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Hole

A hole is an opening in or through a particular medium, usually a solid body. Holes occur through natural and artificial processes, and may be useful for various purposes, or may represent a problem needing to be addressed in many fields of engineering. Depending on the material and the placement, a hole may be an indentation in a surface (such as a hole in the ground) or may pass completely through that surface (such as a hole created by a hole puncher in a piece of paper).

A hole through a dead tree.

Types edit

 
Perforation holes between a pair of postage stamps from a coil of stamps.

Holes can occur for a number of reasons, including natural processes and intentional actions by humans or animals. Holes in the ground that are made intentionally, such as holes made while searching for food, for replanting trees, or postholes made for securing an object, are usually made through the process of digging. Unintentional holes in an object are often a sign of damage. Potholes and sinkholes can damage human settlements.[1]

Holes can occur in a wide variety of materials, and at a wide range of scales. The smallest holes observable by humans include pinholes and perforations, but the smallest phenomenon described as a hole is an electron hole, which is a position in an atom or atomic lattice where an electron is missing. The largest phenomenon described as a hole is a supermassive black hole, an astronomical object which can be billions of times more massive than Earth's sun.

The deepest hole on Earth is the man-made Kola Superdeep Borehole, with a true vertical drill-depth of more than 7.5 miles (12 kilometers), which is only a fraction of the nearly 4,000 mile (6,400 kilometer) distance to the center of the Earth.[2]

In mathematics edit

 
In geometric topology, the doughnut and the coffee cup are considered to fall into the same mathematical "genus" because each has one hole.

In mathematics, holes are examined in a number of ways. One of these is in homology, which is a general way of associating certain algebraic objects to other mathematical objects such as topological spaces. Homology groups were originally defined in algebraic topology, and homology was originally a rigorous mathematical method for defining and categorizing holes in a mathematical object called a manifold. The initial motivation for defining homology groups was the observation that two shapes can be distinguished by examining their holes.[3] For instance, a circle is not a disk because the circle has a hole through it while the disk is solid,[4] and the ordinary sphere is not a circle because the sphere encloses a two-dimensional hole while the circle encloses a one-dimensional hole. Because a hole is immaterial, it is not immediately obvious how to define one or distinguish it from others.

Another is the notion of homotopy group: these are invariants of a topological space that, when non-trivial (one also says in this case that the space is not k-connected), detect the presence of "holes" in the sense that the space contains a sphere that cannot be contracted to a point. The term of hole is often used informally when discussing these objects.[5]

For surfaces a notion closer to the intuitive meaning exists: the genus of a connected, orientable surface is an integer representing the maximum number of cuttings along non-intersecting closed simple curves without rendering the resultant manifold disconnected.[6] In layman's terms, it is exactly the number of "holes" the surface has, when represented as a submanifold in 3-space.

In physics edit

In physics, antimatter is pervasively described as a hole, a location that, when brought together with ordinary matter to fill the hole, results in both the hole and the matter cancelling each-other out. This is analogous to patching a pothole with asphalt, or filling a bubble below the surface of water with an equal amount of water to cancel it out. The most direct example is the electron hole; a fairly general theoretical description is provided by the Dirac sea, which treats positrons (or anti-particles in general) as holes. Holes provide one of the two primary forms of conduction in a semi-conductor, that is, the material from which transistors are made; without holes, current could not flow, and transistors turn on and off by enabling or disabling the creation of holes.

In biology edit

 
The Great Blue Hole near Ambergris Caye, Belize, is an underwater sinkhole.

Animal bodies tend to contain specialized holes which serve various biological functions, such as the intake of oxygen or food, the excretion of waste, and the intake or expulsion of other fluids for reproductive purposes. In some simple animals, a single hole serves all of these purposes.[7] The formation of holes is a significant event in the development of an animal:

All animals start out in development with one hole, the blastopore. If there are two holes, the second hole forms later. The blastopore can arise at the top or the bottom of the embryo.[7]

Gramicidin A, a polypeptide with a helical shape, has been described as a portable hole. When it forms a dimer, it can embed itself in cellular bilayer membranes and form a hole through which water molecules can pass.[8]

Blind and through edit

 
Hole types in engineering: blind (left), through (middle), interrupted (right).

In engineering, machining, and tooling, a hole may be a blind hole or a through hole (also called a thru-hole or clearance hole). A blind hole is a hole that is reamed, drilled, or milled to a specified depth without breaking through to the other side of the workpiece. A through hole is a hole that is made to go completely through the material of an object. In other words, a through hole is a hole that goes all the way through something. Taps used for through holes are generally tapered since it will tap faster and the chips will be released when the tap exits the hole.

The etymology of the blind hole is that it is not possible to see through it. It may also refer to any feature that is taken to a specific depth, more specifically referring to internally threaded hole (tapped holes). Not considering the drill point, the depth of the blind hole, conventionally, may be slightly deeper than that of the threaded depth.

There are three accepted methods of threading blind holes:

  1. Conventional tapping, especially with bottom taps
  2. Single-point threading, where the workpiece is rotated, and a pointed cutting tool is fed into the workpiece at the same rate as the pitch of the internal thread. Single-pointing inside a blind hole, like boring inside one, is inherently more challenging than doing so in a through hole. This was especially true in the era when manual machining was the only method of control. Today, CNC makes these tasks less stressful, but nevertheless still more challenging than with through holes.
  3. Helical interpolation, where the workpiece remains stationary and Computer Numerical Control (CNC) moves a milling cutter in the correct helical path for a given thread, milling the thread.

At least two U.S. tool manufacturers have manufactured tools for thread milling in blind holes: Ingersoll Cutting Tools of Rockford, Illinois, and Tooling Systems of Houston, Texas, who introduced the Thread Mill in 1977, a device that milled large internal threads in the blind holes of oil well blowout preventers. Today many CNC milling machines can run such a thread milling cycle (see a video of such a cut in the "External links" section).

One use of through holes in electronics is with through-hole technology, a mounting scheme involving the use of leads on the components that are inserted into holes drilled in printed circuit boards (PCB) and soldered to pads on the opposite side either by manual assembly (hand placement) or by the use of automated insertion mount machines.[9][10]

Pinholes edit

A pinhole is a small hole, usually made by pressing a thin, pointed object such as a pin through an easily penetrated material such as a fabric or a very thin layer of metal. Similar holes made by other means are also often called pinholes. Pinholes may be intentionally made for various reasons. For example, in optics pinholes are used as apertures to select certain rays of light. This is used in pinhole cameras to form an image without the use of a lens.[11] Pinholes on produce packaging have been used to control the atmosphere and relative humidity within the packaging.[12]

In many fields, pinholes are a harmful side effect of manufacturing processes. For example, in the assembly of microcircuits, pinholes in the dielectric insulator layer coating the circuit can cause the circuit to fail. Therefore, "[t]o avoid pinholes that might protrude through the entire thickness of the dielectric layer, it is a common practice to screen several layers of dielectric with drying and firing after each screening", thereby preventing the pinholes from becoming continuous.[13]

Philosophy and psychology edit

It has been noted that holes occupy an unusual ontological position in philosophy, as people tend to refer to them as tangible and countable objects, when in fact they are the absence of something in another object.[14][15]

In the study of visual perception, a hole is a special case of figure-ground, because the ground region is entirely surrounded by the figure. For a region to be perceived as a visual hole three factors are important: depth factors indicating that the enclosed region lies behind; grouping between the enclosed region and the surround; and figural factors (for example symmetry, convexity, or familiarity) that lead to the perception of a figure rather than a hole.[16][17]

There is a debate on whether holes are special and whether they are perceived as having their own shape. They may be special in some cases, but not in the ownership of the contours.[18]

Some people have an aversion to the sight of irregular patterns or clusters of small holes, a condition called trypophobia.[19][20] Researchers hypothesize that this is the result of a biological revulsion that associates trypophobic shapes with danger or disease, and may therefore have an evolutionary basis.[21][19]

In culture and as a metaphor edit

 
Shallow potholes in a road surface.

An example of the use of holes in popular culture can be found in the Beatles lyric from the song, "A Day in the Life", from their 1967 album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band:

I read the news today, oh boy:
Four thousand holes in Blackburn Lancashire.
And though the holes were rather small,
They had to count them all,
Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall.[22]

The reference to 4,000 holes was written by John Lennon, and inspired by a Far & Near news brief from the same 17 January edition of the Daily Mail, which had also provided inspiration for previous verses of the song. Under the headline "The holes in our roads", the brief stated: "There are 4,000 holes in the road in Blackburn, Lancashire, or one twenty-sixth of a hole per person, according to a council survey. If Blackburn is typical, there are two million holes in Britain's roads and 300,000 in London".[23] Holes have also been described as ontological parasites because they can only exist as aspects of another object.[14] The psychological concept of a hole as a physical object is taken to its logical extreme in the fictional concept of a portable hole, exemplified in role-playing games and characterized as a "hole" that a person can carry with them, keep things in, and enter themselves as needed.[24]

In art holes are sometimes referred to as negative space, as in the case of the Japanese concept of Ma.

Holes can also be referenced metaphorically as existing in non-tangible things. For example, a person who provides an account of an event that lacks important details can be said to have "holes in their story", and a fictional work with unexplained narrative elements can be said to have plot holes.[25] A person who has suffered loss is often referred to as having a "hole in their heart". The concept of a "God-shaped hole" occurs in religious discourse:

[H]umans are commonly said to have “a God-shaped hole” in our souls. If you are a religious person, you can explain the hole by saying that God put it there in order to make it easier for us to receive Him. If you are a naturalist or an atheist, you believe the God-shaped hole is in our minds, not our souls. You then look for reasons that the concept of God might have evolved in our species.[26]

Unicode edit

The Unicode symbol for HOLE, U+1F573, was approved in 2014 as part of the Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs chart in Unicode 7.0,[27] and was part of Emoji 1.0, published in 2015.[28] As pictorial representations for emoji are platform-dependent, Emojipedia shows images of the hole symbol as depicted on various platforms.[29]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The hole story". The Economist. 2016-06-11. Retrieved 2017-02-11.
  2. ^ "What's At The Bottom Of The Deepest Hole On Earth?". 2016-03-11. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  3. ^ Richeson, D.; Euler's Gem: The Polyhedron Formula and the Birth of Topology, Princeton University (2008), p. 254.
  4. ^ Arnold, Bradford Henry (2013). Intuitive Concepts in Elementary Topology. Dover Books on Mathematics. Courier / Dover Publications. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-48627576-5.
  5. ^ Matoušek, Jiří (2007). Using the Borsuk-Ulam Theorem: Lectures on Topological Methods in Combinatorics and Geometry (2nd ed.). Berlin-Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-540-00362-5. Written in cooperation with Anders Björner and Günter M. Ziegler , Section 4.3.
  6. ^ Munkres, James R. Topology. Vol. 2. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall, 2000.
  7. ^ a b Dunn, Casey (2009-11-06). "A tale of two holes – Creature Cast – Learn Science at Scitable". www.nature.com.
  8. ^ Mouritsen, Ole G. (2005). Life - As a Matter of Fat: The Emerging Science of Lipidomics. Springer. p. 186. ISBN 978-3-54023248-3. OCLC 1156049123.
  9. ^ Electronic Packaging: Solder Mounting Technologies in K. H. Buschow et al (eds.), Encyclopedia of Materials: Science and Technology, Elsevier, 2001 ISBN 0-08-043152-6, pp. 2708–2709.
  10. ^ Horowitz, Paul; Hill, Winfield (1989). The art of electronics (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-52137095-0.
  11. ^ What is a Pinhole Camera?, pinhole.cz.
  12. ^ Enrique Ortega-Rivas, Processing Effects on Safety and Quality of Foods (2010), p. 280.
  13. ^ James J. Licari, Leonard R. Enlow, Hybrid Microcircuit Technology Handbook, 2nd Edition (2008), p. 162.
  14. ^ a b Casati, Roberto; Varzi, Achille (2018-12-18). "Holes". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University – via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  15. ^ Lewis, DK, Lewis, SR (1970). "Holes: With Stephanie Lewis". Philosophical Papers Volume I. Australasian Journal of Philosophy. 48: 206–212. doi:10.1093/0195032047.003.0001. ISBN 0195032047.
  16. ^ Rock, Irv (1973). Orientation and Form. New York: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0125912501.
  17. ^ Abrahams, Marc (2005). "A hole full of surprises".
  18. ^ Bertamini M (2006). "Who owns the contour of a visual hole?". Perception. 35 (7): 883–894. doi:10.1068/p5496. PMID 16970198. S2CID 8073234.
  19. ^ a b Martínez-Aguayo, Juan Carlos; Lanfranco, Renzo C.; Arancibia, Marcelo; Sepúlveda, Elisa; Madrid, Eva (2018). "Trypophobia: What Do We Know So Far? A Case Report and Comprehensive Review of the Literature". Frontiers in Psychiatry. 9: 15. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00015. ISSN 1664-0640. PMC 5811467. PMID 29479321.  This article incorporates text by Juan Carlos Martínez-Aguay, Renzo C. Lanfranco, Marcelo Arancibia, Elisa Sepúlveda and Eva Madrid available under the CC BY 4.0 license.
  20. ^ Le, An T. D.; Cole, Geoff G.; Wilkins, Arnold J. (2015-01-30). "Assessment of trypophobia and an analysis of its visual precipitation". Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. 68 (11): 2304–2322. doi:10.1080/17470218.2015.1013970. PMID 25635930. S2CID 42086559.
  21. ^ Milosevic, Irena; McCabe, Randi E. (2015). Phobias: The Psychology of Irrational Fear. ABC-CLIO. pp. 401–402. ISBN 978-1-61069576-3. Retrieved 2017-10-25.
  22. ^ "Photographic impressions of Beatle songs by Art Kane", LIFE, Vol. 65, No. 12 (1968-09-20), p. 67.
  23. ^ "Far & Near: The holes in our roads". The Daily Mail. No. 21994. 1967-01-17. p. 7.
  24. ^ David Zeb Cook, Jean Rabe, Warren Spector, Dungeon Master Guide for the AD&D Game (1995), p. 235.
  25. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 2017-09-07. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  26. ^ Blakey Vermeule, Why Do We Care about Literary Characters? (2010), p. 10.
  27. ^ "Unicode: Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs". Retrieved 2018-08-20.
  28. ^ "Emoji Version 1.0". Retrieved 2018-08-20.
  29. ^ "Emojipedia: Hole". Retrieved 2018-08-20.

hole, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, whole, hole, opening, through, particular, medium, usually, solid, body, occur, through, natural, artificial, processes, useful, various, purposes, represent, problem, needing, addressed, many, fields, enginee. For other uses see Hole disambiguation Not to be confused with Whole A hole is an opening in or through a particular medium usually a solid body Holes occur through natural and artificial processes and may be useful for various purposes or may represent a problem needing to be addressed in many fields of engineering Depending on the material and the placement a hole may be an indentation in a surface such as a hole in the ground or may pass completely through that surface such as a hole created by a hole puncher in a piece of paper A hole through a dead tree Contents 1 Types 1 1 In mathematics 1 2 In physics 1 3 In biology 1 4 Blind and through 1 5 Pinholes 2 Philosophy and psychology 3 In culture and as a metaphor 4 Unicode 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 ReferencesTypes edit nbsp Perforation holes between a pair of postage stamps from a coil of stamps Holes can occur for a number of reasons including natural processes and intentional actions by humans or animals Holes in the ground that are made intentionally such as holes made while searching for food for replanting trees or postholes made for securing an object are usually made through the process of digging Unintentional holes in an object are often a sign of damage Potholes and sinkholes can damage human settlements 1 Holes can occur in a wide variety of materials and at a wide range of scales The smallest holes observable by humans include pinholes and perforations but the smallest phenomenon described as a hole is an electron hole which is a position in an atom or atomic lattice where an electron is missing The largest phenomenon described as a hole is a supermassive black hole an astronomical object which can be billions of times more massive than Earth s sun The deepest hole on Earth is the man made Kola Superdeep Borehole with a true vertical drill depth of more than 7 5 miles 12 kilometers which is only a fraction of the nearly 4 000 mile 6 400 kilometer distance to the center of the Earth 2 In mathematics edit nbsp In geometric topology the doughnut and the coffee cup are considered to fall into the same mathematical genus because each has one hole In mathematics holes are examined in a number of ways One of these is in homology which is a general way of associating certain algebraic objects to other mathematical objects such as topological spaces Homology groups were originally defined in algebraic topology and homology was originally a rigorous mathematical method for defining and categorizing holes in a mathematical object called a manifold The initial motivation for defining homology groups was the observation that two shapes can be distinguished by examining their holes 3 For instance a circle is not a disk because the circle has a hole through it while the disk is solid 4 and the ordinary sphere is not a circle because the sphere encloses a two dimensional hole while the circle encloses a one dimensional hole Because a hole is immaterial it is not immediately obvious how to define one or distinguish it from others Another is the notion of homotopy group these are invariants of a topological space that when non trivial one also says in this case that the space is not k connected detect the presence of holes in the sense that the space contains a sphere that cannot be contracted to a point The term of hole is often used informally when discussing these objects 5 For surfaces a notion closer to the intuitive meaning exists the genus of a connected orientable surface is an integer representing the maximum number of cuttings along non intersecting closed simple curves without rendering the resultant manifold disconnected 6 In layman s terms it is exactly the number of holes the surface has when represented as a submanifold in 3 space In physics edit In physics antimatter is pervasively described as a hole a location that when brought together with ordinary matter to fill the hole results in both the hole and the matter cancelling each other out This is analogous to patching a pothole with asphalt or filling a bubble below the surface of water with an equal amount of water to cancel it out The most direct example is the electron hole a fairly general theoretical description is provided by the Dirac sea which treats positrons or anti particles in general as holes Holes provide one of the two primary forms of conduction in a semi conductor that is the material from which transistors are made without holes current could not flow and transistors turn on and off by enabling or disabling the creation of holes In biology edit nbsp The Great Blue Hole near Ambergris Caye Belize is an underwater sinkhole Animal bodies tend to contain specialized holes which serve various biological functions such as the intake of oxygen or food the excretion of waste and the intake or expulsion of other fluids for reproductive purposes In some simple animals a single hole serves all of these purposes 7 The formation of holes is a significant event in the development of an animal All animals start out in development with one hole the blastopore If there are two holes the second hole forms later The blastopore can arise at the top or the bottom of the embryo 7 Gramicidin A a polypeptide with a helical shape has been described as a portable hole When it forms a dimer it can embed itself in cellular bilayer membranes and form a hole through which water molecules can pass 8 Blind and through edit nbsp Hole types in engineering blind left through middle interrupted right In engineering machining and tooling a hole may be a blind hole or a through hole also called a thru hole or clearance hole A blind hole is a hole that is reamed drilled or milled to a specified depth without breaking through to the other side of the workpiece A through hole is a hole that is made to go completely through the material of an object In other words a through hole is a hole that goes all the way through something Taps used for through holes are generally tapered since it will tap faster and the chips will be released when the tap exits the hole The etymology of the blind hole is that it is not possible to see through it It may also refer to any feature that is taken to a specific depth more specifically referring to internally threaded hole tapped holes Not considering the drill point the depth of the blind hole conventionally may be slightly deeper than that of the threaded depth There are three accepted methods of threading blind holes Conventional tapping especially with bottom taps Single point threading where the workpiece is rotated and a pointed cutting tool is fed into the workpiece at the same rate as the pitch of the internal thread Single pointing inside a blind hole like boring inside one is inherently more challenging than doing so in a through hole This was especially true in the era when manual machining was the only method of control Today CNC makes these tasks less stressful but nevertheless still more challenging than with through holes Helical interpolation where the workpiece remains stationary and Computer Numerical Control CNC moves a milling cutter in the correct helical path for a given thread milling the thread At least two U S tool manufacturers have manufactured tools for thread milling in blind holes Ingersoll Cutting Tools of Rockford Illinois and Tooling Systems of Houston Texas who introduced the Thread Mill in 1977 a device that milled large internal threads in the blind holes of oil well blowout preventers Today many CNC milling machines can run such a thread milling cycle see a video of such a cut in the External links section One use of through holes in electronics is with through hole technology a mounting scheme involving the use of leads on the components that are inserted into holes drilled in printed circuit boards PCB and soldered to pads on the opposite side either by manual assembly hand placement or by the use of automated insertion mount machines 9 10 Pinholes edit Main article Pinhole optics A pinhole is a small hole usually made by pressing a thin pointed object such as a pin through an easily penetrated material such as a fabric or a very thin layer of metal Similar holes made by other means are also often called pinholes Pinholes may be intentionally made for various reasons For example in optics pinholes are used as apertures to select certain rays of light This is used in pinhole cameras to form an image without the use of a lens 11 Pinholes on produce packaging have been used to control the atmosphere and relative humidity within the packaging 12 In many fields pinholes are a harmful side effect of manufacturing processes For example in the assembly of microcircuits pinholes in the dielectric insulator layer coating the circuit can cause the circuit to fail Therefore t o avoid pinholes that might protrude through the entire thickness of the dielectric layer it is a common practice to screen several layers of dielectric with drying and firing after each screening thereby preventing the pinholes from becoming continuous 13 Philosophy and psychology editIt has been noted that holes occupy an unusual ontological position in philosophy as people tend to refer to them as tangible and countable objects when in fact they are the absence of something in another object 14 15 In the study of visual perception a hole is a special case of figure ground because the ground region is entirely surrounded by the figure For a region to be perceived as a visual hole three factors are important depth factors indicating that the enclosed region lies behind grouping between the enclosed region and the surround and figural factors for example symmetry convexity or familiarity that lead to the perception of a figure rather than a hole 16 17 There is a debate on whether holes are special and whether they are perceived as having their own shape They may be special in some cases but not in the ownership of the contours 18 Some people have an aversion to the sight of irregular patterns or clusters of small holes a condition called trypophobia 19 20 Researchers hypothesize that this is the result of a biological revulsion that associates trypophobic shapes with danger or disease and may therefore have an evolutionary basis 21 19 In culture and as a metaphor edit nbsp Shallow potholes in a road surface An example of the use of holes in popular culture can be found in the Beatles lyric from the song A Day in the Life from their 1967 album Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band I read the news today oh boy Four thousand holes in Blackburn Lancashire And though the holes were rather small They had to count them all Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall 22 The reference to 4 000 holes was written by John Lennon and inspired by a Far amp Near news brief from the same 17 January edition of the Daily Mail which had also provided inspiration for previous verses of the song Under the headline The holes in our roads the brief stated There are 4 000 holes in the road in Blackburn Lancashire or one twenty sixth of a hole per person according to a council survey If Blackburn is typical there are two million holes in Britain s roads and 300 000 in London 23 Holes have also been described as ontological parasites because they can only exist as aspects of another object 14 The psychological concept of a hole as a physical object is taken to its logical extreme in the fictional concept of a portable hole exemplified in role playing games and characterized as a hole that a person can carry with them keep things in and enter themselves as needed 24 In art holes are sometimes referred to as negative space as in the case of the Japanese concept of Ma Holes can also be referenced metaphorically as existing in non tangible things For example a person who provides an account of an event that lacks important details can be said to have holes in their story and a fictional work with unexplained narrative elements can be said to have plot holes 25 A person who has suffered loss is often referred to as having a hole in their heart The concept of a God shaped hole occurs in religious discourse H umans are commonly said to have a God shaped hole in our souls If you are a religious person you can explain the hole by saying that God put it there in order to make it easier for us to receive Him If you are a naturalist or an atheist you believe the God shaped hole is in our minds not our souls You then look for reasons that the concept of God might have evolved in our species 26 Unicode editThe Unicode symbol for HOLE U 1F573 was approved in 2014 as part of the Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs chart in Unicode 7 0 27 and was part of Emoji 1 0 published in 2015 28 As pictorial representations for emoji are platform dependent Emojipedia shows images of the hole symbol as depicted on various platforms 29 Gallery edit nbsp Hole in the ground dug by a fox as its burrow nbsp Hole in a Eucalyptus tree used as a nest by Lorikeets nbsp Trees visible through a large hole in a tree trunk in Laos nbsp Hole in a cloud over Karawanks Slovenia nbsp Sock with a hole in it nbsp Simulated view of a black hole in front of the Large Magellanic Cloud nbsp First image of a black hole by the Event Horizon Telescope nbsp Close up view of a printed circuit board showing component lead holes gold plated with through hole plating Through hole technology nbsp Sound holes precisely carved into the surface of a guitar can facilitate a desired sound nbsp First World War cartoon Well if you knows of a better ole go to it by Bruce Bairnsfather 1915 nbsp A hole in the Berlin wall 2019 nbsp A handheld hole punch used to make holes in paper and similar materials See also editAnnulus mathematics Depression geology Law of holes Sinus Tunnel Watering hole TrypophobiaReferences edit The hole story The Economist 2016 06 11 Retrieved 2017 02 11 What s At The Bottom Of The Deepest Hole On Earth 2016 03 11 Retrieved 2016 08 17 Richeson D Euler s Gem The Polyhedron Formula and the Birth of Topology Princeton University 2008 p 254 Arnold Bradford Henry 2013 Intuitive Concepts in Elementary Topology Dover Books on Mathematics Courier Dover Publications p 58 ISBN 978 0 48627576 5 Matousek Jiri 2007 Using the Borsuk Ulam Theorem Lectures on Topological Methods in Combinatorics and Geometry 2nd ed Berlin Heidelberg Springer Verlag ISBN 978 3 540 00362 5 Written in cooperation with Anders Bjorner and Gunter M Ziegler Section 4 3 Munkres James R Topology Vol 2 Upper Saddle River Prentice Hall 2000 a b Dunn Casey 2009 11 06 A tale of two holes Creature Cast Learn Science at Scitable www nature com Mouritsen Ole G 2005 Life As a Matter of Fat The Emerging Science of Lipidomics Springer p 186 ISBN 978 3 54023248 3 OCLC 1156049123 Electronic Packaging Solder Mounting Technologies in K H Buschow et al eds Encyclopedia of Materials Science and Technology Elsevier 2001 ISBN 0 08 043152 6 pp 2708 2709 Horowitz Paul Hill Winfield 1989 The art of electronics 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 52137095 0 What is a Pinhole Camera pinhole cz Enrique Ortega Rivas Processing Effects on Safety and Quality of Foods 2010 p 280 James J Licari Leonard R Enlow Hybrid Microcircuit Technology Handbook 2nd Edition 2008 p 162 a b Casati Roberto Varzi Achille 2018 12 18 Holes In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Lewis DK Lewis SR 1970 Holes With Stephanie Lewis Philosophical Papers Volume I Australasian Journal of Philosophy 48 206 212 doi 10 1093 0195032047 003 0001 ISBN 0195032047 Rock Irv 1973 Orientation and Form New York Academic Press ISBN 978 0125912501 Abrahams Marc 2005 A hole full of surprises Bertamini M 2006 Who owns the contour of a visual hole Perception 35 7 883 894 doi 10 1068 p5496 PMID 16970198 S2CID 8073234 a b Martinez Aguayo Juan Carlos Lanfranco Renzo C Arancibia Marcelo Sepulveda Elisa Madrid Eva 2018 Trypophobia What Do We Know So Far A Case Report and Comprehensive Review of the Literature Frontiers in Psychiatry 9 15 doi 10 3389 fpsyt 2018 00015 ISSN 1664 0640 PMC 5811467 PMID 29479321 nbsp This article incorporates text by Juan Carlos Martinez Aguay Renzo C Lanfranco Marcelo Arancibia Elisa Sepulveda and Eva Madrid available under the CC BY 4 0 license Le An T D Cole Geoff G Wilkins Arnold J 2015 01 30 Assessment of trypophobia and an analysis of its visual precipitation Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 68 11 2304 2322 doi 10 1080 17470218 2015 1013970 PMID 25635930 S2CID 42086559 Milosevic Irena McCabe Randi E 2015 Phobias The Psychology of Irrational Fear ABC CLIO pp 401 402 ISBN 978 1 61069576 3 Retrieved 2017 10 25 Photographic impressions of Beatle songs by Art Kane LIFE Vol 65 No 12 1968 09 20 p 67 Far amp Near The holes in our roads The Daily Mail No 21994 1967 01 17 p 7 David Zeb Cook Jean Rabe Warren Spector Dungeon Master Guide for the AD amp D Game 1995 p 235 plot hole Definition of plot hole in English by Oxford Dictionaries Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 2017 09 07 Retrieved 2017 09 07 Blakey Vermeule Why Do We Care about Literary Characters 2010 p 10 Unicode Miscellaneous Symbols and Pictographs Retrieved 2018 08 20 Emoji Version 1 0 Retrieved 2018 08 20 Emojipedia Hole Retrieved 2018 08 20 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hole amp oldid 1223775693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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