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hysteresis The phenomenon by which an effect in a component depends not only on the present stimulus, but also on the previous state of the component.
Ãâó: www.endura.com/glossary.asp
hysteresis Dependence of the output signal, after transients have decayed, upon the history of prior inputs and the direction of the current traverse.
Ãâó: www.geomechanics.com/dspapp.cfm
hysteresis The distance, in pixels, from the location of a mouse-down event, to the limit in which the cursor is considered not to have moved.
Ãâó: www.vrtoolbox.com/qtvrglossaryhi.html
hysteresis When a load cell is taken from zero to full load and back to zero the mV output for a given load value will be slightly different when the load is rising to when the load is falling. The maximum difference is used to calculate the hysteresis. Normally quoted as a percentage of full load.
Ãâó: www.pcm-uk.com/definitions.htm
hysteresis The energy lost and not returned, when tire materials are subjected to stress in any direction. Lost energy is converted to heat through molecular interaction, and since rubber has poor thermal conductivity, internal temperatures of a tire can build up rapidly under repeated flexing.
Ãâó: earthmover.webmichelin.com/na_eng/Pages/Glossary2....
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