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1 Physical Review B
American: PRB -
2 Physical Review C
NASA: PRC -
3 Physical Review Council
Military: PRCУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Physical Review Council
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4 Physical Review Journal
Abbreviation: PhysRevУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Physical Review Journal
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5 Physical Review Journal - Phys Rev
Information technology: PhysRevУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Physical Review Journal - Phys Rev
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6 Physical Review Letters
Electronics: PRLУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Physical Review Letters
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7 Army Physical Review Council
Military: APRCУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Army Physical Review Council
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8 Physical Disability Review Board
Military: PDRBУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Physical Disability Review Board
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9 Physical Qualification Review
Military: PQRУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Physical Qualification Review
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10 continuar + Gerundio
(v.) = go on + Gerundio, keep + Gerundio, keep on + GerundioEx. Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.Ex. It was interesting to hear how often a very diverse group of people kept coming back to the question of standards against which objectives and aims for services might be gauged.Ex. Despite the electronics invasion, books are still king, and book fairs keeps on growing every year.* * *(v.) = go on + Gerundio, keep + Gerundio, keep on + GerundioEx: Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.
Ex: It was interesting to hear how often a very diverse group of people kept coming back to the question of standards against which objectives and aims for services might be gauged.Ex: Despite the electronics invasion, books are still king, and book fairs keeps on growing every year. -
11 irónicamente
adv.ironically, with one's tongue in one's cheek, wryly.* * *► adverbio1 ironically2 (con burla) mockingly* * *ADV ironically* * *= ironically, with tongue in cheek, tongue-in-cheek, wryly.Ex. Ironically, the latter proved to be the most vulnerable and acutely criticized of Panizzi's rules, as, coincidentally, are the corresponding AACR rules.Ex. Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.Ex. This is a tongue-in-cheek report concerned with reducing not only the 'growth rate' of library collections but also their actual size.Ex. William A Katz has commented wryly that 'the introduction of the machine into the reference process will force even the most reluctant librarian to participate as one human being interacting with another'.* * *= ironically, with tongue in cheek, tongue-in-cheek, wryly.Ex: Ironically, the latter proved to be the most vulnerable and acutely criticized of Panizzi's rules, as, coincidentally, are the corresponding AACR rules.
Ex: Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.Ex: This is a tongue-in-cheek report concerned with reducing not only the 'growth rate' of library collections but also their actual size.Ex: William A Katz has commented wryly that 'the introduction of the machine into the reference process will force even the most reluctant librarian to participate as one human being interacting with another'.* * *ironically* * *
Multiple Entries:
ironicamente
irónicamente
ironicamente adverbio ironically
' ironicamente' also found in these entries:
English:
dig
- sardonically
- ironically
* * *irónicamente advironically -
12 quince
adj.1 fifteen.2 fifteenth.f. & m.fifteen.quince días a fortnight;* * *► adjetivo1 (cardinal) fifteen; (ordinal) fifteenth1 fifteen\* * *noun m. adj.* * *1.ADJ INV PRON [gen] fifteen; [ordinal, en la fecha] fifteenthseis2.SM (=número) fifteen; (=fecha) fifteenth* * *Iadjetivo invariable/pronombre fifteenIIdentro de quince días — in two weeks' time, in a fortnight's time (BrE); para ejemplos ver tb cinco
masculino (number) fifteen* * *= fifteen.Ex. Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.* * *Iadjetivo invariable/pronombre fifteenIIdentro de quince días — in two weeks' time, in a fortnight's time (BrE); para ejemplos ver tb cinco
masculino (number) fifteen* * *= fifteen.Ex: Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.
* * *adj inv/pronfifteendentro de quince días me voy I'm going in two weeks' time o ( BrE) in a fortnight's time(number) fifteen* * *
quince adj inv/pron/m
fifteen;
para ejemplos ver tb cinco
quince adjetivo & m inv fifteen
' quince' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
así
- de
- dulce
- hipar
- membrillo
- prueba
- día
- edad
- exclusive
- igual
- más
- nada
- quinceañero
English:
abortion
- appreciate
- credit
- drop out
- fifteen
- magazine
- quince
- fortnight
* * *quince númfifteen;quince días a fortnight;UElos Quince the Fifteen;dar quince y raya a alguien to get the better of sb;Famdel quince: un constipado del quince a stinking cold;ver también tres* * *adj fifteen;dentro de quince días in two weeks* * *quince adj & nm: fifteen* * *quince num1. (en general) fifteen2. (fechas) fifteenthquince días a fortnight / two weeks -
13 sarcásticamente
adv.sarcastically, ironically, sardonically.* * *► adverbio1 sarcastically* * *ADV sarcastically* * *Ex. Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.* * *Ex: Rober Oppenheimer, with his tongue in cheek, said, some years ago, that if the American 'Physical review' went on expanding at its present rate, it would be fifteen times heavier than the earth by the end of the century!.
* * *sarcastically* * *sarcásticamente advsarcastically -
14 Cady, Walter Guyton
[br]b. 10 December 1874 Providence, Rhode Island, USAd. 9 December 1974 Providence, Rhode Island, USA[br]American physicist renowned for his pioneering work on piezo-electricity.[br]After obtaining BSc and MSc degrees in physics at Brown University in 1896 and 1897, respectively, Cady went to Berlin, obtaining his PhD in 1900. Returning to the USA he initially worked for the US Coast and Geodetic Survey, but in 1902 he took up a post at the Wesleyan University, Connecticut, remaining as Professor of Physics from 1907 until his retirement in 1946. During the First World War he became interested in piezo-electricity as a result of attending a meeting on techniques for detecting submarines, and after the war he continued to work on the use of piezo-electricity as a transducer for generating sonar beams. In the process he discovered that piezo-electric materials, such as quartz, exhibited high-stability electrical resonance, and in 1921 he produced the first working piezo-electric resonator. This idea was subsequently taken up by George Washington Pierce and others, resulting in very stable oscillators and narrow-band filters that are widely used in the 1990s in radio communications, electronic clocks and watches.Internationally known for his work, Cady retired from his professorship in 1946, but he continued to work for the US Navy. From 1951 to 1955 he was a consultant and research associate at the California Institute of Technology, after which he returned to Providence to continue research at Brown, filing his last patent (one of over fifty) at the age of 93 years.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPresident, Institute of Radio Engineers 1932. London Physical Society Duddell Medal. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Morris N.Liebmann Memorial Prize 1928.Bibliography28 January 1920, US patent no. 1,450,246 (piezo-electric resonator).1921, "The piezo-electric resonator", Physical Review 17:531. 1946, Piezoelectricity, New York: McGraw Hill (his classic work).Further ReadingB.Jaffe, W.R.Cooke \& H.Jaffe, 1971, Piezoelectric Ceramics.KF -
15 Schawlow, Arthur Leonard
[br]b. 5 May 1921 Mount Vernon, New York, USA[br]American physicist involved in laser-spectroscopy research.[br]When Arthur L.Schawlow was 3 years old his family moved to Canada: it was in Toronto that he received his education, graduating from the University of Toronto with a BA in physics in 1941. He was awarded an MA in 1942, taught classes for military personnel at the University until 1944 and worked for a year on radar equipment. He returned to the University of Toronto in 1945 to carry out research on optical spectroscopy and received his PhD in 1949. From 1949 to 1951 he held a postgraduate fellowship at Columbia University, where he worked with Charles H. Townes on microwave spectroscopy. From 1951 to 1961 he was a research physicist at the Bell Telephone Laboratories, working mainly on superconductivity, but he maintained his association with Townes, who had pioneered the maser (an acronym of microwave amplification by stimulated emission of radiation). In a paper published in Physical Review in December 1958, Townes and Schawlow suggested the possibility of a development into optical frequencies or an optical maser, later known as a laser (an acronym of light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation). In 1960 the first such device was made by Theodore H. Maiman. In 1960 Schawlow returned to Columbia University as a visiting professor and in the following year was appointed Professor of Physics at Stanford University, where he continued his researches in laser spectroscopy. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Physical Society, the Optical Society of America and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsNobel Prize for Physics 1981. Franklin Institute Stuart Ballantine Medal 1962. Institute of Physics of London Thomas Young Medal and Prize 1963. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Morris N.Liebmann Memorial Prize 1964. Optical Society of America Frederick Ives Medal 1976. Honorary degrees from the State University of Ghent, the University of Bradford and the University of Toronto.BibliographySchawlow is the author of many scientific papers and, with Charles H.Townes, ofMicrowave Spectroscopy (1955).Further ReadingT.Wasson (ed.), 1987, Nobel Prize Winners, New York, pp. 930–3 (contains a short biography).RTSBiographical history of technology > Schawlow, Arthur Leonard
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16 совет СВ по оценке физического состояния ЛС
Military: Army Physical Review CouncilУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > совет СВ по оценке физического состояния ЛС
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17 совет по вопросам оценки физического состояния
Military: Physical RevieW council (военнослужащих)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > совет по вопросам оценки физического состояния
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18 совет по оценке физического состояния ЛС
Military: Physical Review CouncilУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > совет по оценке физического состояния ЛС
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19 Nyquist, Harry
[br]b. 7 February 1889 Nilsby, Swedend. 4 April 1976 Texas, USA[br]Swedish-American engineer who established the formula for thermal noise in electrical circuits and the stability criterion for feedback amplifiers.[br]Nyquist (original family name Nykvist) emigrated from Sweden to the USA when he was 18 years old and settled in Minnesota. After teaching for a time, he studied electrical engineering at the University of North Dakota, gaining his first and Master's degrees in 1915 and 1916, and his PhD from Yale in 1917. He then joined the American Telegraph \& Telephone Company, moving to its Bell Laboratories in 1934 and remaining there until his retirement in 1954. A prolific inventor, he made many contributions to communication engineering, including the invention of vestigial-side band transmission. In the late 1920s he analysed the behaviour of analogue and digital signals in communication circuits, and in 1928 he showed that the thermal noise per unit bandwidth is given by 4 kT, where k is Boltzmann's constant and T the absolute temperature. However, he is best known for the Nyquist Criterion, which defines the conditions necessary for the stable, oscillation-free operation of amplifiers with a closed feedback loop. The problem of how to realize these conditions was investigated by his colleague Hendrik Bode.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFranklin Institute Medal 1960. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Medal of Honour 1960; Mervin J.Kelly Award 1961.Bibliography1924, "Certain factors affecting telegraph speed", Bell System Technical Journal 3:324. 1928, "Certain topics in telegraph transmission theory", Transactions of the AmericanInstitute of Electrical Engineers 47:617.1928, "Thermal agitation of electric charge in conductors", Physical Review 32:110. 1932, "Regeneration theory", Bell System Technical Journal 11:126.1940, with K.Pfleger, "Effect of the quadrature component in single-sideband transmission", Bell System Technical Journal 19:63.Further ReadingBell Telephone Laboratories, 1975, Mission Communications.See also: Shannon, Claude ElwoodKF -
20 Taylor, Albert Hoyt
[br]b. 1 January 1874 Chicago, Illinois, USAd. 11 December 1961 Claremont, California, USA[br]American radio engineer whose work on radio-detection helped lay the foundations for radar.[br]Taylor gained his degree in engineering from Northwest University, Evanston, Illinois, then spent a time at the University of Gottingen. On his return to the USA he taught successively at Michigan State University, at Lansing, and at the universities of Wisconsin at Madison and North Dakota at Grand Forks. From 1923 until 1945 he supervised the Radio Division at the US Naval Research Laboratories. There he carried out studies of short-wave radio propagation and confirmed Heaviside's 1925 theory of the reflection characteristics of the ionosphere. In the 1920s and 1930s he investigated radio echoes, and in 1933, with L.C.Young and L.A.Hyland, he filed a patent for a system of radio-detection that contributed to the subsequent development of radar.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Morris N.Liebmann Memorial Award 1927. President, Institute of Radio Engineers 1929. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Medal of Honour 1942.Bibliography1926, with E.O.Hulbert, "The propagation of radio waves over the earth", Physical Review 27:189.1936, "The measurement of RF power", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 24: 1,342.Further ReadingS.S.Swords, 1986, Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar, London: Peter Peregrinus.See also: Watson-Watt, Sir Robert AlexanderKF
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