0 present participle of peak --
1 to reach the highest, strongest, or best point, value, or level of skill: --
Official figures show that unemployment peaked in November.
In this case, the breakdown voltage of a gas peaking gap depends on gas pressure and gap distance, individually.
For example, peaking the input angular-distribution near the channel axis results in the decreased amount of strikes during the layering.
Angular distribution and forward peaking of laser produced plasma ions.
Even for a given input pulse, the voltage pulse applied to a peaking gap is different for different gap distance.
The mean percentage of positive faecal samples increased to 81.43% in the third week post-infection, peaking in the fourth week (91.43%).
It is very useful for the generation of laser based ion sources, which can produce a collimated beam of ions due to forward peaking.
Delayed emesis can persist up to five days after cisplatin administration, peaking in intensity at 48 to 72 hours.
But after 1986, the income of nonparticipant entrepreneurs steadily increases, peaking after 1992.