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Muscle that stretches a body part
Answer for the clue "Muscle that stretches a body part ", 6 letters:
tensor
Alternative clues for the word tensor
Word definitions for tensor in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Tensor (Latin tensio "tension", a tensor would then be "someone who tenses") may refer to:
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
Of or relating to tensors n. 1 A muscle that stretches a part, or renders it tense. 2 (context mathematics physics English) An image of a tuple under a tensor product map. 3 (context mathematics physics English) A function of several variables 4 (context ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Tensor \Ten"sor\, n. [NL. See Tension .] (Anat.) A muscle that stretches a part, or renders it tense. (Geom.) The ratio of one vector to another in length, no regard being had to the direction of the two vectors; -- so called because considered as a stretching ...
Usage examples of tensor.
No one, I repeatno onehas used Hamiltonian quaternions since 1915 when tensor analysis was invented.
Morey, for instance, would never have developed the autointegral calculus, to say nothing of tensor and spinor calculus, which were developed two hundred years ago, without the knowledge of the problems of space to develop the need.
He marvelled at the way Schwarzschild geodesies flowed into cheek-planes, the spinors transfigured themselves as eyebrows, and the tensor fields spread out and grew into the forehead of this blazing, inner face.
When Melba reached the dining room with a patch on her head and a tensor round her ankle everyone else was half through.
Einstein obtained through Riemannian geometry and gravitational tensors was derived classically by a German called Paul Gerber, in 1898, when Einstein was nine years old.
The difference, however, is that a mirror rephrasing of this sort results in the antisymmetric tensor field Bμv —the real part of the complexified Kähler form on the mirror Calabi-Yau space—vanishing, and this is a far more drastic sort of singularity than that discussed in Chapter 11.
He says (and with more than a touch of the gibber in his voice) it deflowers, rapes, & pillages, breaks & enters Minkowski's Covariant Tensor.
Being only about to finish high school his training had gone no farther than tensor calculus, statistical mechanics, simple transfinities, generalized geometries of six dimensions, and, on the practical side, analysis for electronics, primary cybernetics and robotics, and basic design of analog computers.
He coasted above the floor, finding treasure everywhere -- lamps, cameras, radios, tape recorders, Tensor lamps, television sets, nose drops, spray cans of paint, plastic models, tropical fish tanks, batteries, soap, scouring pads, light bulbs, canned salted peanuts.
In the first place, there are devices that measure overall gravitational intensity, in both scalar and tensor aspects, at any point in space, whether you know the neighborhood or not.
But Haor Chall had set the fuselage on a pedestal and capped it with two enormous wings, presumably kept from sagging by powerful tensor fields.
He informed me in that schoolmaster way of his that it was because those pioneers did not have the tensor calculus, vector analysis, and matrix algebra.
The trouble was, no words could describe being in linkage: creating n-dimensional spaces, and time-variant curvatures for them, and tensors within, and functions and operations that nobody had ever before imagined.
That amplitude is constantly shifting, of course, but if we get it right, then the torpedo should hold together long enough to emit a magneton pulse that will react with a subspace tensor matrix generated by the Enterprise to create an opening in the space-time continuum.
Instead, he retreated as usual into his private world of tensors and twistors, and despite my own respectable scientific background I couldn't follow him there.