A structure made of connected strands of metal, fiber, or other flexible/ductile material, with evenly spaced openings between them
A measure of fineness (particle size) of ground material. A powder that passes through a sieve having 300 openings per linear inch but does not pass 400 openings per linear inch is said to be -300 +400 mesh
The opening or space enclosed by the threads of a net between knot and knot, or the threads enclosing such a space
contact by fitting together; "the engagement of the clutch"; "the meshing of gears"
An any-to-any network in which a node is connected to virtually any other node in a collection of cross-connect links, implemented using OXCs This can allow very efficient routing, but can be expensive to implement
Grading of particle size according to passage through a standard sieve with a known number of filaments per inch Substances graded at 80/100 mesh are those which pass through a screen with 80 filaments per inch but are retained by a screen with 100 filaments per inch
(expanded metal) - This is the nominal distance from the mid-point of one bond in expanded metal to the mid-point of the next bond measured across the SWD Mesh is expressed in inches
Medical Subject Headings; an alphabetic and categorized list of subject descriptors created by the National Library of Medicine to analyze biomedical literature
{i} open spaces in a net or screen; material (threads, wires, or cords, etc.) used to make an object with open spaces in it; something made from a woven material; something that catches or traps; that which fits together like gears
Medical Subject Headings, the thesaurus for Medline; a controlled vocabulary providing consistent terminology for concepts covered by the database
the topology of a network whose components are all connected directly to every other component
A type of fabric characterized by its net-like open appearance, and the spaces between the yarns Mesh is available in a variety of constructions including wovens, knits, laces, or crocheted fabrics
(n ) A topology in which nodes form a regular acyclic d-dimensional grid, and each edge is parallel to a grid axis and joins two nodes that are adjacent along that axis The architecture of many multicomputers is a two or three dimensional mesh; meshes are also the basis of many scientific calculations, in which each node represents a point in space, and the edges define the neighbours of a node See also hypercube, torus