1 the period of time that is needed to do an activity or process:
a timescale for sth A draft released late last night contains no firm timescale for cutting emissions.
set/give/determine a timescale The SEC has not yet set a timescale for registration of the new funds.
within/in/over a timescale You have the right to cancel your order if it fails to show within the timescale specified.
put a timescale on sth At present, we are unable to put a timescale on public funding cuts.
a reasonable/tight/agreed timescale
a 90-day/12-month/30-year, etc. timescale Biotech companies typically have a 10 to 15-year timescale for product development.
Lowpass can also be viewed as a time averaging of the input, so it extracts the large timescale motion of the input.
At this timescale, however, near-surface vortices are affected by external currents, bottom topography, wind, etc., and the whole approach has to be revised.
The new model is called the autoregressive conditional intensity model and it has the advantage of being simple and of maintaining the calendar timescale.
The system design therefore had to be altered, cutting out some of the complexities and extending the project timescale.
Instead, we must use a much longer, geological timescale.
Due to its short characteristic timescale, in the order of 10x13 s, vibrational spectroscopy provides a snapshot of the sample conformer population.
Alternatively male rarity could be too recent a phenomenon on an evolutionary timescale to have generated a female territorial response.
Separate target-participants may be replaced by their aggregates when they equilibriate on a timescale at least as fast as the timescale of the problem itself.
中文繁体
(某事發生的)一段時間,起止時間…
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(某事发生的)一段时间,起止时间…
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escala de tempo, prazo…
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okres (czasu ), skala czasowa, scenariusz…
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oluş süreci, meydana gelme süresi…
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