(Elektrik, Elektronik) Dört daldan oluşan ve ikisinin bitişik olmayan giriş uçlarını, diğer ikisinin de çıkış uçlarını oluşturduğu çokgen bağlantılı devre
A periodic arrangement of points such as the vertices of a tiling of space by cubes or the positions of atoms in a crystal More technically, a discrete abelian subgroup of an n-dimensional vector space which not contained in an n-1-dimensional vector space Lattices play a central role in the theory of Lie groups, in number theory, in error-correcting codes, and many other areas of mathematics
small opening (like a window in a door) through which business can be transacted
framework consisting of an ornamental design made of strips of wood or metal an arrangement of points or particles or objects in a regular periodic pattern in 2 or 3 dimensions
A lattice is a pattern or structure made of strips of wood or another material which cross over each other diagonally leaving holes in between. We were crawling along the narrow steel lattice of the bridge
An arrangement in space of isolated points in a regular pattern, which for example show the positions of atoms, molecules, or ions in the structure of a crystal
Any work of wood or metal, made by crossing laths, or thin strips, and forming a network; as, the lattice of a window; called also latticework
The representation of a piece of latticework used as a bearing, the bands being vertical and horizontal
A surface representation that uses a rectangular array of points spaced at a constant sampling interval in the x and y directions relative to a common origin A lattice is stored as a grid, but differs in that it represents the value of the surface only at the mesh points of the lattice rather than the value of the cell area surrounding each mesh point
A lattice is a poset in which any two elements have a greatest lower bound and a least upper bound
A flat panel constructed with widely-spaced crossed thin strips of wood or other material. It is commonly used as a garden trellis
A lattice can be viewed as a grid in an n-dimensional vector space See Section A 5
An orderly arrangement of atoms in a material, usually thought of as an infinite series of "cells" forming a "latticework" of atoms in 3-dimensions A thorough treatment of lattices and other materials issues can be found at the Visualizations in Materials Science WWW site
an arrangement of points or particles or objects in a regular periodic pattern in 2 or 3 dimensions
A discrete subgroup of the additive group of complex numbers Concretely, it is the set of all complex numbers of the form n + n for integers n, n and "periods" and (whose ratio is not a real number)
A surface representation that uses a rectangular array of mesh points spaced at a constant sampling interval in the x and y directions relative to a common origin A lattice is stored as a grid, but represents the value of the surface only at the mesh points rather than the value of the entire cell
the periodic relative arrangement of quadrupoles and drift spaces in an accelerator
In a periodic tiling, if you take any point in the pattern and apply to that point all the translations (but not any of the other 3 types of isometries), what results is a lattice for the pattern An example For periodic tilings, there are 5 types of lattices
A lattice is a collection of elements which form a pattern of bending and focusing magnets and defines the aperture of the magnets Typically an accelerator is composed of "cells" of magnets, or basic collections of magnets which repeat to create a periodic structure The lattice functions are functions which depend only on the periodic structure and the magnets used and which describe the basic parameters of the beams trajectory and size
a three-dimensional system of points designating the positions of the centers of the components of a solid (atoms, ions, or molecules)
the regular spacing (defined by lengths and angles) of the origins of the individual unit cells
a graphlike configuration where each axis is devoted to tones generated by a specific prime number; a two-dimensional lattice (i e , on a page) is confined to a tuning system using two primes A lattice of tones combines the graph principle with staff notation by skewing the direction of both axes A lattice of twelve notes refers to the twelve most simply derived ratios; an extended lattice includes indefinitely more notes; a chord lattice abandons the staff notation and shows the major and minor triads by chord symbols only; in a key lattice, the symbols stand for keys
1 In nuclear physics, a geometric pattern, as, the pattern in which fuel and moderator are interspersed in a heterogeneous reactor
Descriptive of tower and substation structures designed with skew as well as horizontal and vertical members Design generally used in the BPA system
The regular periodic arrangement of ATOM or MOLECULE in a crystal, like in some PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL
is an abstract base class which presents an interface to a finite-volume, linear, rectangular, or hyper-rectangular structure The Lattice is fundamentally described by its shape
Space lattice Lattice lines and lattice planes are lines and planes chosen so as to pass through collinear lattice points, and non-collinear lattice points, respectively
A geometric arrangement of the points in space at which the atoms, molecules, or ions of a crystal occur. Also called space lattice. Three-dimensional configuration of points connected by lines used to describe the orderly arrangement of atoms in a crystal. Each point represents one or more atoms in the actual crystal. The lattice is divided into a number of identical blocks or cells that are repeated in all directions to form a geometric pattern. Lattices are classified according to their dominant symmetries: isometric, trigonal, hexagonal, tetragonal, orthorhombic, monoclinic, and triclinic. Compounds that exhibit a crystal-lattice structure include sodium chloride (table salt), cesium chloride, and boron nitride. See also solid-state physics
Something that is latticed is decorated with or is in the form of a lattice. latticed doors The surface of the brain is pinky-grey and latticed with tiny blood vessels
() From Middle English latis, from Middle French lattis (“lathing”), from Old French lattis, from latte (“a lath”), of Germanic origin, from Frankish *latta (“a lath”), from Proto-Germanic *lattō(n), *laþþṓ(n), *laþḗn (“lath, board”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)lat- (“beam, log”). Cognate with Old High German latta (German Latte, “lath”), Old English lætt (“lath”), Middle Low German lāde (“plank, counter, sales counter”), German Laden (“shop”). More at lath.