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subsequent proceedings

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    English-Ukrainian law dictionary > subsequent proceedings

  • 2 subsequent proceedings

    Юридический термин: последующее производство

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > subsequent proceedings

  • 3 subsequent proceeding

    = subsequent proceedings наступне провадження

    English-Ukrainian law dictionary > subsequent proceeding

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    English-Ukrainian law dictionary > subsequent

  • 5 Flechsig, W.

    [br]
    fl. c.1938 Germany
    [br]
    German engineer notable for early patents that foreshadowed the development of the shadowmask colour cathode ray tube.
    [br]
    In 1938, whilst working for a German electrical company, Flechsig filed a patent in which he described the use of an array of stretched parallel wires to control the landing of either one or three electron beams on separate red, green and blue phosphor stripes within a single cathode ray tube. Whilst the single-beam arrangement required subsidiary deflection to alternate the beam landing angle, the three-beam version effectively used the wires to "mask" the landing of the electron beams so that each one only illuminated the relevant colour phosphor stripes. Although not developed at the time, the concept anticipated the subsequent invention of the shadowmask tube by RCA in the early 1950s and, even more closely, the development of the Sony Trinitron some years later.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1938, German patent no. 736, 575.
    1941, French patent no. 866, 065.
    Further Reading
    E.W.Herold, 1976, "A history of colour television displays", Proceedings of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 64:1,331.
    K.G.Freeman, "The history of colour CRTs. A personal view", International Conference on the History of Television, Institution of Electrical Engineers Publication no. 271, p.
    38.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Flechsig, W.

  • 6 MacNeill, Sir John Benjamin

    [br]
    b. 1793 (?) Mount Pleasant, near Dundalk, Louth, Ireland
    d. 2 March 1880
    [br]
    Irish railway engineer and educator.
    [br]
    Sir John MacNeill became a pupil of Thomas Telford and served under him as Superintendent of the Southern Division of the Holyhead Road from London to Shrewsbury. In this capacity he invented a "Road Indicator" or dynamometer. Like other Telford followers, he viewed the advent of railways with some antipathy, but after the death of Telford in 1834 he quickly became involved in railway construction and in 1837 he was retained by the Irish Railway Commissioners to build railways in the north of Ireland (Vignoles received the commission for the south). Much of his subsequent career was devoted to schemes for Irish railways, both those envisaged by the Commissioners and other private lines with more immediately commercial objectives. He was knighted in 1844 on the completion of the Dublin \& Drogheda Railway along the east coast of Ireland. In 1845 MacNeill lodged plans for over 800 miles (1,300 km) of Irish railways. Not all of these were built, many falling victim to Irish poverty in the years after the Famine, but he maintained a large staff and became financially embarrassed. His other schemes included the Grangemouth Docks in Scotland, the Liverpool \& Bury Railway, and the Belfast Waterworks, the latter completed in 1843 and subsequently extended by Bateman.
    MacNeill was an engineer of originality, being the person who introduced iron-lattice bridges into Britain, employing the theoretical and experimental work of Fairbairn and Eaton Hodgkinson (the Boyne Bridge at Drogheda had two such spans of 250ft (76m) each). He also devised the Irish railway gauge of 5 ft 2 in. (1.57 m). Consulted by the Board of Trinity College, Dublin, regarding a School of Engineering in 1842, he was made an Honorary LLD of the University and appointed the first Professor of Civil Engineering, but he relinquished the chair to his assistant, Samuel Downing, in 1846. MacNeill was a large and genial man, but not, we are told, "of methodical and business habit": he relied heavily on his subordinates. Blindness obliged him to retire from practice several years before his death. He was an early member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, joining in 1827, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1838.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1838.
    Further Reading
    Dictionary of National Biography. Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers
    73:361–71.
    AB

    Biographical history of technology > MacNeill, Sir John Benjamin

  • 7 Reis, (Johann) Philipp

    SUBJECT AREA: Telecommunications
    [br]
    b. 7 January 1834 Geinherusen, Hesse-Kassel, Germany
    d. 14 January 1874 Friedrichsdorf, Germany
    [br]
    German schoolteacher and inventor who constructed an early form of telephone.
    [br]
    Reis entered the Garniers Institute in Friedrichsdorf in 1844 and then the Hassels Institute in Frankfurt. There he developed an interest in science, but on leaving school in 1850 he was apprenticed to the colour trade by his uncle. This involved study at the trade school and Dr Poppe's Institute in Frankfurt; while there he joined the Frankfurt Physical Society. Following military service in 1855 he studied to be a teacher. After his graduation he obtained a post at Garniers, where he began to pursue experiments with electricity and the development of hearing aids. In 1859 he sent a paper on the radiation of electricity to the editor of Annalen der Physik, but this was rejected, as was a later submission. Undeterred, he continued his experiments and by 1861 he had designed several instruments for the transmission of sound. The transmitter consisted of a membrane on which rested a metal strip that made contact with a metal point and completed an electrical circuit under the action of sound. The receiver consisted of an iron needle surrounded by a coil and resting on a sounding box, the operation probably being achieved by magnetostriction. The invention, which he described in a lecture to the Frankfurt Physical Society on 26 October 1861 and in a published paper, could produce tones and probably also speech, but was largely rejected by the scientific fraternity. The claim to produce speech was discounted in subsequent court cases that upheld the patents of Alexander Bell.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    On 8 December 1878 a monument to Reis was erected in the Friedrichsdorf Cemetery by the Physical Society of Frankfurt.
    Bibliography
    1860–1, "Über Telephone durch den galvani-schen Strom", Jahresbericht der Physikalische 57.
    Further Reading
    J.Munro, 1891, Heroes of the Telegraph.
    Silvanus P.Thompson, 1883, Philipp Reis. Inventor of the Telephone.
    B.B.Bauer, 1962, "A century of the microphone", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers: 720.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Reis, (Johann) Philipp

  • 8 Taylor, Albert Hoyt

    [br]
    b. 1 January 1874 Chicago, Illinois, USA
    d. 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 Distinctions
    Institute 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.
    Bibliography
    1926, 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 Reading
    S.S.Swords, 1986, Technical History of the Beginnings of Radar, London: Peter Peregrinus.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Taylor, Albert Hoyt

  • 9 Varian, Russell Harrison

    [br]
    b. 24 April 1898 Washington, DC, USA
    d. 28 July 1959 Juneau, Alaska, USA
    [br]
    American physicist who, with his brother Sigurd Varian and others, developed the klystron.
    [br]
    After attending schools in Palo Alto and Halcyon, Russell Varian went to Stanford University, gaining his BA in 1925 and his MA in 1927 despite illness and being dyslexic. His family being in need of financial help, he first worked for six months for Bush Electric in San Francisco and then for an oil company in Texas, returning to San Francisco in 1930 to join Farnsworth's Television Laboratory. After a move to Philadelphia, in 1933 the laboratory closed and Russell tried to take up a PhD course at Stanford but was rejected, so he trained as a teacher. However, although he did some teaching at Stanford it was not to be his career, for in 1935 he joined his brothers Sigurd and Eric in the setting up of a home laboratory.
    There, with William Hansen, a former colleague of Russell's at Stanford, they worked on the development of microwave oscillators, based on some of the latter's ideas. By 1937 they had made sufficient progress on an electron velocity-bunching tube, which they called the klystron, to obtain an agreement with the university to provide laboratory facilities in return for a share of any proceeds. By August that year they were able to produce continuous power at a wavelength of 13 cm. Clearly needing greater resources to develop and manufacture the tube, and with a possible war looming, a deal was struck with the Sperry Gyroscope Company to finance the work, which was transferred to the East Coast.
    In 1946, after the death of his first wife, Russell returned to Palo Alto, and in 1948 the brothers and Hansen founded Varian Associates to make microwave tubes for transmitters and linear accelerators and nuclear magnetic-resonance detectors. Subsequent research also resulted in the development of a satellite-borne magnetometer for measuring the earth's magnetic field.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Honorary DSc Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute 1943. Franklin Institute Medal.
    Bibliography
    1939, with S.F.Varian, "High frequency oscillator and amplifier", Journal of Applied Physics 10:321 (describes the klystron).
    Further Reading
    J.R.Pierce, 1962, "History of the microwave tube art", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 979 (provides background to development of the klystron).
    D.Varian, 1983, The Inventor and the Pilot (biographies of the brothers).
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Varian, Russell Harrison

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