释义 |
payload /ˈpeɪləʊd /noun1The part of a vehicle’s load, especially an aircraft’s, from which revenue is derived; passengers and cargo.The airplane will usually be carrying a payload (passengers, cargo, weapons) and often a full load of fuel....- The airline wanted an aircraft with excellent payload to achieve a good passenger-seat-per-mile cost even though it would be a more expensive aircraft to initially purchase.
- A long, slender fuselage was necessary to contain most of the fuel as well as the landing gear and payloads.
1.1Equipment, personnel, or satellites carried by a spacecraft.The satellite will carry a payload that will transmit a Galileo experimental signal....- I've restricted it to spacecraft carrying useful payloads that actually flew.
- It operates microgravity science payloads for ground and spaceflight research.
1.2An explosive warhead carried by an aircraft or missile.It will carry a warhead payload of 404 dual-purpose improved conventional munition bomblets....- Moreover, it is studying new kinds of warheads and payloads for the missiles, as well as new missiles.
- It will have a 30-minute loiter time at 70 kilometers capability using a micro turbojet engine and a warhead payload.
2 Computing The actual information or message in transmitted data, as opposed to automatically generated metadata.The original client request to the presentation server is typically in HTTP with a possible payload of XML....- There are limits to how much lossless data compression can compress and increase the payload of a TCP/IP data packet.
- In general, each message contains a source, a destination, metadata, as well as the data payload itself.
2.1The effects of a virus on a computer system.Sophos experts have advised customers about a new email-aware worm that has an unusual payload....- His Gokar worm also had a malicious payload - it attempted to overwrite the main page on the websites of infected companies.
- It does not have a malicious payload, meaning it does not destroy or alter information within a computer.
|