Stalactites refers to the formations that grow downward from the top of the cave.
If you mean from the cave roofs, and the caves are in limestone, then 'stalactites'. The term refers to such formation in any karst cave irrespective of location.
Formations that grow downward from the top of a cave are called stalactites. Stalactites may be composed of amberat, lava, minerals, mud, peat, pitch, and sand. Formations that grow from the floor upwards are called stalagmites. (You can remember the difference by thinking of the phrase "ants in your pants". The mites go up and the tights come down.)
Formations that grow downward from the top of a cave are called stalactites. Stalactites may be composed of amberat, lava, minerals, mud, peat, pitch, and sand. Formations that grow from the floor upwards are called stalagmites. (You can remember the difference by thinking of the phrase "ants in your pants". The mites go up and the tights come down.)
Downward multiplexing refers to distributing a single signal across multiple channels.
Formations
Formations that grow downwards from the top of the cave are called stalactites.
Formations that grow downward from the top of a cave are called stalactites. Stalactites may be composed of amberat, lava, minerals, mud, peat, pitch, and sand. Formations that grow from the floor upwards are called stalagmites. (You can remember the difference by thinking of the phrase "ants in your pants". The mites go up and the tights come down.)
The upward and the downward bias refers to the overestimation or overstatement by a statistical measure of a given event.
Anhedral refers to the downward slope of an aircrafts wings.
Upward displacement refers to an object's change in position moving in an upward direction, while downward displacement refers to an object's change in position moving in a downward direction along a vertical axis. These displacements are measured vertically from a reference point, such as the starting position of the object.
This process is called infiltration. It refers to the downward movement of water from the surface into the soil.
Zooming in this context refers to the speed at which a roller coaster carries passengers on its downward slopes and downward turns.