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Phonofilm

  • 1 phonofilm

    phonofilm[´founə¸film] n звуков филм.

    English-Bulgarian dictionary > phonofilm

  • 2 phonofilm

    звуковая кинокартина

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > phonofilm

  • 3 phonofilm

    НБАРС > phonofilm

  • 4 phonofilm

    ['fəʊnəfɪlm]
    Общая лексика: звуковая кинокартина

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > phonofilm

  • 5 phonofilm

    n
    звуковий кінофільм
    * * *
    n

    English-Ukrainian dictionary > phonofilm

  • 6 phonofilm

    English-Ukrainian dictionary > phonofilm

  • 7 phonofilm

    فيلم‌سخنگو،فيلم‌صدادار

    English to Farsi dictionary > phonofilm

  • 8 phonofilm

    شريط ناطق

    Dictionnaire Français-Arabe > phonofilm

  • 9 phonofilm

    (n) звуковая кинокартина

    Новый англо-русский словарь > phonofilm

  • 10 phonofilm

    аудио филм

    English-Bulgarian polytechnical dictionary > phonofilm

  • 11 phonofilm

    n звуковая кинокартина

    English-Russian base dictionary > phonofilm

  • 12 شريط ناطق

    phonofilm

    Dictionnaire Arabe-Français > شريط ناطق

  • 13 аудио филм

    phonofilm

    Български-Angleščina политехнически речник > аудио филм

  • 14 De Forest, Lee

    [br]
    b. 26 August 1873 Council Bluffs, Iowa, USA
    d. 30 June 1961 Hollywood, California, USA
    [br]
    American electrical engineer and inventor principally known for his invention of the Audion, or triode, vacuum tube; also a pioneer of sound in the cinema.
    [br]
    De Forest was born into the family of a Congregational minister that moved to Alabama in 1879 when the father became President of a college for African-Americans; this was a position that led to the family's social ostracism by the white community. By the time he was 13 years old, De Forest was already a keen mechanical inventor, and in 1893, rejecting his father's plan for him to become a clergyman, he entered the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University. Following his first degree, he went on to study the propagation of electromagnetic waves, gaining a PhD in physics in 1899 for his thesis on the "Reflection of Hertzian Waves from the Ends of Parallel Wires", probably the first US thesis in the field of radio.
    He then joined the Western Electric Company in Chicago where he helped develop the infant technology of wireless, working his way up from a modest post in the production area to a position in the experimental laboratory. There, working alone after normal working hours, he developed a detector of electromagnetic waves based on an electrolytic device similar to that already invented by Fleming in England. Recognizing his talents, a number of financial backers enabled him to set up his own business in 1902 under the name of De Forest Wireless Telegraphy Company; he was soon demonstrating wireless telegraphy to interested parties and entering into competition with the American Marconi Company.
    Despite the failure of this company because of fraud by his partners, he continued his experiments; in 1907, by adding a third electrode, a wire mesh, between the anode and cathode of the thermionic diode invented by Fleming in 1904, he was able to produce the amplifying device now known as the triode valve and achieve a sensitivity of radio-signal reception much greater than possible with the passive carborundum and electrolytic detectors hitherto available. Patented under the name Audion, this new vacuum device was soon successfully used for experimental broadcasts of music and speech in New York and Paris. The invention of the Audion has been described as the beginning of the electronic era. Although much development work was required before its full potential was realized, the Audion opened the way to progress in all areas of sound transmission, recording and reproduction. The patent was challenged by Fleming and it was not until 1943 that De Forest's claim was finally recognized.
    Overcoming the near failure of his new company, the De Forest Radio Telephone Company, as well as unsuccessful charges of fraudulent promotion of the Audion, he continued to exploit the potential of his invention. By 1912 he had used transformer-coupling of several Audion stages to achieve high gain at radio frequencies, making long-distance communication a practical proposition, and had applied positive feedback from the Audion output anode to its input grid to realize a stable transmitter oscillator and modulator. These successes led to prolonged patent litigation with Edwin Armstrong and others, and he eventually sold the manufacturing rights, in retrospect often for a pittance.
    During the early 1920s De Forest began a fruitful association with T.W.Case, who for around ten years had been working to perfect a moving-picture sound system. De Forest claimed to have had an interest in sound films as early as 1900, and Case now began to supply him with photoelectric cells and primitive sound cameras. He eventually devised a variable-density sound-on-film system utilizing a glow-discharge modulator, the Photion. By 1926 De Forest's Phonofilm had been successfully demonstrated in over fifty theatres and this system became the basis of Movietone. Though his ideas were on the right lines, the technology was insufficiently developed and it was left to others to produce a system acceptable to the film industry. However, De Forest had played a key role in transforming the nature of the film industry; within a space of five years the production of silent films had all but ceased.
    In the following decade De Forest applied the Audion to the development of medical diathermy. Finally, after spending most of his working life as an independent inventor and entrepreneur, he worked for a time during the Second World War at the Bell Telephone Laboratories on military applications of electronics.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Institute of Electronic and Radio Engineers Medal of Honour 1922. President, Institute of Electronic and Radio Engineers 1930. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Edison Medal 1946.
    Bibliography
    1904, "Electrolytic detectors", Electrician 54:94 (describes the electrolytic detector). 1907, US patent no. 841,387 (the Audion).
    1950, Father of Radio, Chicago: WIlcox \& Follett (autobiography).
    De Forest gave his own account of the development of his sound-on-film system in a series of articles: 1923. "The Phonofilm", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 16 (May): 61–75; 1924. "Phonofilm progress", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 20:17–19; 1927, "Recent developments in the Phonofilm", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 27:64–76; 1941, "Pioneering in talking pictures", Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 36 (January): 41–9.
    Further Reading
    G.Carneal, 1930, A Conqueror of Space (biography).
    I.Levine, 1964, Electronics Pioneer, Lee De Forest (biography).
    E.I.Sponable, 1947, "Historical development of sound films", Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 48 (April): 275–303 (an authoritative account of De Forest's sound-film work, by Case's assistant).
    W.R.McLaurin, 1949, Invention and Innovation in the Radio Industry.
    C.F.Booth, 1955, "Fleming and De Forest. An appreciation", in Thermionic Valves 1904– 1954, IEE.
    V.J.Phillips, 1980, Early Radio Detectors, London: Peter Peregrinus.
    KF / JW

    Biographical history of technology > De Forest, Lee

  • 15 звуковая кинокартина

    General subject: phonofilm

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > звуковая кинокартина

  • 16 klankfilm

    n. phonofilm

    Holandés-inglés dicionario > klankfilm

  • 17 hangosfilm

    (DE) Tonfilm {r}; (EN) phonofilm; sound-film; sound-picture; talkies; talking picture

    Magyar-német-angol szótár > hangosfilm

См. также в других словарях:

  • Phonofilm — In 1919, Lee De Forest, inventor of the audion tube, filed his first patent on a sound on film process, DeForest Phonofilm, which recorded sound directly onto film as parallel lines. These parallel lines photographically recorded electrical… …   Wikipedia

  • Phonofilm — Lee De Forest Pour les articles homonymes, voir Forest (patronyme). Lee De Forest Lee De Forest (né le 26 août  …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Phonofilm — ▪ film       system used in the 1920s to provide sound synchronized with motion pictures. A sound track was photographically recorded on the film by a beam of light modulated by the sound waves. The sound was reproduced during projection by… …   Universalium

  • phonofilm — …   Useful english dictionary

  • Sound film — …   Wikipedia

  • Lee De Forest — Infobox person name = Lee De Forest caption = birth date = birth date|1873|8|26|mf=y birth place = Council Bluffs, Iowa death date = death date and age|1961|6|30|1873|8|26|mf=y death place = Hollywood, Los Angeles, California occupation =… …   Wikipedia

  • Miles Mander — Born Lionel Henry Mander May 14, 1888(1888 05 14) Wolverhampton, England Died February 8, 1946(1946 02 08) (aged 57) Los Angeles, California USA …   Wikipedia

  • Cinema sonore — Cinéma sonore Cinéma …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Cinéma Sonore — Cinéma …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Cinéma parlant — Cinéma sonore Cinéma …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Film sonore — Cinéma sonore Cinéma …   Wikipédia en Français

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