TRACK


'Track' may refer to:

Animal tracks, imprints left on surfaces that an animal walk across

Track cycling, a bicycle racing sport usually held on specially-built banked tracks

Athletics (track and field), a collection of sports events that involve running, throwing and jumping; also known as "track and field", "track and field athletics", or just "track" in the US

Caterpillar track, a belt providing motive traction for a tank or bulldozer

Race track, purpose-built facility for the conducting of races

Rail tracks, used on railways, which, together with railroad switches, guide trains without the need for steering

Soundtrack, the recorded sound accompanying a visual medium such as a motion picture, television show, or video game

Navigational track, the path a vessel or aircraft plots over ground

Track (CD), consecutive set of sectors on the disc containing a block of data

Track Records, a record label founded in 1966 in London, England

Track+, project-management and bug tracking tool
'Tracks' may refer to:

Tracks (1976 film), film written and directed by Henry Jaglom, starring Dennis Hopper

Tracks (album), 1998 four-disc box set by Bruce Springsteen

Tracks (novel), book written by Louise Erdrich

Tracks (magazine), monthly Australian surf magazine

Tracks (Transformers), an Autobot in the Transformers series

Contents
Related uses
See also

Related uses



Song or other distinct section of a sound recording

★ One section of a multitrack recording

★ A synonym for cricket pitch, central strip of a cricket field between the wickets

★ An ocean track is used in flight planning for routing aircraft across an ocean, or ground track for overland navigation. It is the path of the aircraft as determined combination of heading, slip, and wind effects.

★ In devices for satellite navigation, a track is an ordered set of points along a path

★ Wheel gauge of a vehicle, or rail gauge

Trail, an informal road or pathway

★ Copper trace or Signal trace line on a printed circuit board

★ Circular segment of a hard disk or other storage media (see also cylinder-head-sector)

Event reconstruction of a charged particle's path in relation to a particle accelerator or particle detector

★ Commonly mistaken verbally, Trac is a web-based project management and bug-tracking tool.

See also



Tracker

Tracking

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