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1 gaugeの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • All other Standard Model bosons are Spin-1 Gauge bosons ( AKA gauge vector boson ).
  • In the 1950s and 1960s 1 gauge experienced a renaissance, first in the UK and then elsewhere.
  • M鋜klin, in Germany, has produced several different lines of trains that can be considered 1 gauge.
  • In the late 1960s, M鋜klin reentered the large scale market with a modest range of 1 gauge trains.
  • The 1 gauge product line continues in production, super-detailed and more expensive than the Maxi line.
  • This was helped by 1 gauge being the same size as the modern G scale, a popular standard for outdoor model railroads.
  • These trains were made of stamped metal and were more toylike in appearance in comparison to their scale version of 1 gauge trains.
  • A similar problem arises with Yang Mills theory ( also known as non-abelian gauge theory ), which predicts massless spin-1 gauge bosons.
  • Wide gauge trains, which are close in size to 2 gauge, are produced in limited quantities today, as are 1 gauge and O gauge trains.
  • In the late 1980s the M鋜klin 1 gauge line included a large number of freight car designs in different liveries and a range of three axle passenger cars.
  • In later years, the Maxi product line was gradually folded into the conventional M鋜klin 1 gauge product line, with the mark " Maxi " disappearing around 2008.
  • The European G gauge trains are built to the same 2 gauge scale, but with a slightly different rail gauge of ( the same as 1 gauge ).
  • In 1921, Ives abruptly discontinued its slow-selling 1 gauge trains in favor of Wide Gauge trains, a standard Lionel had introduced several years earlier and called " Standard Gauge ".
  • The term " S Scale " was adopted by the National Model Railroading Association ( NMRA ) in 1943 to represent that Scale that was half of 1 gauge which was built to 1 : 32 scale.
  • When the market evaporated for its 1 gauge trains, it re-gauged some models to O gauge, where they looked oversized, and re-gauged other models to Lionel's Standard gauge, where they looked undersized.
  • Nearly all garden railroads are built to 1 Gauge, also known as G Scale, which measures 45 mm ( about 1 3 / 4 inches ) between the rails . ( By comparison, O Gauge tracks, the old Lionel indoor standby, have rails 32 mm apart .)