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61 кризис пузырькового кипения
1) Engineering: departure from nucleate boiling2) Makarov: departure from nucleate boiling( DNB)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > кризис пузырькового кипения
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62 рейтинг D&B
Business: D&B rating (http://www.dnb.ru/ (расшифровывается как Dun & Bradstreet rating)) -
63 теплообмен в режиме за кризисом пузырькового кипения
Engineering: post-DNB heat transferУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > теплообмен в режиме за кризисом пузырькового кипения
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64 drum and bass
Music: (жанр электронной музыки) dnb -
65 Filmsiedeabstand
m <kfz.mot> ■ departure from nucleate boiling (DNB) -
66 filmkokingskorrelasjon
subst. (energi) DNB correlation (departure from nucleate boiling) -
67 filmkokingskvotient
subst. (energi) DNB ratio (departure from nucleate boiling) -
68 dinitrobenzène
сущ.хим. динитробензол (DNB) -
69 dinitrobenzène
chem. DNB -
70 динитробензол
nchem. dinitrobenzène (DNB) -
71 Edinburgh
['edɪnbərə]nome proprio Edimburgo f.* * *Edinburgh /ˈɛdɪnbrə/n.(geogr.) Edimburgo: We're going to Edinburgh, andiamo a Edimburgo; He lives in Edinburgh, abita a Edimburgo.(Place names) Edinburgh /ˈɛdɪnbrə, USA -dnbɜ:rə/* * *['edɪnbərə]nome proprio Edimburgo f. -
72 początek kryzysu wrzenia
• onset of the DNB• point of departure from nucleate boilingSłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > początek kryzysu wrzenia
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73 wymiana ciepła w obszarze zakryzysowym
• heat transfer after DNBSłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > wymiana ciepła w obszarze zakryzysowym
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74 zakryzysowa wymiana ciepła
• post DNB heat transferSłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > zakryzysowa wymiana ciepła
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75 кризис теплоотдачи
1) departure from nucleate boiling [DNB] 2) dryoutРусско-английский словарь по радиационной безопасности > кризис теплоотдачи
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76 departure from nuclear boiling
English-Spanish technical dictionary > departure from nuclear boiling
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77 Kennedy, Sir Alexander Blackie William
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 17 March 1847 Stepney, London, England d. 1928[br]English marine engineer and educator.[br]Sir Alexander Kennedy was trained as a marine engineer. The son of a Congregational minister, he was educated at the City of London School and the School of Mines, Jermyn Street. He was then apprenticed to J. \& W.Dudgeon of Millwall, marine engineers, and went on to become a draughtsman to Sir Charles Marsh Palmer of Jarrow (with whom he took part in the development of the compound steam-engine for marine use) and T.M.Tennant \& Co. of Leith. In 1874 he was appointed Professor of Engineering at University College, London. He built up an influential School of Engineering, being the first in England to integrate laboratory work as a regular feature of instruction. The engineering laboratory that he established in 1878 has been described as "the first of its kind in England" (Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers). He and his students conducted important experiments on the strength and elasticity of materials, boiler testing and related subjects. He followed the teaching of Franz Reuleaux, whose Kinematics of Machinery he translated from the German.While thus breaking new educational ground at University College, Kennedy concurrently established a very thriving private practice as a consulting engineer in partnership with Bernard Maxwell Jenkin (the son of Fleeming Jenkin), to pursue which he relinquished his academic posts in 1889. He planned and installed the whole electricity system for the Westminster Electric Supply Corporation, and other electricity companies. He was also heavily involved in the development of electrically powered transport systems. During the First World War he served on a panel of the Munitions Invention Department, and after the war he undertook to record photographically the scenes of desolation in his book From Ypres to Verdun (1921). Towards the end of his life, he pursued his interest in archaeology with the exploration of Petra, recorded in a monograph: Petra. Its History and Monuments (1925). He also joined the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1879, becoming the President of that body in 1894, and he joined the Institution of Electrical Engineers in 1890. Kennedy was thus something of an engineering polymath, as well as being an outstanding engineering educationalist.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1887. Knighted 1905. Member, Institution of Civil Engineers 1879; President, 1906. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1894.Bibliography1921, From Ypresto Verdum.1925, Petra. Its History and Monuments.Further ReadingDNB supplement.1928–9, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 221:269–75.ABBiographical history of technology > Kennedy, Sir Alexander Blackie William
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78 Pasley, General Sir Charles William
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering[br]b. 8 September 1780 Eskdalemuir, Dumfriesshire, Scotlandd. 19 April 1861 London, England[br]Scottish Colonel-Commandant, Royal Engineers.[br]At first he was educated by Andrew Little of Lan-gholm. At the age of 14 he was sent to school at Selkirk, where he stayed for two years until joining the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich in August 1796. He was commissioned as Second Lieutenant in the Royal Artillery and transferred to the Royal Engineers on 1 April 1798. He served at Minorca, Malta, Naples, Sicily, Calabria and in the siege of Copenhagen and in other campaigns. He was promoted First Captain in 1807, and was on the staff of Sir John Moore at the battle of Coruna. He was wounded at the siege of Flushing in 1809 and was invalided for a year, employing his time in learning German.In November 1810 he published his Essay on Military Policy and Institutions of the British Empire, which ran through four editions. In 1811 he was in command of a company of Royal Military Artificers at Plymouth and there he devised a method of education by which the NCOs and troops could teach themselves without "mathematical masters". His system was a great success and was adopted at Chatham and throughout the corps. In 1812 he was appointed Director of the School of Military Engineering at Chatham. He remained at Chatham until 1841, when he was appointed Inspector-General of Railways. During this period he organized improved systems of sapping, mining, telegraphing, pontooning and exploding gunpowder on land or under water, and prepared pamphlets and courses of instruction in these and other subjects. In May 1836 he started what is probably the most important work for which he is remembered. This, was a book on Limes, Calcareous Cements, Mortar, Stuccos and Concretes. The general adoption of Joseph Aspdin's Portland Cement was largely due to Pasley's recommendation of the material.He was married twice: first in 1814 at Chatham to Harriet Cooper; and then on 30 March 1819 at Rochester to Martha Matilda Roberts, with whom he had six children— she died in 1881.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKGB 1846. FRS 1816. Honorary DCL, Oxford University 1844.Bibliography1810, Essay on Military Policy and Institutions of the British Empire. Limes, Calcareous Cements, Mortar, Stuccos and Concretes.Further ReadingPorter, History of the Corps of Royal Engineers. DNB. Proceedings of the Royal Society.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Pasley, General Sir Charles William
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79 Unwin, William Cawthorne
[br]b. 12 December 1838 Coggeshall, near Colchester, Essex, England d. 1933[br]English engineer and educator.[br]Unwin made an important contribution to the establishment of engineering at the University of London. His family were of Huguenot stock, and his father was a Congregational minister. Unwin was educated at the City of London Corporation School and at New College, St John's Wood. At a time when the older universities were still effectively closed to Dissenters, he matriculated with Honours in Chemistry in the London University Matriculation Examination in 1858, and he subsequently graduated BSc from London in 1861. He served as Scientific Assistant to William Fairbairn in Manchester from 1856 to 1862, going on to manage engineering work of various sorts. He was appointed Instructor at the Royal School of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering (1869–72), and then he became Professor of Hydraulics and Mechanical Engineering at the Royal Indian Engineering College (1872–84). From 1884 to 1904 he was Professor of Civil and Mechanical Engineering at the Central Institution of the City \& Guilds of London, which was incorporated into the University of London in 1900. Unwin's research interests included hydraulics and water power, which led to him taking a leading part in the Niagara Falls hydroelectric scheme; the strength of materials, involving the stability of masonry dams; and the development of the internal combustion engine.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1886.Further ReadingDNB Supplement.E.G.Walker, 1938, Lift and Work of William Cawthorne Unwin.ABBiographical history of technology > Unwin, William Cawthorne
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80 Filmsiedeabstand
mdeparture from nucleate boiling (DNB)
См. также в других словарях:
DNB — steht für: De Nederlandsche Bank, die niederländische Zentralbank Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Deutsche Nationalbibliografie Deutsche Notenbank Deutsch Nordische Burse in Kiel Deutsches Nachrichtenbüro Dictionary of National Biography,… … Deutsch Wikipedia
DNB — is short for: De Nederlandsche Bank, the Dutch central bank Den norske Bank, a Norwegian bank (from 2003 DnB NOR) Departure from nucleate boiling in boiling heat transfer Deutsche Nationalbibliothek, the German national library Deutsches… … Wikipedia
DnB — steht für: De Nederlandsche Bank, die niederländische Zentralbank Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Deutsche Nationalbibliografie Deutsche Notenbank Deutsch Nordische Burse in Kiel Deutsches Nachrichtenbüro Dictionary of National Biography,… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Dnb — steht für: De Nederlandsche Bank, die niederländische Zentralbank Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Deutsche Nationalbibliografie Deutsche Notenbank Deutsch Nordische Burse in Kiel Deutsches Nachrichtenbüro Dictionary of National Biography,… … Deutsch Wikipedia
DNB — abbrev. Dictionary of National Biography * * * Common Semitic noun *ḏanab , tail. Deneb; Denebola, from Arabic ḏanab, tail. * * * ➡ Dictionary of National Biography. * * * … Universalium
DNB — DNB, the the abbreviation of the Dictionary of National Biography … Dictionary of contemporary English
ḏnb — Definition: Common Semitic noun *ḏanab , tail. Deneb; Denebola, from Arabic ḏanab, tail … The American Heritage dictionary of the English language
DNB — abbrev. Dictionary of National Biography … English World dictionary
DnB — Drum and bass Drum and bass Origines stylistiques Dub Rave Breakbeat hardcore Techno Hip hop Reggae Ragga Dancehall Funk B … Wikipédia en Français
DNB — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Sigles d’une seule lettre Sigles de deux lettres > Sigles de trois lettres Sigles de quatre lettres … Wikipédia en Français
DnB — drum and bass. Also, dnb …