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prime mover

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prime mover

1. 
a. the source of power, such as fuel, wind, electricity, etc., for a machine
b. the means of extracting power from such a source, such as a steam engine, electric motor, etc.
2. (in the philosophy of Aristotle) that which is the cause of all movement
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

prime mover

[′prīm ′müv·ər]
(anatomy)
A muscle that produces a specific motion or maintains a specific posture.
(mechanical engineering)
The component of a power plant that transforms energy from the thermal or the pressure form to the mechanical form.
A tractor or truck, usually with four-wheel drive, used for hauling tasks.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Prime mover

The component of a power plant that transforms energy from the thermal or the pressure form to the mechanical form. Mechanical energy may be in the form of a rotating or a reciprocating shaft, or a jet for thrust or propulsion. The prime mover is frequently called an engine or turbine and is represented by such machines as waterwheels, hydraulic turbines, steam engines, steam turbines, windmills, gas turbines, internal combustion engines, and jet engines. These prime movers operate by either of two principles: (1) balanced expansion, positive displacement, intermittent flow of a working fluid into and out of a piston and cylinder mechanism so that by pressure difference on the opposite sides of the piston, or its equivalent, there is relative motion of the machine parts; or (2) free continuous flow through a nozzle where fluid acceleration in a jet (and vane) mechanism gives relative motion to the machine parts by impulse, reaction, or both. See Gas turbine, Hydraulic turbine, Impulse turbine, Internal combustion engine, Power plant, Reaction turbine, Steam engine, Steam turbine, Turbine

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Engineering. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

prime mover

1. Any machine that converts fuel (e.g., diesel oil, gasoline, or natural gas) or steam into mechanical energy.
2. A powerful truck, tractor, or the like.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
The significantly lower ability of women to activate muscles involved in hand gripping may restrict the magnitude of the RVC driven CAP response of the prime mover for women, considering motor overflow increases with contraction intensity (12) and, therefore, potentially explaining the findings of the present study.
For any value of prime mover PLR and heat allocation fraction, the amount of heat available for the absorption chiller (Qgen, abs, ch) as well as excess heat available for heating can then be computed.
Figure 4 presents the relationship between prime mover electrical power output and heating capacity, which represents an operating curve.
Finally, the wider the scale on which an energy prime mover is deployed, the longer it will take for substitutions to appear.
Jacques Brunschwig and Aryeh Kosman have taken opposing views on the famous problem in chapter 9 of what the prime mover knows.
Ricardo was a prime mover during the early 1920s in the "Anta" subgroup of Modernismo, which urged a nationalistic rediscovery of the land and its indigenous folkloric traditions.
Fernow, chief of the Forestry Division of the Department of Agriculture, who would later be a prime mover in the American Forestry Association.
Indeed, in those days the theory of industrial production saw the machine as the prime mover in production and the worker as a malleable extension of the machine.
He was also the prime mover and signatory of the James Bay Northern Quebec Agreement and the Cree-Naskapi Act on behalf of the Cree people of Northern Quebec.
THE "prime mover" view of a country's economy holds that fluctuations in economic activity reflect, to an important extent, movements in certain fundamental forces.
(Lat, " prime mover " ) In the classical concept of the order of the heavens, the ninth heaven.
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