television transmitting aerial - translation to greek
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television transmitting aerial - translation to greek

TYPE OF RADIO ANTENNA
Magnetic loop; Magnetic loop antenna; Small transmitting loop; Small receiving loop; AM loop antenna; Loopstick antenna; Loop aerial; Frame aerial
  • /}} wavelength (3.5 MHz).
  • HF]] spectrum according CCIR 322.<ref name=CCIR-refs/>
  • A loop antenna for [[amateur radio]] under construction
  • Ferrite]] antennas are usually enclosed inside the radio receiver.
  • nulls]] broadside to the wires. (Pink and red represent "hot" or intense radiation; blue and indigo represent "cold" or low / no radiation.)
  • sp=us}} rectangle.
  • MF]] wavelengths it is used with.
  • parasitic element]].
  • (WA8FJW)]]. Notice the triple-loop.

television transmitting aerial      
κεραία εκπομπής τηλεοράσεως
κεραία εκπομπής τηλεοράσεως      
television transmitting aerial
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

Definition

Telpherage
·noun The conveyance of vehicles or loads by means of electricity.
II. Telpherage ·add. ·noun Specif., electric transportation of goods by means of carriages suspended on overhead conductors, as of wire, the power being conveyed to the motor carriage by the wires on which it runs. Telpherage and telpher are sometimes applied to such systems in which the motive power is not electricity.

Wikipedia

Loop antenna

A loop antenna is a radio antenna consisting of a loop or coil of wire, tubing, or other electrical conductor, that is usually fed by a balanced source or feeding a balanced load. Within this physical description there are two (possibly three) distinct types:

  • Large loop antennas (or self-resonant loop antennas or full-wave loops) have a perimeter close to one or more whole wavelengths at the operating frequency, which makes them self-resonant at that frequency. They are the most efficient of all antenna types for both transmission and reception. Large loop antennas have a two-lobe radiation pattern at their first, full-wave resonance, peaking in both directions perpendicular to the plane of the loop.
  • Halo antennas are shortened dipoles that have been bent into a circular loop, with the ends not quite touching. Some writers prefer to exclude them from loop antennas, since they can be well-understood as bent dipoles, others make halos an intermediate category between large and small loops, or the extreme upper limit for small loops: In shape and performance halo antennas are very similar to small loops, only distinguished by being self resonant and having much higher radiation resistance. (See discussion below.)
  • Small loop antennas (or magnetic loops or tuned loops) have a perimeter smaller than half the operating wavelength (typically no more than  1 /3~ 1 /4 wave). They are used mainly as receiving antennas, but are sometimes used for transmission despite their reduced efficiency; loops with a circumference smaller than about 1/10 wavelength become so inefficient they are rarely used for transmission. A common example of small loop is the ferrite (loopstick) antenna used in most AM broadcast radios. The radiation pattern of small loop antennas is maximum at directions within the plane of the loop, so perpendicular to the maxima of large loops.