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1 motion picture photography
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > motion picture photography
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2 motion picture photography
Англо-русский словарь технических терминов > motion picture photography
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3 motion picture photography
Техника: киносъёмкаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > motion picture photography
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4 motion-picture photography
Реклама: киносъёмкаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > motion-picture photography
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5 documentary motion picture photography
DMPP, documentary motion picture photographyКФ, кинофотосъемка, кинофоторепортажEnglish-Russian dictionary of program "Mir-Shuttle" > documentary motion picture photography
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6 documentary motion picture photography
Космонавтика: кинофотосъёмкаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > documentary motion picture photography
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7 high-speed motion-picture photography
Макаров: скоростная фотозаписьУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > high-speed motion-picture photography
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8 ultrahigh-speed motion-picture photography
Космонавтика: ультраскоростная киносъёмкаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > ultrahigh-speed motion-picture photography
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9 very-high-speed motion-picture photography
Космонавтика: скоростная киносъёмкаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > very-high-speed motion-picture photography
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10 X-ray motion picture photography
Kineradiographie f, Röntgenfilmaufnahmetechnik f, Röntgenfilmdarstellung fFachwörterbuch Medizin Englisch-Deutsch > X-ray motion picture photography
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11 ultrahigh-speed motion-picture photography
Englsh-Russian aviation and space dictionary > ultrahigh-speed motion-picture photography
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12 very-high-speed motion-picture photography
Englsh-Russian aviation and space dictionary > very-high-speed motion-picture photography
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13 ultrahigh speed motion picture photography
n ультрашвидкісна кінозйомкаEnglish-Ukrainian military dictionary > ultrahigh speed motion picture photography
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14 photography
фотографирование, фотосъёмка -
15 photography
2) фотосъёмка, фотографирование•- additive color photography -
advertising photography
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aerial photography from a kite
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aerial photography
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aerospace photography
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air-to-air photography
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amateur photography
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animated photography
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applied photography
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art photography
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astronomical photography
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ballistic photography
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black-and-white photography
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borehole photography
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bubble chamber photography
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celestial photography
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cine photography
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close-up photography
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color photography
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composite photography
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daylight photography
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deep-ocean photography
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direct photography
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earth-based lunar photography
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electronic photography
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electrostatic photography
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endoscopic photography
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engineering photography
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exoelectron photography
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fade-in photography
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fade-out photography
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flash photography
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frame-by-frame photography
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half-tone photography
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high-resolution photography
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high-speed photography
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identification photography
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imbibition color photography
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industrial photography
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infrared photography
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instantaneous photography
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integral photography
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interference color photography
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laser photography
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lensless photography
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long-distance photography
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lunar photography
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metric photography
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missile photography
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motion picture photography
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multispectral photography
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newsreel photography
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nuclear track photography
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oscilloscope photography
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panoramic photography
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process-camera photography
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professional photography
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reconnaissance photography
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reproduction photography
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satellite-borne photography
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schlieren photography
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screen photography
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short distance photography
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silver photography
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slow-motion photography
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space photography
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spark photography
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speckle photography
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spectral zonal photography
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squeezed photography
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stellar photography
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stereoscopic photography
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still photography
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stroboscopic photography
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studio photography
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subtractive color photography
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technical photography
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three-color photography
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three-dimensional photography
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time-lapse photography
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traveling-matte photography
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two-color photography
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unconventional photography
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underwater photography
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X-ray photography -
16 киносъемка
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17 прикладной
прил. applied прикладные науки ≈ applied sciencesприкладн|ой - applied;
~ые науки applied sciences;
~ое искусство applied art(s) (pl.) ;
~ая кинематография applied motion picture photography.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > прикладной
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18 DMPP
DMPP, documentary motion picture photographyКФ, кинофотосъемка, кинофоторепортаж -
19 Dickson, William Kennedy Laurie
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. August 1860 Brittany, Franced. 28 September 1935 Twickenham, England[br]Scottish inventor and photographer.[br]Dickson was born in France of English and Scottish parents. As a young man of almost 19 years, he wrote in 1879 to Thomas Edison in America, asking for a job. Edison replied that he was not taking on new staff at that time, but Dickson, with his mother and sisters, decided to emigrate anyway. In 1883 he contacted Edison again, and was given a job at the Goerk Street laboratory of the Edison Electric Works in New York. He soon assumed a position of responsibility as Superintendent, working on the development of electric light and power systems, and also carried out most of the photography Edison required. In 1888 he moved to the Edison West Orange laboratory, becoming Head of the ore-milling department. When Edison, inspired by Muybridge's sequence photographs of humans and animals in motion, decided to develop a motion picture apparatus, he gave the task to Dickson, whose considerable skills in mechanics, photography and electrical work made him the obvious choice. The first experiments, in 1888, were on a cylinder machine like the phonograph, in which the sequence pictures were to be taken in a spiral. This soon proved to be impractical, and work was delayed for a time while Dickson developed a new ore-milling machine. Little progress with the movie project was made until George Eastman's introduction in July 1889 of celluloid roll film, which was thin, tough, transparent and very flexible. Dickson returned to his experiments in the spring of 1891 and soon had working models of a film camera and viewer, the latter being demonstrated at the West Orange laboratory on 20 May 1891. By the early summer of 1892 the project had advanced sufficiently for commercial exploitation to begin. The Kinetograph camera used perforated 35 mm film (essentially the same as that still in use in the late twentieth century), and the kinetoscope, a peep-show viewer, took fifty feet of film running in an endless loop. Full-scale manufacture of the viewers started in 1893, and they were demonstrated on a number of occasions during that year. On 14 April 1894 the first kinetoscope parlour, with ten viewers, was opened to the public in New York. By the end of that year, the kinetoscope was seen by the public all over America and in Europe. Dickson had created the first commercially successful cinematograph system. Dickson left Edison's employment on 2 April 1895, and for a time worked with Woodville Latham on the development of his Panoptikon projector, a projection version of the kinetoscope. In December 1895 he joined with Herman Casier, Henry N.Marvin and Elias Koopman to form the American Mutoscope Company. Casier had designed the Mutoscope, an animated-picture viewer in which the sequences of pictures were printed on cards fixed radially to a drum and were flipped past the eye as the drum rotated. Dickson designed the Biograph wide-film camera to produce the picture sequences, and also a projector to show the films directly onto a screen. The large-format images gave pictures of high quality for the period; the Biograph went on public show in America in September 1896, and subsequently throughout the world, operating until around 1905. In May 1897 Dickson returned to England and set up as a producer of Biograph films, recording, among other subjects, Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee celebrations in 1897, Pope Leo XIII in 1898, and scenes of the Boer War in 1899 and 1900. Many of the Biograph subjects were printed as reels for the Mutoscope to produce the "what the butler saw" machines which were a feature of fairgrounds and seaside arcades until modern times. Dickson's contact with the Biograph Company, and with it his involvement in cinematography, ceased in 1911.[br]Further ReadingGordon Hendricks, 1961, The Edison Motion Picture Myth.—1966, The Kinetoscope.—1964, The Beginnings of the Biograph.BCBiographical history of technology > Dickson, William Kennedy Laurie
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20 Jenkins, Charles Francis
[br]b. 1867 USAd. 1934 USA[br]American pioneer of motion pictures and television.[br]During the early years of the motion picture industry, Jenkins made many innovations, including the development in 1894 of his own projector, the "Phantoscope", which was widely used for a number of years. In the same year he also suggested the possibility of electrically transmitting pictures over a distance, an interest that led to a lifetime of experimentation. As a result of his engineering contributions to the practical realization of moving pictures, in 1915 the National Motion Picture Board of Trade asked him to chair a committee charged with establishing technical standards for the industry. This in turn led to his proposing the creation of a professional society for those engineers in the industry, and the following year the Society of Motion Picture Engineers (later to become the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers) was formed, with Jenkins as its first President. Soon after this he began experiments with mechanical television, using both the Nipkow hole-spiral disc and a low-definition system of his own, based on rotating bevelled glass discs (his so-called "prismatic rings") and alkali-metal photocells. In the 1920s he gave many demonstrations of mechanical television, including a cable transmission of a crude silhouette of President Harding from Washington, DC, to Philadelphia in 1923 and a radio broadcast from Washington in 1928. The following year he formed the Jenkins Television Company to make television transmitters and receivers, but it soon went into debt and was acquired by the de Forest Company, from whom RCA later purchased the patents.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFirst President, Society of Motion Picture Engineers 1916.Bibliography1923, "Radio photographs, radio movies and radio vision", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 16:78.1923, "Recent progress in the transmission of motion pictures by radio", Transactions ofthe Society of Motion Picture Engineers 17:81.1925, "Radio movies", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 21:7. 1930, "Television systems", Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 15:445. 1925. Vision by Radio.Further ReadingJ.H.Udelson, 1982, The Great Television Race: A History of the American Television Industry, 1925–41: University of Alabama Press.R.W.Hubbell, 1946, 4,000 Years of Television, London: G.Harrap \& Sons.1926. "The Jenkins system", Wireless World 18: 642 (contains a specific account of Jenkins's work).KFBiographical history of technology > Jenkins, Charles Francis
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