Athletics at the 1999 Summer Universiade | ||
---|---|---|
Track events | ||
100 m | men | women |
200 m | men | women |
400 m | men | women |
800 m | men | women |
1500 m | men | women |
5000 m | men | women |
10,000 m | men | women |
100 m hurdles | women | |
110 m hurdles | men | |
400 m hurdles | men | women |
3000 m steeplechase | men | |
4×100 m relay | men | women |
4×400 m relay | men | women |
Road events | ||
Half marathon | men | women |
10 km walk | women | |
20 km walk | men | |
Field events | ||
High jump | men | women |
Pole vault | men | women |
Long jump | men | women |
Triple jump | men | women |
Shot put | men | women |
Discus throw | men | women |
Hammer throw | men | women |
Javelin throw | men | women |
Combined events | ||
Heptathlon | women | |
Decathlon | men | |
The men's discus throw event at the 1999 Summer Universiade was held at the Estadio Son Moix in Palma de Mallorca, Spain on 8 and 9 July. [1] [2]
Gold | Silver | Bronze |
Frantz Kruger South Africa | Andy Bloom United States | Doug Reynolds United States |
Qualification: 59.00 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) advance to the final
Rank | Group | Athlete | Nationality | #1 | #2 | #3 | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | A | Andy Bloom | United States | 64.57 | Q | |||
2 | B | Doug Reynolds | United States | 63.27 | Q | |||
3 | A | Roland Varga | Hungary | 61.99 | Q | |||
4 | B | Frantz Kruger | South Africa | 61.96 | Q | |||
5 | B | Aleksander Tammert | Estonia | 61.91 | Q | |||
6 | B | Mika Loikkanen | Finland | 60.55 | Q | |||
7 | A | Olgierd Stański | Poland | 59.97 | Q | |||
8 | B | Andrzej Krawczyk | Poland | 59.60 | Q | |||
9 | A | Pieter van der Kruk | Netherlands | 59.28 | Q | |||
10 | B | Gábor Máté | Hungary | 59.28 | Q | |||
11 | A | Frits Potgieter | South Africa | 59.17 | Q | |||
12 | A | Mario Pestano | Spain | x | 58.15 | 58.94 | 58.94 | q |
13 | B | Paulo Bernardo | Portugal | 58.63 | ||||
14 | B | Stefano Lomater | Italy | 58.35 | ||||
15 | B | Einar Kristian Tveitå | Norway | 58.21 | ||||
16 | A | Brad Snyder | Canada | 57.34 | ||||
17 | B | Jason Gervais | Canada | 57.15 | ||||
18 | A | Timo Sinervo | Finland | 56.91 | ||||
19 | A | Eivind Smörgrav | Norway | 56.74 | ||||
20 | A | Emeka Udechuku | Great Britain | 56.70 | ||||
21 | B | Jesús Camblor | Spain | 53.06 | x | 52.02 | 53.06 | |
22 | A | Juan Manuel Tello | Peru | 52.44 | ||||
23 | A | Wael Mohd | Qatar | 49.49 | ||||
24 | B | Kristian Pettersson | Sweden | 48.64 | ||||
25 | B | Leonardo Ochoa | Peru | 44.84 |
Rank | Athlete | Nationality | #1 | #2 | #3 | #4 | #5 | #6 | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frantz Kruger | South Africa | 64.14 | x | 63.95 | 62.21 | 65.22 | 66.90 | 66.90 | ||
Andy Bloom | United States | 62.83 | 61.24 | 63.73 | 62.62 | 64.68 | x | 64.68 | ||
Doug Reynolds | United States | 63.65 | ||||||||
4 | Aleksander Tammert | Estonia | 61.95 | |||||||
5 | Frits Potgieter | South Africa | 61.10 | |||||||
6 | Olgierd Stański | Poland | 61.04 | |||||||
7 | Roland Varga | Hungary | 60.54 | |||||||
8 | Pieter van der Kruk | Netherlands | 57.83 | |||||||
9 | Mika Loikkanen | Finland | 56.54 | |||||||
10 | Andrzej Krawczyk | Poland | 56.24 | |||||||
11 | Mario Pestano | Spain | 54.90 | 55.77 | 53.94 | 55.77 | ||||
12 | Gábor Máté | Hungary | 55.59 |
An allele is one of two, or more, forms of a given gene variant. For example, the ABO blood grouping is controlled by the ABO gene, which has six common alleles. Nearly every living human's phenotype for the ABO gene is some combination of just these six alleles. An allele is one of two, or more, versions of the same gene at the same place on a chromosome. It can also refer to different sequence variations for several-hundred base-pair or more region of the genome that codes for a protein. Alleles can come in different extremes of size. At the lowest possible size an allele can be a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). At the higher end, it can be up to several thousand base-pairs long. Most alleles result in little or no observable change in the function of the protein the gene codes for.
Q, or q, is the seventeenth letter of the modern English alphabet and the ISO basic Latin alphabet. Its name in English is cue, plural cues.
Q.E.D. or QED is an initialism of the Latin phrase "quod erat demonstrandum", literally meaning "what was to be shown". Traditionally, the abbreviation is placed at the end of a mathematical proof or philosophical argument in print publications to indicate that the proof or the argument is complete, and hence is used with the meaning "thus it has been demonstrated".
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Q fever or query fever is a disease caused by infection with Coxiella burnetii, a bacterium that affects humans and other animals. This organism is uncommon, but may be found in cattle, sheep, goats, and other domestic mammals, including cats and dogs. The infection results from inhalation of a spore-like small-cell variant, and from contact with the milk, urine, feces, vaginal mucus, or semen of infected animals. Rarely, the disease is tick-borne. The incubation period is 9–40 days. Humans are vulnerable to Q fever, and infection can result from even a few organisms. The bacterium is an obligate intracellular pathogenic parasite.
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In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result. It is a fundamental property of many binary operations, and many mathematical proofs depend on it. Most familiar as the name of the property that says "3 + 4 = 4 + 3" or "2 × 5 = 5 × 2", the property can also be used in more advanced settings. The name is needed because there are operations, such as division and subtraction, that do not have it ; such operations are not commutative, and so are referred to as noncommutative operations. The idea that simple operations, such as the multiplication and addition of numbers, are commutative was for many years implicitly assumed. Thus, this property was not named until the 19th century, when mathematics started to become formalized. A corresponding property exists for binary relations; a binary relation is said to be symmetric if the relation applies regardless of the order of its operands; for example, equality is symmetric as two equal mathematical objects are equal regardless of their order.
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In motorsports, the pole position is the position at the inside of the front row at the start of a racing event. This position is typically given to the vehicle and driver with the best qualifying time in the trials before the race. This number-one qualifying driver is referred to as the pole-sitter.
In mathematics, a rational number is a number that can be expressed as the quotient or fraction p/q of two integers, a numerator p and a non-zero denominator q. For example, −3/7 is a rational number, as is every integer. The set of all rational numbers, also referred to as "the rationals", the field of rationals or the field of rational numbers is usually denoted by a boldface Q ; it was thus denoted in 1895 by Giuseppe Peano after quoziente, Italian for "quotient".
A truth table is a mathematical table used in logic—specifically in connection with Boolean algebra, boolean functions, and propositional calculus—which sets out the functional values of logical expressions on each of their functional arguments, that is, for each combination of values taken by their logical variables. In particular, truth tables can be used to show whether a propositional expression is true for all legitimate input values, that is, logically valid.
Coulomb's law, or Coulomb's inverse-square law, is an experimental law of physics that quantifies the amount of force between two stationary, electrically charged particles. The electric force between charged bodies at rest is conventionally called electrostatic force or Coulomb force. The law was first discovered in 1785 by French physicist Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, hence the name. Coulomb's law was essential to the development of the theory of electromagnetism, maybe even its starting point, as it made it possible to discuss the quantity of electric charge in a meaningful way.
Wikidata is a collaboratively edited multilingual knowledge graph hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation. It is a common source of open data that Wikimedia projects such as Wikipedia, and anyone else, can use under the CC0 public domain license. Wikidata is a wiki powered by the software MediaWiki, and is also powered by the set of knowledge graph MediaWiki extensions known as Wikibase.