semistationary
English
Etymology
From semi- + stationary.
Adjective
semistationary (not comparable)
- Allowing only a limited range of movement.
- 1998, Richard E. Gertsch, Richard Lee Bullock, Techniques in Underground Mining, →ISBN:
- Where semistationary shovels do the loading, some sort of vehicle must haul the rock either to the next part of the materials-handling system, located near the stoping area, or all the way to the shaft.
- Staying on one place or form, although capable of change on occasion.
- 2012, Pentti Hakkila, Utilization of Residual Forest Biomass, →ISBN, page 297:
- In the United States, the process of dismembering a tree or stem at a stationary or semistationary conversion yard to obtain a maximum product value is termed merchandizing,[sic] and the system of machines used for this purpose is called a tree or stem merchandizer.[sic]
- 2012, Clark Viehweg, The Dragon Fly, →ISBN:
- They now have several satellites located in semistationary orbits at strategic locations around the world instead of one satellite circulating the globe.
- (mathematics) Having the same properties over time, although possibly showing different behavior in stability intervals.
- 2016, Fred Espen Benth, Heidar Eyjolfsson, “Simulation of volatility modulated Volterra processes using hyperbolic stochastic partial differential equations”, in Bernoulli[1], volume 22, pages 774–793:
- These solutions can in turn estimate so called volatility modulated Volterra (VMV) processes and L\'{e}vy semistationary (LSS) processes, which is a class of processes that have been employed to model turbulence, tumor growth and electricity forward and spot prices.