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Cycle


Cycle


Cycle, cycles, or cyclic may refer to:

Anthropology and social sciences

  • Cyclic history, a theory of history
  • Cyclical theory, a theory of American political history associated with Arthur Schlesinger, Sr.
  • Social cycle, various cycles in social sciences
    • Business cycle, the downward and upward movement of gross domestic product (GDP) around its ostensible, long-term growth trend

Arts, entertainment, and media

Films

  • Cycle (2008 film), a Malayalam film
  • Cycle (2017 film), a Marathi film

Literature

  • Cycle (magazine), an American motorcycling enthusiast magazine
  • Literary cycle, a group of stories focused on common figures

Music

Musical terminology

  • Cycle (music), a set of musical pieces that belong together
    • Cyclic form, a technique of construction involving multiple sections or movements
    • Interval cycle, a collection of pitch classes generated from a sequence of the same interval class
    • Song cycle, individually complete songs designed to be performed in a sequence as a unit

Albums

  • Cycle (album), a 1965 album by the Paul Horn Quintet
  • Cycle, a 2003 album by Merzbow
  • Cycle, a 2014 album by Buckethead
  • Cycles (Cartel album), 2009
  • Cycles (David Darling album), 1981
  • Cycles (The Doobie Brothers album), 1989
  • Cycles (Frank Sinatra album), 1968
  • Cycles (Redbone album), 1977
  • Cycles, a 2021 album by Sam Teskey

Songs

  • "Cycles", a 1968 song by Frank Sinatra on his album Cycles
  • "Cycles" (song), a 2018 song by Tove Lo
  • "Cycle" an interlude by Beck from Morning Phase, 2014

Science, technology, and mathematics

Biology

  • Cycle (gene), a gene in Drosophila melanogaster that encodes the CYCLE protein
  • Cyclic flower, in botany, one way in which flower parts may be arranged
  • Menstrual cycle

Computing

  • Cycles, a render engine for the software Blender
  • Instruction cycle, the time period during which a computer processes a machine language instruction
  • Reference cycle, where a software object refers directly or indirectly to itself

Mathematics

  • Cycle (algebraic topology), a simplicial chain with 0 boundary
  • Cycle (graph theory), a nontrivial path in a graph from a node to itself
    • Cycle graph, a graph that is itself a cycle
    • Cycle matroid, a matroid derived from the cycle structure of a graph
  • Cycle (sequence), a sequence with repeating values
    • Cycle detection, the algorithmic problem of detecting repetitions in sequences generated by iterated functions
  • Cycle, a set equipped with a cyclic order
    • Necklace (combinatorics), an equivalence classes of cyclically ordered sequences of symbols modulo certain symmetries
  • Cyclic (mathematics), a list of mathematics articles with "cyclic" in the title
  • Cyclic group, a group generated by a single element
  • Cyclic permutation, a basic permutation (all permutations are products of cycles)

Other uses in science and technology

  • Cycle (angular unit), a unit of plane angle or rotation
  • Charge cycle, charging and discharging a rechargeable battery
  • Thermodynamic cycle, a sequence of processes that transfer heat and work into and out of a system
  • Wave cycle, the repeatable part of a periodic wave
  • Cyclic, a primary flight control for helicopters
  • Cyclic compound
  • Cycle in cycle per second, which is a unit of frequency (rate of repetition)
    • A period in alternating current

Vehicles

  • Bicycle
  • Motorcycle
  • Quadricycle
  • Tricycle
  • Unicycle

Other uses

  • Cycling, a sport
  • Cycle (baseball), a single, double, triple, and home run (in any order) by the same player in one game
  • Cycle, North Carolina, a community in the United States
Giuseppe Zanotti Luxury Sneakers

See also

  • Frequency (disambiguation)
  • List of cycles
  • Periodicity (disambiguation)
  • The Cycle (disambiguation)
  • All pages with titles beginning with Cycle
  • All pages with titles containing Cycle
  • All pages with titles beginning with cycl
  • All pages with titles containing cycl



Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Cycle by Wikipedia (Historical)