, “Torque on lead screw based on psi”, in Physics Forums[4], Mechanical Engineering Forum, archived from the original on 2022-10-16:
      So in a cnc machine, the screw that drives the x,y,z axiis are called "lead screws". I am constructing a machine that displences[sic] fluid at percise[sic] volumes. It will be essencially[sic] a seringe[sic] with one way valves coming in and going out. To open the "check valve" it requires at least 1.5 psi. If I am using a motor, with a lead screw to push down the plunger in the syringe, how much torque will I need to create 1.5+ psi in the syringe cylinder?
    • 2015 April 12, ShuRugal, “x55 buttons not recognized, throttle axiis only recognized under devce[sic] ID 5”, in GitHub[5], archived from the original on 2022-10-16:
      My saitek X55 buttons are not recognized by UJR at all, and the throttle axiis are only recognized if i assign it to ID 5 with Joystick ID Swapper.
    • 2022 March 6, EulerFanGirl, “Bottom text”, in Reddit[6], mathmemes, archived from the original on 2022-10-16:
      I remember that the area of an ellipse is half the long axis times half the short axis times pi. But not Circumference.
      This raised the question though, would a "unit ellipse" have a long axis of one or a short axis of one? Or would the average of the axiis be one? I think rather, it cannot exist.