One of the concentric circles of data on disk media such as hard drives, CD-ROM discs, DVD discs, and floppy disks.
A concentric ring encoded on a disk during the low-level format.
A single circular ring of sectors on a disk. See also cylinder, sector.
The actual flight path of an aircraft over the surface of the Earth.
A collection of points that show the path travelled.
A concentric set of magnetic bits on the disk which can further divided into sectors of 512 bytes each.
location onto which data can be stored; tracks on magnetic tape are parallel rows, and tracks on magnetic disks are concentric circles.
A ring of adjacent sectors on a disk. The concentric circles of a disk platter.
Sub-division of the recording area of storage media, such as magnetic disks, optical discs and magnetic tape.
A circular area on a disk's surface. The formatting process creates tracks and sectors.
the record of the path of the trajectory of a particle in the detector.
actual flight path of an aircraft over the ground.
One of several concentric circular bands on computer disks where data is recorded.
A storage channel on a disk or tape made up of a series of sectors.
When a disk is low-level formatted, it's divided into concentric circles called tracks. When a disk is spinning, the area directly under the stationary read/write head is a Track.
A concentric collection of sectors on a hard- or floppy disk. The outermost track on the top of the disk (or platter) is numbered track 0 side 0, and the outermost track on the other side is numbered track 0 side1. Numbering increases inwards towards the center of the disk. Tracks are created during the disk formatting process. On tapes, tracks are parallel lines down the axis of the tape.
The intended path and past path of the ship. When used in conjunction with ECDIS, additional terminology related to track can include: planned route (planned track) intended path past track past path cross-track distance distance right or left of intended path.
A unit of measure for space on a disk. On our MVS disk devices (IBM 3350's), a track holds 19,069 bytes.
A specific area on a moving-storage medium, such as a diskette, disk, or tape cartridge, that can be accessed by the drive heads.
The path that a pilot intends the aircraft to follow over the ground.
concentric ring on a disk to which data can be written
All the sectors (usually 63) on one side of a hard disk platter that would pass under a non-moving read/write head as the platter rotates on its spindle, forming a circle. Tracks are numbered starting from 0.
a line or route along which something travels or moves; "the hurricane demolished houses in its path"; "the track of an animal"; "the course of the river"
(computer science) one of the circular magnetic paths on a magnetic disk that serve as a guide for writing and reading data
any road or path affording passage especially a rough one
observe or plot the moving path of something; "track a missile"
a circular area of the disk surface
a circular ring around the disk
a circular ring of storage elements on the disk
a circular ring on one side of the disk
a concentric circle around the disk, while a sector is a segment or arc within each circle
a concentric ring at a fixed location from the center of the diskette
a narrow band on the disk where data is stored, much like the music on an LP record
a narrow recording band that forms a concentric circle on the surface of the disk
an invisible concentric ring on disk
a path that the system records as you move about
a ring of data or Sectors that moves under a specific Head as the disk rotates
a set of requirements within a concentration
a strip of data running around the disk on a specific side
Data on the disk media is accessed by combination of track and sector numbers. Tracks form concentric rings on the disk; the standard IBM single-density disks have 77 tracks. Each track consists of a fixed number of numbered sectors. Tracks are numbered from zero to one less than the number of tracks on the disk.
A concentric magnetic circle pattern on a disk surface used for storing and reading data.
A concentric path on a disk where data is recorded.
1. The path of the ball from the foul line to the pins. 2. The area on a bowling ball where, when rolling, it picks up minute particles.
A U-shaped piece of metal that keeps the wheels of a seat on a straight path. A slide is made up of two tracks.
One of the many concentric magnetic circle patterns written on a disk surface for storing and reading data. tribology The science of the mechanisms of friction, lubrication and wear of interacting surfaces that are in relative motion.
Disk: Concentric circles where the data is stored, divided into sectors. Tape: The tracks of the tape prepared for storage of data, divided into blocks. See format.
A narrow recording band forming a full circle around the floppy disk. 5.4
(n.) A concentric ring on a disk that passes under a single stationary disk head as the disk rotates.
A common term for an AAR refuelling orbit, usually racetrack shaped and about 25 long by 10 miles wide, but can be as large as 200 by 30 miles, and different shape. Also used by AWACS for the path of an aircraft in ACM
The Australian term for a foot path, pad, or trail. May be referred to as a trail when used in a ski-touring context
Area of bowling ball that makes contact with the surface during its path down the lane. Because of revolving motion, this area is usually in the form of a ring or rings around the ball.
that part of an avalanche path between the starting zone at the top and the runout zone at the bottom. In general, avalanche tracks have an inclination of at least 15 degrees more commonly 20 degrees - 25 degrees, and can be subdivided into channeled (gullies, gulches, couloirs, etc.) or unconfined (plane, open slopes) tracks.
The part of a disk platter which passes under one read-write head while the head is stationary but the disk is spinning. Each track is divided into sectors, and a vertical collection of tracks is a cylinder
Path or sets of paths on medium associated with a single reading or writing head as medium moves past head; for an optical disk, a 360 degree segment of path which is to be followed by read beam during reading or write beam during writing
a measurement of space on a magnetic disk
The record of the path of a particle traversing a detector.
The concentric rings on a floppy or hard disk where data is written. Tracks are recorded onto a floppy disk during formatting. Disk storage is organized into tracks and sectors, which are pie-shaped slices. A combination of two or more sectors on a single track makes a cluster or block, the smallest unit used to store information.
Recording path shaped like concentric rings on a cylinder. Formed when the magnetic media moves a 5t at the read/write head.
Information is recorded on the surface of a magnetic disk in a series of concentric circles. Each of these is called a track.
The kites ability to keep on a straight path.
The path on the ground over which an aircraft has flown. Also used synonymously with course, the direction in which an aircraft is moving relative to the ground. Note that this is not necessarily the same as the aircraft's heading.
The magnetic path traced on a tape by video and audio heads, leater read on playback. Linear audio and control tracks are in the upper and lower edges. Video tracks are recorded helicaly in the central part of the tape.
A concentric ring on a disk surface where data is stored.
Path to the pins created by many balls rolled in the same general area.
The circular path traced across the spinning surface of a disk platter by the read/write head inside the hard-disk drive. The track consists of one or more clusters.
(Piste) : Circular recording zone on a diskette or hard disk. Tracks generally are generally composed of sectors.
Surfers path along the wave.
Narrow recording band that forms a full circle on the surface of a disk. 7.8
Each of the series of concentric rings contained on a hard drive platter.
In navigation, a track is the actual path followed, or intended to be followed, by a moving body. In many circumstances, this is equivalent to a bearing, but it has a particular difference in aviation.