| overshoot | 1. Generally, any initial change, in response to a sudden step change in some factor, that is greater than the steady-state response to the new level of that factor; common in systems in which inertia or a time lag in negative feedback outweighs any damping that may be present. Changes in a negative direction are sometimes distinguished by the term undershoot, and the two may alternate in an oscillatory fashion, as in the transient oscillations of a pendulum when released from an initial displacement. 2. Momentary reversal of the membrane potential of a cell (inside becoming positive rather than negative relative to the outside) during an action potential; considered a form of overshoot because, before discovery of overshoot, excitation was thought merely to depolarise the membrane to zero transmembrane potential. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| overshoot |
shoot beyond or over (a target) an approach that fails and gives way to another attempt aim too high; "The plan overshoots its aim"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| overshoot |
That portion of an arc digitized past its intersection with another arc. See also dangling arc. P
Ãâó: www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/1224/terms/esri_gl...
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| overshoot |
A condition that obtains when the momentum of a particle carries it past its equilibrium point.
Ãâó: www.angelfire.com/stars5/astroinfo/gloss/o.html
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| overshoot |
The number of degrees that a process exceeds the set point temperature when coming up to the set point temperature.
Ãâó: www.flw.com/define_o.htm
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| overshoot |
1. The amount of output measured beyond the final steady output value, in response to a step change in the measurand. NOTE: (S) Expressed in percent of the equivalent step change in output. 2. A transient response to a step change in an input signal which exceeds the normal or expected steady state response. 3. The maximum difference between the transient response and the steady state response. http://www.iica.org.au/html/dict-i. ...
Ãâó: www.control.co.kr/dic/dic-o.htm
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| overshoot | an approach that fails and gives way to another attempt |
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| overshoot | aim too high |
| overshoot | shoot beyond or over (a target) |
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