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wilson

  • 21 Wilson chamber

    = Wilson cloud chamber камера Вильсона, расширительная (диффузионная) камера

    English-Russian electronics dictionary > Wilson chamber

  • 22 Wilson cloud chamber

    English-Russian electronics dictionary > Wilson cloud chamber

  • 23 Wilson chamber

    = Wilson cloud chamber камера Вильсона, расширительная (диффузионная) камера

    The New English-Russian Dictionary of Radio-electronics > Wilson chamber

  • 24 Wilson cloud chamber

    The New English-Russian Dictionary of Radio-electronics > Wilson cloud chamber

  • 25 Wilson central terminal

    Wilson-Elektrode f ( EKG)

    Fachwörterbuch Medizin Englisch-Deutsch > Wilson central terminal

  • 26 Wilson's\ petrel

    English-Hungarian dictionary > Wilson's\ petrel

  • 27 Wilson, Thomas

    SUBJECT AREA: Canals, Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 1781 Dunbar, Scotland
    d. 1 December 1873 Grangemouth, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish shipwright and canal engineer, builder of the barge Vulcan, the world's first properly constructed iron ship.
    [br]
    Wilson, the son of a sailor, spent his early years on the Forth. Later his father moved home to the west and Wilson served his apprenticeship as a shipwright on the Clyde at the small shipyards of Bowling, fifteen miles (24 km) west of Glasgow and on the river's north bank. In his late thirties Wilson was to take the leading role in what is arguably the most important development in Scotland's distinguished shipbuilding history: the building of the world's first properly constructed iron ship. This ship, the Vulcan, was the culmination of several years' effort by a group of people well connected within the academic establishment of Scotland. The Forth and Clyde Canal Company had passed instructions for investigations to be made into reducing running expenses and a distinguished committee looked into this matter. They included John Robison (Secretary of the Royal Society of Edinburgh), Professor Joseph Black of Glasgow University, James Watt and John Schanck. After a period of consideration it was decided to build a new, fastpassage barge of iron, and tenders were invited from several appropriate contractors. Wilson, with the assistance of two blacksmiths, John and Thomas Smellie, was awarded the work, and the Vulcan was constructed and ultimately launched at Faskine near Glasgow in 1819. The work involved was far beyond the comprehension of engineers of the twentieth century, as Wilson had to arrange puddled-iron plates for the shell and hand-crafted angle irons for the frames. His genius is now apparent as every steel ship worldwide uses a form of construction literally "hammered out on the anvil" between 1818 and 1819. The Vulcan was almost 64 ft (19.5 m) in length and 11 ft (3.4 m) broad. In 1822 Wilson was appointed an inspector of works for the Canal Company, and ultimately he superintended the building of the docks at Grangemouth, where he died in 1873, the same year that the Vulcan was broken up.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    R.Harvey, 1919, Early Days of Engineering in Glasgow, Glasgow: Aird and Coghill. F.M.Walker, 1989–90, "Early iron shipbuilding. A reappraisal of the Vulcan and other pioneer vessels", Transactions of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in
    Scotland 133:21–34.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Wilson, Thomas

  • 28 Wilson, Robert

    [br]
    b. September 1803 Dunbar, Haddingtonshire, East Lothian, Scotland
    d. 28 July 1882 Matlock, Derbyshire, England
    [br]
    Scottish mechanical engineer and inventor who developed the self-acting control gear applied to the steam-hammer.
    [br]
    Robert Wilson was the son of a fisherman who was drowned in a lifeboat rescue attempt in December 1810. He received only a meagre education and was apprenticed to a joiner. From a very early age he was much concerned with the idea of applying screw propellers to ships, and his invention was approved by the Highland Society and by the Scottish Society of Arts, who in 1832 awarded him a silver medal. He must have gained some experience as a mechanic and while working on his invention he made the acquaintance of James Nasmyth. In 1838 he became Works Manager at Nasmyth's Bridgewater Foundry and made an important contribution to the success of the steam-hammer by developing the self-acting control gear. From 1845 he was with the Low Moor Ironworks near Bradford, Yorkshire, but in July 1856 he returned to the Bridgewater Foundry so that he was able to take over as Managing Partner after Nasmyth's early retirement at the end of 1856. In 1867 the name of the firm was changed to Nasmyth, Wilson \& Co., and Wilson remained a partner until May 1882, when the firm became a limited company. Wilson often returned to his first invention, and two of his many patents related to improvements in screw propellers. In 1880 he received £500 from the War Department for the use of his double-action screw propeller as applied to the torpedo.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Member, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1857. FRSE 1873. Member, Royal Scottish Society of Arts.
    Bibliography
    1860, The Screw Propeller: Who Invented It?, Glasgow.
    Further Reading
    J.A.Cantrell, 1984, James Nasmyth and the Bridgewater Foundry, Manchester, Appendix F, pp. 262–3 (a short biographical account and a list of his patents).
    RTS

    Biographical history of technology > Wilson, Robert

  • 29 Wilson gearbox

    GB <mvhcl.drive> ■ Wilson-Vorwählgetriebe n ; Wilson-Getriebe n

    English-german technical dictionary > Wilson gearbox

  • 30 Wilson pre-selector transmission

    <mvhcl.drive> ■ Wilson-Vorwählgetriebe n ; Wilson-Getriebe n

    English-german technical dictionary > Wilson pre-selector transmission

  • 31 Wilson transmission

    <mvhcl.drive> ■ Wilson-Vorwählgetriebe n ; Wilson-Getriebe n

    English-german technical dictionary > Wilson transmission

  • 32 Wilson's disease

    Wilsonsche Krankheit f, Wilson-Krankheit f, Morbus m Wilson, hepatolentikuläre Degeneration f

    Fachwörterbuch Medizin Englisch-Deutsch > Wilson's disease

  • 33 Wilson chamber

    < nucl> ■ Wilson-Kammer f

    English-german technical dictionary > Wilson chamber

  • 34 Wilson cloud chamber

    < nucl> ■ Wilson-Kammer f
    < phys> ■ Nebelkammer f

    English-german technical dictionary > Wilson cloud chamber

  • 35 Wilson chamber

    kamar Wilson

    English-Indonesian dictionary > Wilson chamber

  • 36 Wilson’s disease

    Wil.son’s dis.ease
    [wilsənz diz'i:z] n Med moléstia de Wilson: doença congênita que torna o organismo incapaz de metabolizar cobre e provoca cirrose e problemas mentais.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > Wilson’s disease

  • 37 Wilson chamber

    (metr) cameră de ionizare / cu ceaţă / cu detentă / Wilson

    English-Romanian technical dictionary > Wilson chamber

  • 38 Wilson meat products

    мясная гастрономия "Уилсон"
    Сосиски, бекон, ветчина фирмы "Уилсон энд Ко." [Wilson and Co.], г. Оклахома-Сити, шт. Оклахома. Один из рекламных лозунгов фирмы: "Если на пакете Золотая печать, лучше с него покупки начать" ["If this Gold Seal is on it - there's better meat in it"]

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Wilson meat products

  • 39 Wilson Quarterly

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Wilson Quarterly

  • 40 Wilson lot-sized formula

    formule van Camp
    formule van Wilson

    English-Dutch technical dictionary > Wilson lot-sized formula

См. также в других словарях:

  • Wilson — se puede referir a: Contenido 1 Personas 1.1 Autores de nombres botánicos 2 En geografía 3 En medicina …   Wikipedia Español

  • Wilson — may refer to:People* Wilson (surname)In geography*List of peaks named Mount WilsonAustralia*Wilson, Western AustraliaCanada*Wilson Avenue (Toronto), Ontario **Wilson (TTC) subway stationPoland* Wilson Square ( Plac Wilsona ) in WarsawUnited… …   Wikipedia

  • Wilson — Wilson, Angus Wilson, Charles Thompson Rees Wilson, Colin Wilson, Colin St. John Wilson, Henry Maitland Wilson, James Harold Wilson, John Wilson, Kenneth …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Wilson — Wilson, WI U.S. village in Wisconsin Population (2000): 176 Housing Units (2000): 69 Land area (2000): 1.550263 sq. miles (4.015163 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 1.550263 sq. miles (4.015163 sq …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • Wilson — bezeichnet: einen Familiennamen, siehe Wilson (Familienname) Wilson (Film), Spielfilm von Henry King aus dem Jahr 1944 Wilson Krankheit, eine Erkrankung Wilson Sporting Goods, amerikanischer Sportartikelhersteller in der Mathematik den nach John… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Wilson —   [wɪlsn],    1) Sir (seit 1980) Angus Frank Johnstone, englischer Schriftsteller, * Bexhill (County East Sussex) 11. 8. 1913, ✝ Bury (County Suffolk) 31. 5. 1991; Studium der Geschichte in Oxford, 1936 55 Bibliothekar am Britischen Museum, 1966… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • WILSON (J. H.) — WILSON JAMES HAROLD (1916 1995) Premier ministre de Grande Bretagne de 1964 à 1970, puis de 1974 à 1976. Né à Huddersfield, fils d’un agent électoral du Parti libéral (ancien agent électoral de Churchill), James Harold Wilson étudie à Wirral… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • WILSON (R.) — Robert WILS Robert Wilson se dit plus volontiers artiste visuel que metteur en scène, et, bien qu’il soit surtout connu pour son travail théâtral, il s’est aussi illustré dans le dessin, la peinture, la sculpture et la vidéo. C’est que l’image… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • WILSON (A.) — WILSON ANGUS (1913 1991) Doué d’un sens de l’humour féroce, admirablement servi par un don d’observation sans complaisance et par une clairvoyance psychologique redoutable, Angus Wilson cache sous les dehors pétillants d’un homme d’esprit la… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • WILSON (E.) — Pendant un demi siècle, Wilson a dominé intellectuellement la scène littéraire aux États Unis, interprétant pour ses contemporains les multiples aspects des grands courants artistiques, sociaux et politiques qui ont modifié le visage de… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • WILSON (T. W.) — WILSON THOMAS WOODROW (1856 1924) Après des études à Princeton et à l’université de Virginie, Thomas Wilson devient avocat. Mais ce métier ne lui convient pas. Il reprend ses études et enseigne l’histoire à Bryn Mawr (Pennsylvanie), puis la… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

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