Sentences with phrase «relatively wide bands»

When one looks at Yellow Jacket, 1969, one notices yellow used in a variety of ways: On the right, narrow vertical lines of yellow are tightly interspersed with orange lines; on the left, blue and pink stripes are sandwiched between relatively wide bands of lemon; and in roughly the center, medium - size gold stripes emerge from within a broad swath of lime green.
Power comes from a twin - turbocharged 4.0 - liter V8 that produces 416 horsepower between 5,250 and 5,500 rpm and 450 pound - feet of torque over a relatively wide band that stretches from 2,250 to 4,750 rpm.

Not exact matches

The heart of a jet stream is a relatively narrow band of strong wind a few hundred miles wide that can reach speeds of more than 200 miles per hour.
Additionally, in zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata), which produce a wide range of broad - band note types, expansion of the OEC has also been found to affect frequency patterns by shifting energy to relatively lower frequencies while amplitude generally increases (Ohms et al., 2010b).
There are still the impressive qualities of the twinturbo engine: immediate responsiveness and a wide torque plateau reached relatively low in the rpm band.
The MultiAir has a wide, relatively flat power band, making its most torque from 2,500 rpm to 4,000 rpm.
I agree with the overall scenario (and was actually thinking of posting something similar), except that I suspect that instabilities and the Earth's rotation would cause the pattern to break up into relatively narrow latitudinal bands perhaps as little as a few tens of kilometres wide, with a sort of helical circulation in each (like a rope).
For the further comparison with other paleoclimate data, therefore, the MXD reconstruction is used; although the reader should take note that the relatively low sample replication in the MXD data generally gives a wider error band (Fig. 5).
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