ocular window
(noun)
A circular opening without tracery, such as are found in many Italian churches.
Examples of ocular window in the following topics:
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Characteristics of Romanesque Architecture
- Ocular windows are common in Italy, particularly in the facade gable, and are also seen in Germany.
- Later Romanesque churches may have wheel windows or rose windows with plate tracery.
- The Collegiate Church of Nivelles, Belgium uses fine shafts of Belgian marble to define alternating blind openings and windows.
- Upper windows are similarly separated into two openings by colonettes.
- Characteristics of Romaesque architecture include the ocular window and the pairing of two arched windows or arcade openings within a larger arch, both of which seen here at the Abbey Church of St.
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The Compound Microscope
- It is made of two convex lenses: the first, the ocular lens, is close to the eye; the second is the objective lens.
- The second or ocular lens is the eyepiece.
- The distance between the objective lens and the ocular lens is slightly shorter than the focal length of the ocular lens, fe.
- This causes the ocular lens to act as a magnifying glass to the first image and makes it even larger.
- where m is total magnification, mo is objective lens magnification, me is ocular lens magnification.
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Chicago School of Architecture
- The "Chicago window" originated in this school .
- It is a three-part window consisting of a large fixed center panel flanked by two smaller double-hung sash windows.
- The arrangement of windows on the facade typically creates a grid pattern, with some projecting out from the facade forming bay windows.
- The Chicago window combined the functions of light-gathering and natural ventilation; a single central pane was usually fixed, while the two surrounding panes were operable.
- These windows were often deployed in bays, known as oriel windows, that projected out over the street.
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Window of Opportunity
- In corporate finance, a "window of opportunity" is the time when an asset or product which is unattainable will become available.
- In corporate finance, a "window of opportunity" basically is the idea of a time when an asset or product that is unattainable will become available.
- Therefore, the IPO presents a window of opportunity to the potential investor to get in on the new equity while it is still affordable and a greater return on investment is attainable.
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The Discount Rate
- The Fed makes loans to depository institutions and charges different discount rates for each of discount windows.
- The discount rate is the interest rate charged to commercial banks and other depository institutions on loans they receive from the Fed's lending facility, the discount window.
- The Fed offers three discount window programs to depository institutions: primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit, each with its own interest rate.
- All discount window loans are fully secured.
- (Because primary credit is the Federal Reserve's main discount window program, the Federal Reserve, at times, uses the term "discount rate" to mean the primary credit rate. ) The discount rate on secondary credit is above the rate on primary credit.
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The ZPD
- This window represents the ZPD.
- The window on the left represents an area on the bar that 'needs little support. ' The bar divisions are a yellow color to light orange color in this pane of the window.
- The window on the right represents an area on the bar that 'needs much support. ' The bar divisions are a dark orange color to red color in this pane of the window.
- Before the animation begins, the window is near the left end of the bar.
- As the animation progresses, the window slides to the right.
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The MIT / X Window System License
- If your goal is that your code be accessible by the greatest possible number of developers and derivative works, and you do not mind the code being used in proprietary programs, choose the MIT / X Window System license (so named because it is the license under which the Massachusetts Institute of Technology released the original X Window System code).
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Other Infectious Eye Diseases
- Recurrent herpes of the eye in turn is caused by reactivation of the virus in a latently infected sensory ganglion, transport of the virus down the nerve axon to sensory nerve endings, and subsequent infection of ocular surface.
- Signs and symptoms of ocular toxoplasmosis can include reduced vision, blurred vision, pain (often with bright light), redness of the eye, and sometimes tearing.
- An ophthalmologist will provide the best care for ocular toxoplasmosis.
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Reflexes and Diagnosis
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Black Eye
- In some cases, abnormally high pressure inside the eyeball (ocular hypertension) can also result.