BREAKWATERS ON WAVE ENERGY DISSIPATION ABSTRACT The northern Egyptian coasts are subjected to many changes in shoreline balance due to waves and coastal currents. To protect and develop these coasts‚ many types of coastal protection structures have been used. This research demonstrates the effect of different systems of coastal protection structures on wave energy dissipation. By using the CGWAVE numerical model‚ the effect of each one and interaction between these structures on wave height could
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1.1 the wave 1 extension distance rule 2.1 the shape of wave 2 rule 2.2 the short correction wave 2 rule 2.3 the forecast of wave 2 rule 2.4 the most common retracement of wave 2 rule 3.1 the 3rd of an extended third rule 3.2 the wave 3 steepness relative to wave 1 rule 3.3 the 2nd and 3rd targets of wave 3 rule 4.1 the triangle in fourth wave forecasting wave 5 rule 4.2 the length of wave 4 relative to a wave within it rule 4.3 the large correction of wave 2 forecasting wave 4 rule 4.4 the most
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biomass energy. Wave power‚ as one of inexhaustible clean energies‚ stands out prominently due to high efficiency and low capital cost. As a result‚ Sea wave power has been increasingly viewed in many countries as a competitive and promising energy resource(You‚ 2003). China’s engagement in the study of wave energy conversion since 1970’s has made significant progress in fueling China’s fast growing economy. And there is still great potential of further exploitation of wave energy as about
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Universal Impact of the Hallyu Wave The Korean wave‚ otherwise known as Hallyu‚ originated from the Korean success in film marketing. The wave began in East Asia around the 1990s and spread globally to parts of Europe‚ the United States‚ and even Latin America (Ravina 2009). This phenomenon has led to thousands of non-Koreans to question how the Korean wave originated. Authors like Shim Dooboo‚ Shin Solee‚ and Kim Lanu revisit the possible causes of the success of the Korean Wave. While Shim Dooboo argues
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Imagine a huge towering tsunami. Focus on all the details. Now imagine a rogue wave‚ or at least what you think a rogue wave is. Do the same thing. Do you see any similarities...any differences ? While you may think there are no similarities‚ or no differences‚ you will find that there are some of both‚ in the ways that they are formed‚ where they happen‚ and how to predict them. According to source one‚ “rogue waves seem especially likely to occur in places in the ocean where currents collide”.
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electromagnetic waves : cable bounded waves ⇔ free space waves 2 ©Kathrein/Scholz 07/04 Antenna Basics / Theory antenna principle shown by bending a coax cable open the pulsing electrical field‚ created by the transmitter‘s high frequency power‚ cannot leave the cable the field lines become longer and are orthogonal to the wires 1 2 3 ©Kathrein/Scholz 07/04 Antenna Basics / Theory the field lines have reached the maximum length and allow a wave to free itself
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Yagi-Uda antenna 4.3 SIMULATED RESULTS After simulating the design different parameters of antenna are obtained such as return loss‚ gain‚ directivity‚ VSWR and radiation efficiency. (a) Return loss: Return loss is related to both standing wave ratio (SWR) and reflection coefficient (Γ). Increasing
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Concept In The Elliott Wave Principle — A Critical Appraisal‚ Hamilton Bolton made this opening statement: As we have advanced through some of the most unpredictable economic climate imaginable‚ covering depression‚ major war‚ and postwar reconstruction and boom‚ I have noted how well Elliott’s Wave Principle has fitted into the facts of life as they have developed‚ and have accordingly gained more confidence that this Principle has a good quotient of basic value. "The Wave Principle" is Ralph Nelson
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The Elliott wave principle is a form of technical analysis that attempts to forecast trends in the financial markets and other collective activities. It is named after Ralph Nelson Elliott (1871–1948)‚ an accountant who developed the concept in the 1930s: he proposed that market prices unfold in specific patterns‚ which practitioners today call Elliott waves. Elliott published his views of market behavior in the book The Wave Principle (1938)‚ in a series of articles in Financial World magazine in
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THE FRENCH NEW WAVE LA NOUVELLE VAUGE During the German occupation French cinema thrived‚ this was due to the protection given to it from foreign competition. When the war ended American films flooded into the French market‚ these films were greeted with great enthusiasm‚ as many were curious about all aspects of American culture. The Blums-Byrnes Agreement regulated the flow of foreign films in the French market. This agreement stated that French films could only be shown for 13 weeks
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