Rate+of+motion

  • 31Motion artifact — PP Visual interference caused by the difference between the frame rate of the camera and the motion of the object. The most common display of this is when filming a computer or television screen. The screen will flicker or a line will scan down… …

    Audio and video glossary

  • 32motion pictures — (movies, pic(s), pix, or moving pictures )   a length of film (with or without sound) with a sequence of images that create an illusion of movement when projected; originally referred to the motion or movement (due to the principle of persistence …

    Glossary of cinematic terms

  • 33Motion graphs and derivatives — The green line shows the slope of the velocity time graph at the particular point where the two lines touch. Its slope is the acceleration at that point. In mechanics, the derivative of the position vs. time graph of an object is equal to the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 34rate — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. ratio, percent, degree, proportion; rank, class; price, value; velocity. See judgment. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Ratio] Syn. proportion, degree, standard, scale, fixed amount, quota, relation,… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 35rate — I n 1. pay, payment, rent, fare, hire, freightage, towage, truckage, wharfage; percentage, commission, brokerage; duty, tax, capitation, custom, toll, tollage; price, cost, expense, charge, Commerce. quotation, Inf. damages, fee, dues;… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 36Mechanics of planar particle motion — Classical mechanics Newton s Second Law History of classical mechanics  …

    Wikipedia

  • 37Centrifugal force (planar motion) — In classical mechanics, centrifugal force (from Latin centrum center and fugere to flee ) is one of the three so called inertial forces or fictitious forces that enter the equations of motion when Newton s laws are formulated in a non inertial… …

    Wikipedia

  • 38High-motion — is the characteristic of video or film footage displayed possessing a sufficiently high frame rate (or field rate) that moving images do not blur or strobe even when tracked closely by the eye. The most common forms of high motion are NTSC and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 39High motion — is the characteristic of video or film footage displayed possessing a sufficiently high frame rate (or field rate) that moving images do not blur or strobe even when tracked closely by the eye. The most common forms of high motion are NTSC and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 40slow-motion — /sloh moh sheuhn/, adj. 1. of, pertaining to or made in slow motion: a slow motion replay. 2. moving or proceeding at a strikingly slow rate: slow motion progress toward a settlement. [1925 30] * * * …

    Universalium