Propagation in a sentence as a noun

Es on 6M is fun, but I want some months long round-the-world F2 propagation modes.

If the propagation speed of changes in spacetime geometry were equal to the speed of light, that'd be fine.

Since DNS propagation takes some time, many active users were able to switch their forms to the new domain before it went down.

Both health risks and chances of propagation are significantly reduced.

For ham radio HF propagation above 20 meters?

It also has ablative properties and resists flame propagation.

The compiler could do constant propagation for the number of arguments and you'd have little overhead in your function calls.

Synchronous circuits avoid the issues of wave front propagation by pausing until the signal has reached all over the circuit.

Modern CPU pipelines have backward propagation that can resolve RAW hazards without stalling the pipeline.

The three most important techniques are backtracking, constraint propagation and conflict learning.

With a good promise library this is a one-liner using a well tested library function.#2 Error propagation.

Some examples of this are signal integrity, metastability, transmission lines, propagation delays, timing closure, SSO, etc.

The selfish miners unanimously adopt and extend the previously private branch, while the honest miners will choose to mine on either branch, depending on the propagation of the notifications.

""The above solutions were generated without compensating for ionospheric propagation delays using parameters in page 18 of subframe 4 which should be applied because this is a single frequency receiver.

66ms of latency on top is going slow things down considerably, and when games are poorly coded and dump a few additional frames on top - which could happen because of propagation through events and subsystems, network latency, or animation concerns - the control starts to feel "wrong" in a hard-to-identify way.

He sees then that a system of nature could indeed subsist with such a universal law although men ... should let their talents rest and resolve to devote their lives merely to idleness, amusement, and propagation of their species- in a word, to enjoyment; but he cannot possibly will that this should be a universal law of nature, or be implanted in us as such by a natural instinct.

Propagation definitions

noun

the spreading of something (a belief or practice) into new regions

See also: extension

noun

the act of producing offspring or multiplying by such production

See also: generation multiplication

noun

the movement of a wave through a medium