0 past simple and past participle of radiate --
1 to produce heat and/or light, or (of heat or light) to be produced: --
2 to show an emotion or quality, or (of an emotion or quality) to be shown or felt: --
3 to spread out in all directions from a central point: --
Higher sound power is radiated at the instants of large rate of change of vortex core asymmetry.
Hence, there is no need for the flow to change as the trailing edge enters it and no sound is radiated.
On the other hand, in providing the parish clergy, it radiated influence into the outside world.
First, there is no evidence (numerical or observational) that the wave field radiated by the vortex can be considered as quasiresonant.
The danger in such language, of course, was that it radiated a paternalistic, even elitist, stance.
Both patients presented here had severe pain that radiated to the back, systemic hypertension, and anxiety suggestive of dissecting aortic aneurysm.
The main attention is focused on the estimates of the power radiated by the beam when its modulation frequency lies in the whistler range.
This effect radiated far beyond their immediate activities.