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1 displaced mass
смещённая масса
покров
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[ http://slovarionline.ru/anglo_russkiy_slovar_neftegazovoy_promyishlennosti/]Тематики
Синонимы
EN
Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > displaced mass
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2 displaced mass
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3 displaced mass
смещённая масса, покровАнгло-русский словарь нефтегазовой промышленности > displaced mass
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4 displaced mass
Геология: покров, смещённая масса -
5 displaced mass
Англо-русский словарь по ядерным испытаниям и горному делу > displaced mass
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6 mass
масса
air mass воздушная масса
biphyletic mass бифилетическая основная масса
block mass глыба
capping mass перекрывающие отложения
complex multiphase
thrust masses сложные массы многократных надвигов
cover mass покровная масса
detached mass экзотическая глыба
detached mass of overthrust sheet оторванный фрагмент шарьяжа
displaced mass смещённая масса; смещённый покров
disturbing mass масса, вызывающая аномалию, нарушение или возмущение
erratic mass отторженец
flat masses пластовое месторождение
injected mass инъекционная масса
lumpy ground mass комковатая основная масса
median mass срединный массив
molten mass расплавленная масса
nodular mass нодулярная масса, скопление конкреций
older mass древний массив
overridden mass автохтонная масса; толща, лежащая под покровом надвига
overriding mass надвинутая масса, покров, толща, образующая покров надвига
overthrust mass покров надвига, тектонический покров, шарьяж
parent mass материнская масса
resistant mass кратоген, устойчивый массив
rock mass толща пород
slab-like mass of rock плитовидная масса породы
solid mass массив
stationary [steady] mass инертная масса (тяжёлый груз в сейсмометрах)
streaky mass шлиры
subjacent mass подстилающая [нижележащая] масса
tabular mass пластинчатая масса
* * *• массив• тело -
7 displace
dis'pleis1) (to disarrange or put out of place.) desplazar2) (to take the place of: The dog had displaced her doll in the little girl's affections.) sustituir, reemplazar•- displaced person
tr[dɪs'pleɪs]2 (replace) sustituir, reemplazar; (official) destituir\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLdisplaced person expatriado,-a, refugiado,-a, desplazado,-a1) : desplazar (un líquido, etc.)2) replace: reemplazarv.• desplazar v.• reemplazar v.dɪs'pleɪsa) ( Phys) \<\<liquid/volume\>\> desplazar*b) ( replace) reemplazar*c) ( force from home) \<\<refugees/workers\>\> desplazar*[dɪs'pleɪs]VT1) (Phys) [+ liquid, mass] desplazar2) (=replace) reemplazar3) (=remove from office) destituir4) (=force to leave home) desplazar* * *[dɪs'pleɪs]a) ( Phys) \<\<liquid/volume\>\> desplazar*b) ( replace) reemplazar*c) ( force from home) \<\<refugees/workers\>\> desplazar* -
8 distribution
1) распределение; распространение; раздача2) стат. распределение (вероятностей), закон распределения3) размещение, расположение4) разводка (напр., кабельных соединений)5) разделение, классификация6) зоол. ареал (область обитания какого-л. организма на земной поверхности)7) мех. эпюра8) полигр. разбор ( шрифта)9) растир, раскат ( краски)•distribution on a sphere —распределение на сфере
distribution truncated at both ends — распределение, усечённое с обеих сторон
distribution truncated at one end — распределение, усечённое с одной стороны
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9 Tourism
Although certain places in Portugal have attracted travelers since the 18th century, mass tourism did not begin until the 1960s. After 1780, English romantics such as Robert Southie, Lord Byron, and other foreign writers put the town of Sintra on the map of romantic places to visit. In the 1920s and 1930s, the town of Estoril, about 32 kilometers (18 miles) west of Lisbon, along the coast, began to be developed as a high-class resort town. During the 1930s, Estoril attracted wealthy Spaniards escaping from the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) and, after World War II, displaced and dethroned ex-royalty from Europe. Tourism was encouraged in the late 1930s, when the Estado Novo began to restore Portuguese castles in connection with the Double Centenary Exposition of the Portuguese World in 1940, an event designed to attract visitors to Portugal. In the 1960s, the Estado Novo began to develop the infrastructure for a mass tourist industry. Hotels and golf courses were built, especially in the Algarve, and a national system of pousadas (government subsidized inns) was established in restored castles and other historic structures.During the 1960s, the number of tourists visiting Portugal reached 6 million per year. Tourists stayed away from Portugal during the turbulent years immediately after the Revolution of 25 April 1974, but returned during the 1980s, and the tourist industry has grown at a phenomenal rate ever since. The number of tourists rose from 7.3 million in 1981-82 to about 18.4 million in 1990. Expo '98, Portugal's worlds fair of 1998, attracted hundreds of thousands of additional visitors, mostly from Europe. -
10 Sprague, Frank Julian
[br]b. 25 July 1857 Milford, Connecticut, USAd. 25 October 1934 New York, USA[br]American electrical engineer and inventor, a leading innovator in electric propulsion systems for urban transport.[br]Graduating from the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, in 1878, Sprague served at sea and with various shore establishments. In 1883 he resigned from the Navy and obtained employment with the Edison Company; but being convinced that the use of electricity for motive power was as important as that for illumination, in 1884 he founded the Sprague Electric Railway and Motor Company. Sprague began to develop reliable and efficient motors in large sizes, marketing 15 hp (11 kW) examples by 1885. He devised the method of collecting current by using a wooden, spring-loaded rod to press a roller against the underside of an overhead wire. The installation by Sprague in 1888 of a street tramway on a large scale in Richmond, Virginia, was to become the prototype of the universally adopted trolley system with overhead conductor and the beginning of commercial electric traction. Following the success of the Richmond tramway the company equipped sixty-seven other railways before its merger with Edison General Electric in 1890. The Sprague traction motor supported on the axle of electric streetcars and flexibly mounted to the bogie set a pattern that was widely adopted for many years.Encouraged by successful experiments with multiple-sheave electric elevators, the Sprague Elevator Company was formed and installed the first set of high-speed passenger cars in 1893–4. These effectively displaced hydraulic elevators in larger buildings. From experience with control systems for these, he developed his system of multiple-unit control for electric trains, which other engineers had considered impracticable. In Sprague's system, a master controller situated in the driver's cab operated electrically at a distance the contactors and reversers which controlled the motors distributed down the train. After years of experiment, Sprague's multiple-unit control was put into use for the first time in 1898 by the Chicago South Side Elevated Railway: within fifteen years multiple-unit operation was used worldwide.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPresident, American Institute of Electrical Engineers 1892–3. Franklin Institute Elliot Cresson Medal 1904, Franklin Medal 1921. American Institute of Electrical Engineers Edison Medal 1910.Bibliography1888, "The solution of municipal rapid transit", Trans. AIEE 5:352–98. See "The multiple unit system for electric railways", Cassiers Magazine, (1899) London, repub. 1960, 439–460.1934, "Digging in “The Mines of the Motor”", Electrical Engineering 53, New York: 695–706 (a short autobiography).Further ReadingLionel Calisch, 1913, Electric Traction, London: The Locomotive Publishing Co., Ch. 6 (for a near-contemporary view of Sprague's multiple-unit control).D.C.Jackson, 1934, "Frank Julian Sprague", Scientific Monthly 57:431–41.H.C.Passer, 1952, "Frank Julian Sprague: father of electric traction", in Men of Business, ed. W. Miller, Cambridge, Mass., pp. 212–37 (a reliable account).——1953, The Electrical Manufacturers: 1875–1900, Cambridge, Mass. P.Ransome-Wallis (ed.), 1959, The Concise Encyclopaedia of World RailwayLocomotives, London: Hutchinson, p. 143..John Marshall, 1978, A Biographical Dictionary of Railway Engineers, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.GW / PJGR -
11 spectrum
1) спектр2) спектральная характеристика; спектральная зависимость•- spectrum of matrix
- spectrum of operator
- absorption spectrum
- acoustic spectrum
- AM spectrum
- amplitude spectrum
- arc spectrum
- atomic spectrum
- audio spectrum
- autocorrelation spectrum
- background spectrum
- band spectrum
- band-limited spectrum
- baseband spectrum
- bounded spectrum
- Brillouin spectrum
- canonical spectrum
- characteristic spectrum
- complex spectrum
- connected spectrum
- continuous spectrum
- correlation spectrum
- cosine rolloff spectrum - degenerate spectrum
- direct-sequence spread spectrum
- discrete spectrum
- eigenvalue spectrum
- ether spectrum
- extended spectrum
- direct spectrum
- displaced spectrum
- Doppler-broadened spectrum - electromagnetic spectrum
- electron spectrum
- emission spectrum
- energy spectrum
- energy-density spectrum
- exchange-coupled spectrum
- exciton spectrum
- ferromagnetic-resonance spectrum
- finite spectrum
- flat spectrum
- FM spectrum
- folded spectrum
- frequency hopping spread spectrum
- Gaussian spectrum
- generalized spectrum
- group spectrum
- hyperfine spectrum
- IBOC spectrum
- in-band/on-channel spectrum
- infrared spectrum
- inverse spectrum
- joint spectrum
- line spectrum
- log spectrum
- luminescent-emission spectrum
- magnetic hardness spectrum
- magnetic-permeability spectrum
- mass spectrum
- maximum-entropy spectrum
- microwave spectrum
- mixed spectrum
- Mössbauer spectrum
- optogalvanic spectrum
- paramagnetic-resonance spectrum
- perturbed spectrum
- phase spectrum
- phonon spectrum
- power spectrum
- power-density spectrum
- pulse-train spectrum
- pulse-train frequency spectrum
- quadrature spectrum
- quasi-discrete spectrum
- quasi-line spectrum
- radio spectrum
- raised-cosine spectrum
- Raman spectrum
- Rayleigh spectrum
- recombination-radiation spectrum
- rectangular spectrum
- reflectance spectrum
- regression spectrum
- regular spectrum
- required response spectrum
- RF spectrum
- rotation spectrum
- rotation-vibration spectrum
- sferics spectrum
- singular spectrum
- smoothed spectrum
- spread spectrum
- stochastic spectrum
- ultraviolet spectrum
- uniform spectrum
- vibration spectrum
- white spectrum
- X-ray spectrum
- ε-spectrum -
12 spectrum
1) спектр2) спектральная характеристика; спектральная зависимость•- absorption spectrum
- acoustic spectrum
- AM spectrum
- amplitude spectrum
- arc spectrum
- atomic spectrum
- audio spectrum
- autocorrelation spectrum
- background spectrum
- band spectrum
- band-limited spectrum
- baseband spectrum
- bounded spectrum
- Brillouin spectrum
- canonical spectrum
- characteristic spectrum
- complex spectrum
- connected spectrum
- continuous spectrum
- correlation spectrum
- cosine rolloff spectrum
- cross-correlation spectrum - direct spectrum
- direct-sequence spread spectrum
- discrete spectrum - Doppler-broadened spectrum
- eigenvalue spectrum - electromagnetic spectrum
- electron spectrum
- emission spectrum
- energy spectrum
- energy-density spectrum
- ether spectrum
- exchange-coupled spectrum
- exciton spectrum
- extended spectrum
- ferromagnetic-resonance spectrum
- finite spectrum
- flat spectrum
- FM spectrum
- folded spectrum
- frequency hopping spread spectrum
- Gaussian spectrum
- generalized spectrum
- group spectrum
- hyperfine spectrum
- IBOC spectrum
- in-band/on-channel spectrum
- infrared spectrum
- inverse spectrum
- joint spectrum
- line spectrum
- log spectrum
- luminescent-emission spectrum
- magnetic hardness spectrum
- magnetic-permeability spectrum
- mass spectrum
- maximum-entropy spectrum
- microwave spectrum
- mixed spectrum
- Mössbauer spectrum
- optogalvanic spectrum
- paramagnetic-resonance spectrum
- perturbed spectrum
- phase spectrum
- phonon spectrum
- power spectrum
- power-density spectrum
- pulse-train frequency spectrum
- pulse-train spectrum
- quadrature spectrum
- quasi-discrete spectrum
- quasi-line spectrum
- radio spectrum
- raised-cosine spectrum
- Raman spectrum
- Rayleigh spectrum
- recombination-radiation spectrum
- rectangular spectrum
- reflectance spectrum
- regression spectrum
- regular spectrum
- required response spectrum
- RF spectrum
- rotation spectrum
- rotation-vibration spectrum
- sferics spectrum
- singular spectrum
- smoothed spectrum
- spectrum of electromagnetic radiation
- spectrum of matrix
- spectrum of operator
- spread spectrum
- stochastic spectrum
- ultraviolet spectrum
- uniform spectrum
- vibration spectrum
- white spectrum
- X-ray spectrumThe New English-Russian Dictionary of Radio-electronics > spectrum
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