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Examples

  • This automated system is known as Kurs and has been in use by Russia since the

    WN.com - Articles related to Russian cargo vessel misses space station 2010

  • This automated system is known as Kurs and has been in use by Russia since the

    WN.com - Articles related to Russian cargo vessel misses space station 2010

  • This automated system is known as Kurs and has been in use by Russia since the

    WN.com - Articles related to Russian cargo vessel misses space station 2010

  • This rude hookah is half filled with water; the dried hemp in the bowl is covered with what Syrians call a "Kurs," a bit of metal about the size of half-a-crown, and upon it rests the fire.

    Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo Volume 1 Richard Francis Burton 1855

  • [FN#533] This Iklíl, a complicated affair, is now obsolete, its place having been taken by the "Kurs," a gold plate, some five inches in diameter, set with jewels, etc. Lane (M.E. Appendix A) figures it.

    Arabian nights. English Anonymous 1855

  • Voraussetzungen: Der Kurs ist kein Anfängerkurs, sondern richtet sich an Brettchenweberinnen und -weber, die bereits etwas Erfahrung gesammelt haben.

    Archive 2009-07-01 a stitch in time 2009

  • In dem Kurs werden verschiedene Flechtvarianten, zum alleine oder gemeinsam Flechten, erlernt und geübt.

    Archive 2009-07-01 a stitch in time 2009

  • Magnetic coupling is particularly suitable for everyday applications because most common materials interact only very weakly with magnetic fields, so interactions with extraneous environmental objects are suppressed even further. “The fact that magnetic fields interact so weakly with biological organisms is also important for safety considerations,” Kurs, a graduate student in physics, points out.

    MIT Demonstrates Wireless Power | Impact Lab 2007

  • Members of the team that performed the experiment are obstructing the direct line of sight between the coils; front row: Peter Fisher (left) and Robert Moffatt; second row: Marin Soljacic; third row: Andre Kurs (left), John Joannopoulos and Aristeidis Karalis.

    MIT Demonstrates Wireless Power | Impact Lab 2007

  • "We wanted to use the magnetic field for coupling, and have the electric field confined," says theoretician André Kurs, a member of the MIT group, "because a magnetic field does not interact with most objects, including biological tissues."

    Wireless Power for Mobile Devices | Impact Lab 2007

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