0 present participle of vibrate
1 to shake slightly and quickly, or to cause something to do this, in a way that is felt rather than seen or heard:
The method suits the simulation of one-dimensional resonators particularly well (vibrating strings, acoustic tubes, thin bars), which are found in many families of musical instruments.
One of the basic problems in classical vibration analysis is to determine the natural frequencies and normal modes of the vibrating body.
The motion of a rigid particle in an inviscid non-uniformly vibrating ambient liquid is considered.
The second important influence on the frequency is the mass of vibrating atoms, the larger the mass, the slower the vibration.
In the presence of a female, the male becomes violently excited and approaches her with wings raised and antennae vibrating.
In the same way, the shortening of a vibrating string increases its pitch.
The piling system uses a method of vibrating each pile into the ground - a less noisy method than traditional driven piles.
They produced a boundary-layer wave downstream of a vibrating ribbon and found that bxeakdown was first noticed in the high amplitude portions of the wave.