- A chip
log, also
called common log,
ship log, or just
log, is a
navigation tool
mariners use to
estimate the
speed of a
vessel through water. The word...
- A
logbook (a
ship's logs or
simply log) is a
record of
important events in the management, operation, and
navigation of a
ship. It is
essential to traditional...
- plants,
particle accelerators, and
ships (among
other applications). The term
logbook originated with the
ship's log, a
maritime record of
important events...
-
Gaussian or
LoG, an
algorithm used in
digital image processing Logbook, or
log, a
record of
important events in the
operation of a
ship Chip
log, or
log, a tool...
- and was
recorded in a
ship's log or logbook. To sign in
connotes the same idea but is
based on the
analogy of
manually signing a
log book or visitor's book...
- was from 11
November 1762,
which meant that the
ship had been lost in the
Arctic for 13 years. As the
log was frozen, it
slipped from the binding, leaving...
-
Pitometer logs (also
known as pit
logs) are
devices used to
measure a
ship's speed relative to the water. They are used on both
surface ships and submarines...
- Parsons] and
sixteen sailors),
according to the
three logs (Captain's
log,
Ship's log, Master's
log).
Spartiate returned to her home port of
Plymouth for...
- a
ship. It is part of the
pitometer log, a
device for
measuring the
ship's speed through the water.
Electromagnetic log Pitot tube "Underwater
Log Systems"...
- and
log-metres, have no
physical significance, but were
rather chosen for
historical convenience.
Since gross tonnage is a
bijective function of
ship volume...