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41 Department of Commerce
орг.сокр. USDOC, DOC гос. упр., амер. Министерство торговли (отстаивает интересы американского бизнеса в стране и за рубежом, собирает и анализирует экономическую информацию, следит за исполнением международных торговых соглашений, регулирует экспорт чувствительных товаров и технологий, выдает патенты и торговые знаки, обеспечивает защиту интеллектуальной собственности, устанавливает систему мер и весов; основано в 1903 г. как часть Министерства торговли и труда; как самостоятельное министерство существует с 1913 г.)Syn:See:Department of Commerce and Labor, Bureau of Industry and Security, Economic Development Administration, Economics and Statistics Administration, International Trade Administration, Minority Business Development Agency, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, Patent and Trademark Office, Export Contact List Service, Foreign Trade Division, Interagency Group on Countertrade, Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements, Foreign Trade Zones Board, commercial activity report, Trade Adjustment Assistance, Export Assistance Center, factory ordersАнгло-русский экономический словарь > Department of Commerce
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42 ITSA
1) Американизм: Income Tax Self Assessment2) Военный термин: installation and test support associate contractor4) Сокращение: International Technology SA (Spain)5) Фирменный знак: Insolvency And Trustee Service Australia -
43 facility
n1) кредит, кредитная линия; ссуда3) pl возможности, условия деятельности; производственные мощности4) pl сооружения; объекты
- acceptance facility
- advance factory facilities
- airport facilities
- air traffic facilities
- approved delivery facilities
- auxiliary facilities
- backstop credit facility
- backup underwriting facility
- baggage facilities
- bank facilities
- banking facilities
- capital facilities
- cargo handling facilities
- catering facilities
- Central Bank facility
- cold storage facilities
- commercial facilities
- communications facilities
- community facilities
- Compensatory and Contingency Financing facility
- computer facilities
- contingency financing facility
- contingent investment support facility
- contingent swap facility
- creche facilities
- credit facilities
- customer look-up facility
- customs facilities
- designing facilities
- discounting facilities
- distribution facilities
- dockage facilities
- editing facilities
- educational facilities
- emergency facilities
- extended fund facility
- Euronote facilities
- fabrication facilities
- factory conveyance facilities
- field-test facilities
- financing facility
- freight handling facilities
- government facilities
- ground facilities
- handling facilities
- harbour facilities
- health facilities
- housing facilities
- idle facilities
- industrial facilities
- industrial conveyance facilities
- in-house facilities
- international banking facility
- inventory storage facilities
- laboratory facilities
- leisure facilities
- lifting facilities
- living facilities
- loading facilities
- loan facilities
- loan facility
- long-term credit facilities
- maintenance facilities
- management facilities
- manufacturing facility
- manufacturing facilities
- marketing facilities
- minimum facilities
- modern facilities
- multioption financing facility
- nonrelated facility
- nonunderwritten facilities
- office facilities
- off-loading facilities
- overdraft facility
- overhead facilities
- parking facilities
- passenger facilities
- payment facilities
- plant facilities
- plant storage facilities
- pollution control facilities
- port facilities
- port handling and receiving facilities
- processing facilities
- production facilities
- production and technical facilities
- public facilities
- R & D facilities
- reciprocal credit facilities
- recreational facilities
- refrigeration facilities
- related facility
- repair facilities
- research facilities
- revolving underwriting facility
- sales facilities
- service facilities
- shipping facilities
- shopping facilities
- sports facilities
- standby facilities
- storage facilities
- subsidiary facilities
- swap insurance facility
- telecommunications facilities
- terminal facilities
- test facilities
- testing facilities
- trade financing facility
- trade-related facility
- transfer facilities
- transport facilities
- transportation facilities
- underwritten facilities
- unloading facilities
- vacant facilities
- warehouse facilities
- waste treatment facilities
- water facilities
- water treating facilities
- waterworks facility
- wholly-owned facilities
- working capital facility
- workshop facilities
- facilities for credit buying
- facility for inspection
- enjoy credit facilities
- furnish necessary facilities
- grant facilities
- provide facilities
- provide transport facilities
- strengthen production facilitiesEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > facility
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44 Hertz, Heinrich Rudolph
[br]b. 22 February 1857 Hamburg, Germanyd. 1 January 1894 Bonn, Germany[br]German physicist who was reputedly the first person to transmit and receive radio waves.[br]At the age of 17 Hertz entered the Gelehrtenschule of the Johaneums in Hamburg, but he left the following year to obtain practical experience for a year with a firm of engineers in Frankfurt am Main. He then spent six months at the Dresden Technical High School, followed by year of military service in Berlin. At this point he decided to switch from engineering to physics, and after a year in Munich he studied physics under Helmholtz at the University of Berlin, gaining his PhD with high honours in 1880. From 1883 to 1885 he was a privat-dozent at Kiel, during which time he studied the electromagnetic theory of James Clerk Maxwell. In 1885 he succeeded to the Chair in Physics at Karlsruhe Technical High School. There, in 1887, he constructed a rudimentary transmitter consisting of two 30 cm (12 in.) rods with metal balls separated by a 7.5 mm (0.3 in.) gap at the inner ends and metallic plates at the outer ends, the whole assembly being mounted at the focus of a large parabolic metal mirror and the two rods being connected to an induction coil. At the other side of his laboratory he placed a 70 cm (27½ in.) diameter wire loop with a similar air gap at the focus of a second metal mirror. When the induction coil was made to create a spark across the transmitter air gap, he found that a spark also occurred at the "receiver". By a series of experiments he was not only able to show that the invisible waves travelled in straight lines and were reflected by the parabolic mirrors, but also that the vibrations could be refracted like visible light and had a similar wavelength. By this first transmission and reception of radio waves he thus confirmed the theoretical predictions made by Maxwell some twenty years earlier. It was probably in his experiments with this apparatus in 1887 that Hertz also observed that the voltage at which a spark was able to jump a gap was significantly reduced by the presence of ultraviolet light. This so-called photoelectric effect was subsequently placed on a theoretical basis by Albert Einstein in 1905. In 1889 he became Professor of Physics at the University of Bonn, where he continued to investigate the nature of electric discharges in gases at low pressure until his death after a long and painful illness. In recognition of his measurement of radio and other waves, the international unit of frequency of an oscillatory wave, the cycle per second, is now universally known as the Hertz.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsRoyal Society Rumford Medal 1890.BibliographyMuch of Hertz's work, including his 1890 paper "On the fundamental equations of electrodynamics for bodies at rest", is recorded in three collections of his papers which are available in English translations by D.E.Jones et al., namely Electric Waves (1893), Miscellaneous Papers (1896) and Principles of Mechanics (1899).Further ReadingJ.G.O'Hara and W.Pricha, 1987, Hertz and the Maxwellians, London: Peter Peregrinus. J.Hertz, 1977, Heinrich Hertz, Memoirs, Letters and Diaries, San Francisco: San Francisco Press.R.Appleyard, 1930, Pioneers of Electrical Communication.See also: Heaviside, OliverKFBiographical history of technology > Hertz, Heinrich Rudolph
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