Sentences with phrase «few fractions of a second»

Not only did the five - door missile manage to trump the AWD, V -8-powered Audi B7 RS4 on its way to snatch the title, it also outpaced its lighter and shorter hot - hatch stablemate by a few fractions of a second, despite the three - door setting a new FWD record last year.
While this isn't an issue for music streaming, even nominal lag can create sync issues between the on - screen video and the audio, meaning the actions on screen will occur a few fractions of a second before you hear any sound.

Not exact matches

That's how agonizingly close Wojciech Szczesny was to actually saving this; a few centimeters and a couple fractions of a second.
A car traveling at highway speeds would not linger on any single charging pad for more than a fraction of a second, so the pads would need to be placed every few meters to provide a continuous charge.
In the span of a fraction of a second to a few minutes, gamma - ray bursts spew out 1020 times as much energy as the sun.
It might take a few seconds to establish the presence of the snake and formulate a response via the high road, but the low road kicks the body into a freezing response within a fraction of a second.
«In laser fusion, an ignited target is like a miniature star of about a 10th of a millimeter, which produces the energy equivalent of a few gallons of gasoline over a fraction of a billionth of a second.
Here are just a few top tips that can help you create eLearning voice overs that engage, entertain, and enlighten your learners in a fraction of a second.
It only lasts for a fraction of a second, doesn't continue once the engine is running, and doesn't happen if I shut the engine off and start it again a few minutes later.
The bags inflate within a fraction of a second and deflate after a few seconds.
The swift sprint through the Mushroom Kingdom has only seen incremental gains over the last few years, with runners besting times by fractions of a second.
I, perhaps like you, have run a business and employed people but very few of us have had a fraction of the success that Paul Polak has, (he is mentioned in the second paragraph of the article).
According to one reference, in the normal atmosphere, all of the O3 is destroyed by UV photolysis every few minutes, leading to the formation of free O atoms, and all of the O atoms are immediately consumed in reactions with O2 to reform O3 in a fraction of a second.
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