Doubling
Doubling may refer to:
Mathematics
- Multiplication by 2
- 100% increase
- Doubling the cube, a geometric problem
- Doubling time, the period of time required for a quantity to double in size or value
- Doubling map
- Period-doubling bifurcation
Music
- The composition or performance of a melody with itself or itself transposed at a constant interval such as the octave, third, or sixth, Voicing (music)#Doubling
- The assignment of a melody to two instruments in an arrangement
- The playing of two (or more) instruments alternately by a single player, e.g. Flute, doubling piccolo
- Musicians who play more than one woodwind instrument are called Woodwind Doublers or Reed Players
- Doubletracking, a recording technique in which a musical part (or vocal) is recorded twice and mixed together, to strengthen or "fatten" the tone.
Other
- Doubling (psychodrama) is a technique of provoking a protagonist by a participant, for effect.
- Doubling in the theatre is where one actor plays more than one part in the same performance.
- Doubling (textiles) is the process where six slivers of cotton are fed into a draw frame, stetched and together to improve the uniformity of the roving before it is spun
- Doubling (naval tactic) was a means of focusing gunfire in formations of sailing warships maneuvering as a line of battle.
- Double knitting is the process of combining two or more lengths of yarn into a single thread.
- Doubling in two-way radio, where two or more transmitters transmit at once on the same frequency, interfering with one another and garbling all messages.
- Syntactic doubling is a phenomenon consisting in the lengthening (gemination) of the initial consonant of certain words
- When more than one round is fired in a semiautomatic gas powered rifle with only one pull of the trigger, also known as a slam fire.
See also
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.