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cantilever
(redirected from cantilevers)

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cantilever

Beam or structure that is fixed at one end only, though it may be supported at some point along its length; for example, a diving board. The cantilever principle, widely used in construction engineering, eliminates the need for a second main support at the free end of the beam, allowing for more elegant structures and reducing the amount of materials required. Many large-span bridges have been built on the cantilever principle.

A typical cantilever bridge consists of two beams cantilevered out from either bank, each supported part way along, with their free ends meeting in the middle. The multiple-cantilever Forth Rail Bridge (completed 1890) across the Firth of Forth in Scotland has twin main spans of 521 m/1,710 ft.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The team coated the cantilevers with antibodies that attract a certain virus but not other microparticles.
Each floorplate rotates and cantilevers over the one below and no single internal column runs through the entire structure (only four walls project through from top to bottom).
The core of the Millipede project is a two-dimensional array of v-shaped silicon cantilevers that are 0.
 
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