During the low-pressure phase of each sound wave, bubbles expanded rapidly. |
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It has a mini ramp, a half pipe, a bauer box, 3 quarter pipes, a few boxes, a wave ramp, a starting box, and a picnic table. |
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She tried to smile warmly at him, but it turned more into a grimace, so she sufficed with a simple wave before walking on. |
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From the opening handshake to the final wave, Tabby did most of the talking and came across as a genuinely charming character. |
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If you wish to have a slight wave to the hair instead of lots of volume, use a curling iron or Velcro rollers to achieve a delicate wave. |
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We finger-styled Tamara's hair fresh out of the shower, coaxing out the natural wave in her otherwise pin-straight hair. |
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Standing at well over six feet, he had long, dark hair with a slight wave to it that just brushed his shoulders. |
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They had styled my hair by blowing it out straight so that even the ends were perfect without any of my natural wave or curl. |
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Sure, my outfit was great and my hair held a natural wave that I didn't want to mess with. |
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Applied to wet hair, it stretches out the wave to mimic the texture of relaxed hair. |
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Beyond this point, the damping steals energy from the wave and its amplitude quickly declines. |
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The shape, size, and configuration of the transmitting antenna defines the wave frequency and the shape of the transmitted wave. |
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When cornering the first one we found out that when the tracking device was positioned in between the two signals that the wave was disrupted. |
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Regular commuters to Dublin can also wave the bus down along the route each morning and they will be picked up. |
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The group of wavefronts is called a spectral decomposition wave of the ultrashort pulse. |
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All objects have a wave function which represents the probability of locating that object at a particular point in space. |
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This is important because a long wavelength means that the sound wave can pass around barriers, like rocks, easily. |
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In 1926, Schrodinger developed a theory of wave mechanics that treated electrons as waves rather than particles. |
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The spectra were first converted from wavelength to wave number and then fitted with a superposition of Gaussians. |
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Changing the temperature from above to below the lipid phase transition shifted the band position to somewhat higher wave numbers. |
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The integration variable in Eq. 1 may be any spectral variable, wavelength, wave number, energy or frequency. |
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For Raymer, the experiment was impressive because it produced single photons in well defined wave packets. |
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And when they repeated the experiment without interactions between the atoms, they saw obvious evidence for spreading of the wave packet. |
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The pressure on the landscape could be relieved if wind power follows wave power out to the ocean. |
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Considerable interest in wave power in the the 1970s and 1980s was triggered by an oil crisis but many of the designs produced were never made. |
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How does the cost of electricity generated through wave power compare to coal or other renewables like solar or wind? |
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Scotland is surrounded by the North Sea, offering fish, oil and natural gas, and potentially tidal and wave power. |
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Shell is investing in renewable energy technologies such as solar, wind power and wave power. |
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But developments in hydrogen production using solar, wind and wave power, give hope of breakthrough within a decade or two. |
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More support is needed for newer technologies, such as wave power, and for energy conservation. |
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At first, try the move on the first wave in a wave train because it will have the most distinct shape compared to the chop that comes later. |
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No sooner have we regained the river than we're riding another fast wave train. |
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We rushed down a granite chute, our kayaks smashing through wave trains, and spilled into a quiet pool. |
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That factor can also be understood in terms of the longer wave train created in an earthquake of large magnitude. |
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I cut out another wave, pleased with the way I had captured a few tendrils of waviness at the end of it. |
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Unlike burning coal or oil, wave and wind machines do not spew sulphur and cause acid rain. |
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We are being invaded by hard rock, acid rock, punk rock, new wave, and heavy metal music under the guise of religious rock and roll. |
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I looked up, right at him, and didn't smile, wave, or even acknowledge him in any way. |
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He never entered a carriage but stood on the outside platform, and though he wouldn't wave back, he always bowed in acknowledgement. |
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As she launched herself forward with one arm cocked back as a feint, he threw a forceful punch releasing a wave of concussive force. |
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The first wave of fresh buying often goes into tracker funds, which invest in shares across the board, irrespective of the sector. |
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You know the blockers are doing theft jobs when Holmes consistently is getting by the initial wave of defenders. |
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The new simulator recreates the speed and force of an explosive shock wave using computer-controlled hydraulic actuators. |
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He could see Captain Mason supervising his crew, and once under weigh, saw him wave and salute. |
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She cupped a warm glass of tea in her nimble fingers, as she watched the translucent wave of of mist roll over the English country side. |
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He was also passed a demodulator unit, which was to be connected to the short wave radio when a message was to be received. |
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These millimeter wave frequencies have been used for radio astronomy, space-based cloud imaging, and various military applications. |
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This latest atrocity has sent a fresh shock wave to jolt us out of our complacency. |
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All of a sudden, the ship jolted from sided to side as if a wave had tried to push it over. |
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The silence drew out, raining down on her ears endlessly until it grew its own sound, a buzzing like a radio wave. |
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Working on the 13.56 MHz frequency, a radio wave ricochets off the chip, picking up a code that identifies the bearer. |
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The local system will be delivered by radio wave directly to the user and will provide 24 hour connection. |
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All in all, what's left is a distinctive set of pulses, the imprint of the radio wave being intermittently altered by the gravity wave. |
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Terahertz radiation represents the last unexplored frontier of the radio wave and light spectrum, Nori said. |
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Light according to Maxwell is an electromagnetic wave, no different in essence to radio waves or the microwaves that heat up our ready meals. |
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When I heard their footsteps fade and their door close I felt a sudden wave of relief wash over me. |
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When he didn't call again, a wave of sadness washed over me, but it contained a bit of relief. |
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He felt a wave of sadness wash over him again, but he ignored it, like he did every day. |
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Therese stepped into the stables, a sudden wave of suspicion washing over her. |
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The pain from his wounds suddenly washed over him like a tidal wave, ten times worse than before. |
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Suddenly a wave of homesickness washed over me, almost more than I could bear. |
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The wave of nausea that usually accompanied a good bruising hit me as I swayed unsteadily on my feet. |
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Nosing into the wave, called purling, will usually result in your quick exit from the board. |
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Swimming pools, diving boards, wave making machines, water slides and many other attractions were on offer on the night. |
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He didn't come out, he didn't wave or slide the window open to yell for me. |
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Don't encourage your children to wave from the windows, as they might try to climb up when you're out of the room. |
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As you sing the song the next time, you wave your left hand in time with the music. |
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Even before birth, babies repeatedly kick their legs, wave their arms, and bring their hands to the mouth. |
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They have no use for the dignified thumb sign, but wave their hands recklessly in an attempt to attract the rider and somehow get him to stop. |
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Leaving their hotel room to go to the Peppermint Lounge, the lads wave a sweet goodbye to the two-man camera crew. |
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But for today you wave a sad farewell as it floats back off into the night sky. |
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A new survey reveals that less than a quarter of people wait on the platform to wave their loved one farewell until the train has pulled out. |
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For example, guards may wave people they know through, leaving no record of who is in the facility. |
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As he posed for photographs near the shore a huge wave knocked him from his perch and almost carried him out to sea. |
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As a large wave approaches the shore, the two take off in a race for the beach. |
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He had anticipated this move though for as soon as she broke the surface a wave of water hit her. |
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The upward tendency in arms exports has generated a new wave of company mergers, especially in the aerospace industry. |
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Plans to lift prices earlier this year were postponed after a wave of protests. |
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His soft brown eyes slowly drifted to meet my very confused and puzzled gaze and with a simple wave of the hand gestured for me to take a seat. |
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With a wave Patric walked casually outside the store and found a small bench on the other side of this ornamental bush where he sat himself down. |
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He gave me a small wave and walked back to his beat up little station wagon. |
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His every step all day was taken to applause acknowledged with a thumbs-up gesture, a wave, a nod. |
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We greeted each other with a wave and I gestured for him to look at the door. |
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He studied continuum mechanics, lunar theory with Clairaut, the three body problem, elasticity, acoustics, the wave theory of light, hydraulics, and music. |
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The couple, from Doncaster, were sleeping in their first-floor bedroom when the first wave hit and floodwater washed through the ground floor of their hotel. |
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For every can of water he tossed out, another wave washed in. |
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He'd been meditating when the first wave arrived, almost washing into the temple, and now he was coordinating the distribution of aid to approximately 2000 people. |
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Her hair had a slight wave to it from it always being in a ponytail. |
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My eyelids begin to droop, and a sudden wave of exhaustion washes over me. |
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Her hair was white-blonde with a slight wave and she had sky blue eyes. |
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Then with a small wave, he walked down the hallway and out the door. |
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The problem is that the Government gives such a small band to operate in and effectively the radio wave we use for the key fob is restricted because of that. |
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The bartender will acknowledge this with a similar gesture or a wave. |
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Harnessing both offshore wind and wave power could provide at least 15 per cent of the total carbon savings required to meet the UK's 2050 targets, analysts found. |
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What's the longest radio wave that therefore, has the lowest frequency? |
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Stromness has been chosen as a test site for wave power in Scotland. |
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Then, on a subsequent large wave, the fish wash back into the ocean. |
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Scotland has been urged to lead the way on finding new ways to make electricity, most obviously by harnessing our own natural wind and wave power. |
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Such a move would be seen as a significant boost to Scotland's bid to become a world leader in the development and commercialisation of wave power. |
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It is straight and flat with no curl, but may have a slight wave. |
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During the 1750s French Huguenots suffered the last great wave of state-sponsored persecution, and Jansenists within the Gallican Church fared little better. |
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He was clean shaven, had dark hair which was around one-and-a-half inches long with a slight wave, and was wearing a black hooded top with black jeans. |
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Her long dark blonde hair had a natural wave and hung half to her waist. |
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A wave of green fire sped across the room like a wake left by waterskiers. |
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I have a slight wave in my hair so it looks choppy when it is roughly cut. |
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The amplitude of a wave tells you how much energy the wave has. |
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This is undoubtedly a good thing, as it allows him to wave his arms about and shout with little danger of catching innocent bystanders on the chin. |
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The man himself is, however, quick to wave the formalities aside. |
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There are ready smiles from residents who wave their greetings as we eventually head off the road and towards a small clutch of humble wooden dwellings. |
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The police advise you not to stop if they wave you down in the middle of the night but rather speed past them and drive to your nearest police station. |
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As the pulse evolves the carrier wave can therefore become out of phase with the amplitude envelope, which can lead to a variety of different electric-field waveforms. |
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A bipolar waveform can be in the form of sine waves, or other wave shapes. |
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On the other, if he squeaks out a victory in a GOP wave year, Republicans may be skeptical that he has coattails. |
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We are tired of this city using development as a new wave of Jim Crowism. |
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And this latest wave of complaints about the behavior won't be the last. |
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Entangled particles are inextricably entwined because they share the same wave function, or quantum description, and therefore, in a sense, the same future. |
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In fact on the rare occasions when she did unbraid her dark blonde tresses they flowed down her back in a rippling wave, permanently creased from the braiding. |
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But I'll tell you, it hasn't stopped this wave of illegal immigration. |
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After the mid-19th century there was a wave of mass migration of poor Europeans to North America, and to other colonies, such as Brazil and South Africa. |
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It can also be modulated, like a radio wave, to carry information. |
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This latest wave of violence is being looked at very closely. |
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But the enduring depression led to a wave of negative equity. |
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I suspect that the series of waves in the wave train was smaller at farther shores too, and that there were fewer noticeable waves on African shores than Southeast Asian ones. |
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Kris burst into a fresh wave of sobs as she collapsed in Mike's arms. |
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It was a scene repeated at polling stations across America last week as an unprecedented wave of early voting signalled a potentially sharp rise in overall turnout. |
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That's when a first wave of Web hosting companies burst onto the market. |
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When any part of the radio wave is reflected to the fuze from the target, an interaction or doppler signal occurs between the reflected transmitted wave. |
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Huygens stated that an expanding sphere of light behaves as if each point on the wave front were a new source of radiation of the same frequency and phase. |
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Mr. Krupp made a dismissive wave of his hand, as if to quiet his wife. |
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The phones work by changing the sound of your voice into a radio wave, which it then sends out through an antenna. |
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The wave has already caused serious damage to the sparsely populated Juan Fernandez islands, off the Santiago coast, local radio reported. |
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This radio telescope will be used to study the Sun's radio wave emission that may be produced by solar activity. |
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The first encoded a pure tone in a traditional radio wave with peaks and troughs lined up neatly in a single, two-dimensional plane. |
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Additionally, the box features an interface that allows for USB and LAN connections while maintaining radio wave damping and can also efficiently vent heat. |
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The candidates were at the microphone early and often started to wave the crowd to be silent until the radioman signaled that the circuit was open. |
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Having already faced a 45ft freak wave, the crew's the Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon was triggered by heavy seas which hit the craft while she was on sea anchor. |
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