ITO may refer to:

See also [link]


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9K32 Strela-2

The 9K32 Strela-2 (Russian: Cтрела, "arrow"; NATO reporting name SA-7 Grail) is a man-portable, shoulder-fired, low-altitude surface-to-air missile system (MANPAD) with a high explosive warhead and passive infrared homing guidance. Broadly comparable in performance with the US Army FIM-43 Redeye, which was designed in 1959, it was the first generation of Soviet man-portable SAMs, entering service in 1968, with series production starting in 1970.

Described by one expert as being "the premier Russian export line", the Strela and its variants have seen widespread use in nearly every regional conflict since 1968.

Development

The end of World War II saw a major shift in Soviet defense policy. The advent of long range, high altitude, nuclear-armed American bombers, capable of penetrating Soviet airspace at heights and speeds unreachable and unmatchable by anti-aircraft guns and most interceptors, appeared to render every conventional weapon obsolete at a stroke. Numerous long-range, high-altitude SAM systems, such as the SA-1 "Guild" and SA-2 "Guideline", were rapidly developed and fielded to counter this large vulnerability. Due to the apparent "obsolescence" of conventional arms, however, relatively little development took place to field mobile battlefield air defenses.

Itō

Itō may refer to:

People

  • Itō (name), a common Japanese family name
  • Mathematics

  • Itō's lemma, used in stochastic calculus
  • Itoh-Tsujii inversion algorithm, in field theory
  • Itō calculus, an extension of calculus to stochastic processes, named after Kiyoshi Itō
  • Places

  • Itō, Shizuoka, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan
  • Ito District, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan
  • Fictional characters

  • Itō (伊藤 Itō) from Hikaru no Go
  • Keita Itō of Gakuen Heaven
  • See also

  • Ito (disambiguation)
  • ITO (disambiguation), for the three-letter acronym
  • Cage

    Cage may refer to:

    Technology

  • Cage (enclosure), a structure made of mesh, bars or wires
  • Batting cage, an enclosure for baseball batting practice
  • Bottle cage, a bicycle bottle holder
  • Cage crinoline, a type of crinoline petticoat
  • Faraday cage, an enclosure used to block electric fields
  • Human rib cage, a part of the skeleton
  • Mine cage, similar to an elevator, for a shaft mine
  • Roll cage, a frame built in or around the cab of a vehicle
  • Shark proof cage, used to protect divers
  • Cage (bearing), a component of a rolling-element bearing
  • Gabion, a cage filled with coarse gravel or rock
  • Cage, a separated enclosure in a computer colocation centre
  • Cage (graph theory)

    In the mathematical area of graph theory, a cage is a regular graph that has as few vertices as possible for its girth.

    Formally, an (r,g)-graph is defined to be a graph in which each vertex has exactly r neighbors, and in which the shortest cycle has length exactly g. It is known that an (r,g)-graph exists for any combination of r ≥ 2 and g ≥ 3. An (r,g)-cage is an (r,g)-graph with the fewest possible number of vertices, among all (r,g)-graphs.

    If a Moore graph exists with degree r and girth g, it must be a cage. Moreover, the bounds on the sizes of Moore graphs generalize to cages: any cage with odd girth g must have at least

    vertices, and any cage with even girth g must have at least

    vertices. Any (r,g)-graph with exactly this many vertices is by definition a Moore graph and therefore automatically a cage.

    There may exist multiple cages for a given combination of r and g. For instance there are three nonisomorphic (3,10)-cages, each with 70 vertices : the Balaban 10-cage, the Harries graph and the Harries–Wong graph. But there is only one (3,11)-cage : the Balaban 11-cage (with 112 vertices).

    Cage (enclosure)

    A cage is an enclosure made of mesh, bars or wires, used to confine, contain or protect something or someone. A cage can serve many purposes, including keeping an animal in captivity, capturing, and being used for display of an animal at a zoo.

    Humans

    In history, prisoners were sometimes kept in a cage. They would sometimes be chained up inside into uncomfortable positions to intensify suffering.

    History

    Cages have been usually been used to capture or trapping a certain life form. For this reason, they've been known as a hunting accessory, often used for poaching animals or simply seizing them.

    In captivity

    Cages are often used now as a source to confine animals. These provide as a habitat to the animal, and since they've advanced so greatly, they are now specially designed to fit that species of animal. Captive breeds of birds, rodents, reptiles, and even larger animals have also been known to be confined in a cage as a domesticated animal (also known as a pet). Captivity is a common purpose of the cage.

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