Yahoo Search Búsqueda web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 22 de mar. de 2024 · El efecto dominó es una reacción en cadena que ocurre cuando un evento desencadena una serie de eventos similares, relacionados o conectados. Es una referencia a una serie de fichas de dominó en pie, cada una de las cuales derriba a la siguiente, creando una reacción en cadena.

  2. El efecto dominó o reacción en cadena es el efecto acumulativo producido cuando un acontecimiento origina una cadena de otros acontecimientos similares. 1 . Se produce cuando un pequeño cambio origina un cambio similar a su lado, que a su vez causa otro similar, y así sucesivamente en una secuencia lineal.

  3. 31 de oct. de 2021 · This chapter first summarizes the definitions, characteristics, and classifications of domino effects. The vulnerability models related to domino effects are reviewed, including deterministic methods, probabilistic methods, and CFD/FEM methods.

  4. 21 de jun. de 2021 · Over the years, rigorous efforts have been made to demystify the mechanism of domino accidents, assess the possibility of domino effect occurrence, set the thresholds for escalation vectors,...

  5. 1 de ene. de 2021 · The spatial-temporal evolution characteristics of a domino effect, including accident escalation path, escalation times and escalation probabilities of involved units, and residual time to failure of involved units were obtained by the approach.

  6. 7 de abr. de 2024 · The domino effect refers to a chain reaction that occurs when a small change causes a similar change nearby, which then will cause another similar change, and so on, in linear sequence. This concept is widely applicable across various fields, including economics, politics, and social sciences.

  7. 1 de nov. de 2015 · The proposed approach has the following main features: i) estimation of all possible hazards from toxic release to explosion; ii) handling of interaction among different accidental events (generation of domino or cascading accident scenarios); iii) estimation of domino effect probability; and iv) estimation of domino effect consequences.