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1 transmitted-light exposure
English-Russian big polytechnic dictionary > transmitted-light exposure
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2 transmitted-light exposure
Полиграфия: экспонирование в проходящем светеУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > transmitted-light exposure
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3 transmitted-light exposure
Англо-русский словарь по полиграфии и издательскому делу > transmitted-light exposure
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4 exposure
1) экспонирование2) время экспонирования, выдержка3) экспозицияАнгло-русский словарь по полиграфии и издательскому делу > exposure
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5 light
1) свет
2) засвечивать
3) легкий
4) легковесный
5) маловязкий
6) освещать
7) поджигать
8) светлоокрашенный
9) слабый
10) огонь
11) освещение
12) источник света
13) лампа
14) сведения
15) разъяснение
16) светлый
17) текучий
18) свечение
19) световой
– aberration of light
– absorb light
– adapt for light
– airway light
– ambient light
– anticollision light
– antidazzle light
– approach light
– artificial light
– back light
– back-up light
– backup light
– beam of light
– blinker light
– boundary light
– bow light
– by reflected light
– by transmitted light
– carry a light
– coherence of light
– coherent light
– contact light
– course light
– dark light
– darkroom light
– dazzle light
– deck light
– dial light
– diffraction of light
– diffused light
– directional light
– dispersion of light
– emit light
– fairway light
– flash light
– identification light
– indicator light
– infrared light
– landing light
– lantern light
– leading light
– light absorption
– light adaptation
– light ageing
– light alloy
– light beam
– light buoy
– light burner
– light characteristic
– light chopper
– light coal
– light cupola
– light damping
– light detector
– light diode
– light displacement
– light distillate
– light draught
– light exposure
– light filter
– light flash
– light fuel
– light fuse
– light guide
– light gyroscope
– light hydrogen
– light indication
– light indicator
– light industry
– light integrator
– light intensity
– light is polarized
– light isotope
– light metal
– light microscope
– light misting
– light modulation
– light modulator
– light oil
– light pen
– light pipe
– light pressure
– light pulse
– light quantum
– light reduction
– light refractory
– light scrap
– light section
– light sensitivity
– light signal
– light source
– light spot
– light stiffening
– light stimulus
– light transmission
– light water
– light year
– low light
– masthead light
– modulate light
– natural light
– navigation light
– nonactinic light
– obstruction light
– occulting light
– park light
– parking light
– pertaining to light
– plane-polarized light
– port light
– printing light
– ray of light
– red light
– reflect light
– reflected light
– reversing light
– riding light
– running light
– safe light
– seadrome light
– side light
– starboard light
– starboard-position light
– stray light
– switch on light
– tail light
– traffic light
– transmitted light
– truck light
– turn off light
– visible light
– white light
airway obstruction light — <aeron.> огонь заградительный линейный
examine in reflected light — рассматривать в отраженном свете
examine in transmitted light — рассматривать в проходящем свете
flashing light unit — < railways> головка проблесковая
landing direction light — <aeron.> огонь посадочный аэродромный
light scattering coefficient — <opt.> коэффициент рассеивания
mechanical equivalent of light — механический эквивалент света
multiple light fiber — волоконнооптический жгут, жгут оптических волокон
observation by incident light — наблюдение в отраженном свете
observation by transmitted light — наблюдение в проходящем свете
parametric light generator — <phys.> генератор света параметрический
port position light — левый бортовой огонь, <naut.> огонь бакбортный
range of light variation — <astr.> амплитуда изменения блеска
side running light — <aeron.> огонь бортовой
signal marker light — < railways> сигнал световой отличительный
solid of light distribution — <opt.> тело фотометрическое
spatially coherent light — пространственный когерентный свет
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6 экспонирование в проходящем свете
Polygraphy: transmitted-light exposureУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > экспонирование в проходящем свете
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7 вспышка света
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > вспышка света
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8 Sutton, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1819 Englandd. 1875 Jersey, Channel Islands[br]English photographer and writer on photography.[br]In 1841, while studying at Cambridge, Sutton became interested in photography and tried out the current processes, daguerreotype, calotype and cyanotype among them. He subsequently settled in Jersey, where he continued his photographic studies. In 1855 he opened a photographic printing works in Jersey, in partnership with L.-D. Blanquart- Evrard, exploiting the latter's process for producing developed positive prints. He started and edited one of the first photographic periodicals, Photographic Notes, in 1856; until its cessation in 1867, his journal presented a fresher view of the world of photography than that given by its London-based rivals. He also drew up the first dictionary of photography in 1858.In 1859 Sutton designed and patented a wideangle lens in which the space between two meniscus lenses, forming parts of a sphere and sealed in a metal rim, was filled with water; the lens so formed could cover an angle of up to 120 degrees at an aperture of f12. Sutton's design was inspired by observing the images produced by the water-filled sphere of a "snowstorm" souvenir brought home from Paris! Sutton commissioned the London camera-maker Frederick Cox to make the Panoramic camera, demonstrating the first model in January 1860; it took panoramic pictures on curved glass plates 152×381 mm in size. Cox later advertised other models in a total of four sizes. In January 1861 Sutton handed over manufacture to Andrew Ross's son Thomas Ross, who produced much-improved lenses and also cameras in three sizes. Sutton then developed the first single-lens reflex camera design, patenting it on 20 August 1961: a pivoted mirror, placed at 45 degrees inside the camera, reflected the image from the lens onto a ground glass-screen set in the top of the camera for framing and focusing. When ready, the mirror was swung up out of the way to allow light to reach the plate at the back of the camera. The design was manufactured for a few years by Thomas Ross and J.H. Dallmeyer.In 1861 James Clerk Maxwell asked Sutton to prepare a series of photographs for use in his lecture "On the theory of three primary colours", to be presented at the Royal Institution in London on 17 May 1861. Maxwell required three photographs to be taken through red, green and blue filters, which were to be printed as lantern slides and projected in superimposition through three projectors. If his theory was correct, a colour reproduction of the original subject would be produced. Sutton used liquid filters: ammoniacal copper sulphate for blue, copper chloride for the green and iron sulphocyanide for the red. A fourth exposure was made through lemon-yellow glass, but was not used in the final demonstration. A tartan ribbon in a bow was used as the subject; the wet-collodion process in current use required six seconds for the blue exposure, about twice what would have been needed without the filter. After twelve minutes no trace of image was produced through the green filter, which had to be diluted to a pale green: a twelve-minute exposure then produced a serviceable negative. Eight minutes was enough to record an image through the red filter, although since the process was sensitive only to blue light, nothing at all should have been recorded. In 1961, R.M.Evans of the Kodak Research Laboratory showed that the red liquid transmitted ultraviolet radiation, and by an extraordinary coincidence many natural red dye-stuffs reflect ultraviolet. Thus the red separation was made on the basis of non-visible radiation rather than red, but the net result was correct and the projected images did give an identifiable reproduction of the original. Sutton's photographs enabled Maxwell to establish the validity of his theory and to provide the basis upon which all subsequent methods of colour photography have been founded.JW / BC -
9 radiation
noun2) (energy transmitted) Strahlung, die3) attrib. Strahlen[therapie, -krankheit, -dosis usw.]; Strahlungs[intensität, -messgerät, -niveau usw.]* * *noun (rays of light, heat etc or of any radioactive substance.) die Ausstrahlung* * *ra·dia·tion[ˌreɪdiˈeɪʃən]n no plelectromagnetic/radioactive/ultraviolet \radiation elektromagnetische/radioaktive/ultraviolette Strahlungharmful \radiation schädliche Strahlen plmicrowave \radiation Mikrowellenstrahlen plthe \radiation of heat/energy [from sth] das Abstrahlen von Hitze/Energie [von etw dat]* * *["reIdI'eISən]n(of heat etc) (Aus)strahlung f; (= rays) radioaktive Strahlungcontaminated by or with radiation — verstrahlt, strahlenverseucht
radiation damage/injuries — Strahlenschäden pl
* * *radiation [ˌreıdıˈeıʃn] s1. PHYS Strahlung f:radiation belt Strahlungsgürtel m;radiation dose Strahlendosis f;radiation injuries Strahlenschäden;radiation level Strahlungsbelastung f;radiation protection Strahlenschutz m;a) Bestrahlungstherapie f,b) → academic.ru/60056/radiotherapy">radiotherapy a* * *noun2) (energy transmitted) Strahlung, die3) attrib. Strahlen[therapie, -krankheit, -dosis usw.]; Strahlungs[intensität, -messgerät, -niveau usw.]* * *n.Ausstrahlung f.Strahlung f.
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