(Askeri) EKSENİNE GÖZETLEME: Atışların; silah ile hedefi birleştiren hattın üzerinde veya yakınında bulunan bir noktadan gözetlenmesi. Hedeften silaha ve gözetleyiciye uzatılan hatlar arasında meydana gelen açı 5 den az olmalıdır. Buna "axial spotting" da denir. Ayrıca bakınız: "flank observation"
Movement of the body around its own axis; non-locomotor movement occurring above a stationary base
Describes the two positions in a trigonal bipyramid that lie above and below the trigonal plane See equatorial
Referring to a type of air conditioning compressor that compresses the R-12 refrigerant in a horizontal cylinder and piston compressor Compare to Radial (Remember, Axial is LONG like an axle; Radial is SHORT like a radial tire )
Of or pertaining to an axis; of the nature of or resembling, an axis; around an axis
situated on or along or in the direction of an axis of or relating to or resembling an axis of rotation
The plane of section that runs from the front to the back of the body, dividing it into top and bottom parts Also known as transaxial, cross, or transverse section
in a direction along the axis In smooth laminar flow through a pipe, all particles move in the axial direction The oxygen molecule exhibits axial symmetry
or computed tomography (CT) Diagnostic imaging method using a low-dose beam of X rays that crosses the body in a single plane at many different angles. Conceived by William Oldendorf and developed independently by Godfrey Hounsfield (b. 1919) and Allan M. Cormack, who shared a 1979 Nobel Prize for their inventions, this major advance in imaging technology became generally available in the early 1970s. Detectors record the strength of the exiting X rays; this information is then processed by computer to produce a detailed two-dimensional cross-sectional image of the body. A series of such images in parallel planes or around an axis can show the location of abnormalities (especially tumours and other masses) more precisely than can conventional X-ray images
Tomography in which computer analysis of a series of cross-sectional scans made along a single axis of a bodily structure or tissue is used to construct a three-dimensional image of that structure. The technique is used in diagnostic studies of internal bodily structures, as in the detection of tumors or brain aneurysms