aerial tunning condenser - ترجمة إلى اليونانية
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aerial tunning condenser - ترجمة إلى اليونانية

LABORATORY APPARATUS USED TO CONDENSE GASES INTO LIQUIDS
Vigreux column; Vigreux; Graham condenser; Reflux condenser; Allihn condenser; Allhin condenser; Dimroth condenser; Friedrichs condenser; Vigreux condenser; Jacketed Vigreux condenser; Straight-walled condenser; Bulb condenser; Friedrich condenser; Thomas D. Graham; Double surface condenser; Inland Revenue condenser; Snyder column; Condenser (chemistry)
  • flask]] at left is heated by the blue mantle to the [[boiling point]].  The vapor is then cooled as it goes through the inner tube of the condenser.  There it becomes liquid again, and drips into the smaller collecting flask at right, immersed in a [[cooling bath]].  The two hoses connected to the condenser circulate water through the space between the inner and outer walls.
  • A glass still head, upside down.  The rounded part was meant to be fitted on the top of the boiling flask. Black-and-white photo of object at the [[Wellcome Trust]] museum.
  • Distillation setup using a retort and tube condenser, from a 1921 book.<ref name=hitest>United States Bureau of Public Roads (1921): "[https://archive.org/stream/standardtentativ949unit/standardtentativ949unit Standard and tentative methods of sampling and testing highway materials]" Proceedings of the Second Conference of State Highway Testing Engineers and Chemists, Washington, D.C., Feb. 23-27, 1920.</ref>

aerial tunning condenser      
πυκνώτης συντονισμού κεραίας
air photograph         
  • Abalone point]], Irvine Cove, Laguna Beach: an example of low-altitude aerial photography
  • An aerial photographer prepares continuous oblique shooting in a Cessna 206
  • Aerial Drone and a Eurocopter HH-65 Dolphin
  • Air photography from flight
  • Oblique Aerial Photo
  • [[Honoré Daumier]], "Nadar élevant la Photographie à la hauteur de l'Art" (Nadar elevating Photography to Art), published in ''Le Boulevard'', May 25, 1862.
  • m}} on 29 May 1882 - the earliest extant aerial photograph taken in the British Isles.
  • The [[Cliffs of Moher]], filmed with a drone (2014)
  • language=en}}</ref>
  • A drone carrying a camera for aerial photography
  • kite photo]] technique. (circa 1911)
  • Vertical Orientation Aerial Photo
  • [[Sidney Cotton]]'s [[Lockheed 12]]A, in which he made a high-speed reconnaissance flight in 1940.
  • A vertical still from a kite aerial thermal video of part of a former brickworks site captured at night. http://www.armadale.org.uk/aerialthermography.htm
  • Air photo of a military target used to evaluate the effect of bombing.
  • An aerial view of the city of [[Pori]], Finland.
  • A German observation plane, the [[Rumpler Taube]].
  • [[Giza pyramid complex]], photographed from [[Eduard Spelterini]]'s balloon on November 21, 1904
  • [[New York City]] 1932, aerial photograph of Fairchild Aerial Surveys Inc.
  • Milton Kent with his aerial camera, June 1953, Milton Kent Studio, Sydney
PROCESS OF TAKING IMAGES OF THE GROUND FROM THE AIR
Aerial photographs; Aerial photograph; Aerial imagery; Aerial Photography; Aerial photo; Aerial photos; Air photography; Air photograph; Air photographer; Aerial photographer; Aerial imaging; Drone photography; Ariel photography; Arial photography; Aerophoto; UAV Photography; Aerial camera; Aerial videography; History of aerial photography; Airborne camera; Airborne imagery; Regulation of aerial photography
αεροφωτογραφία
πυκνώτης συντονισμού κεραίας      
aerial tunning condenser

تعريف

Condenser
·noun One who, or that which, condenses.
II. Condenser ·noun A lens or mirror, usually of short focal distance, used to concentrate light upon an Object.
III. Condenser ·noun An apparatus for receiving and condensing the volatile products of distillation to a liquid or solid form, by cooling.
IV. Condenser ·noun An instrument for concentrating electricity by the effect of induction between conducting plates separated by a nonconducting plate.
V. Condenser ·noun An apparatus, separate from the cylinder, in which the exhaust steam is condensed by the action of cold water or air. ·see ·Illust. of Steam engine.
VI. Condenser ·noun An instrument for condensing air or other elastic fluids, consisting of a cylinder having a movable piston to force the air into a receiver, and a valve to prevent its escape.

ويكيبيديا

Condenser (laboratory)

In chemistry, a condenser is laboratory apparatus used to condense vapors – that is, turn them into liquids – by cooling them down.

Condensers are routinely used in laboratory operations such as distillation, reflux, and extraction. In distillation, a mixture is heated until the more volatile components boil off, the vapors are condensed, and collected in a separate container. In reflux, a reaction involving volatile liquids is carried out at their boiling point, to speed it up; and the vapors that inevitably come off are condensed and returned to the reaction vessel. In Soxhlet extraction, a hot solvent is infused onto some powdered material, such as ground seeds, to leach out some poorly soluble component; the solvent is then automatically distilled out of the resulting solution, condensed, and infused again.

Many different types of condensers have been developed for different applications and processing volumes. The simplest and oldest condenser is just a long tube through which the vapors are directed, with the outside air providing the cooling. More commonly, a condenser has a separate tube or outer chamber through which water (or some other fluid) is circulated, to provide a more effective cooling.

Laboratory condensers are usually made of glass for chemical resistance, for ease of cleaning, and to allow visual monitoring of the operation; specifically, borosilicate glass to resist thermal shock and uneven heating by the condensing vapor. Some condensers for dedicated operations (like water distillation) may be made of metal. In professional laboratories, condensers usually have ground glass joints for airtight connection to the vapor source and the liquid receptacle; however, flexible tubing of an appropriate material is often used instead. The condenser may also be fused to a boiling flask as a single glassware item, as in the old retort and in devices for microscale distillation.