luminal$45674$ - traducción al italiano
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

luminal$45674$ - traducción al italiano

2004 FILM
Luminal (movie)

luminal      
adj. luminare, della luce
speed of light         
  • Hendrik Lorentz (right) with Albert Einstein (1921)
  • alt=A light ray passes horizontally through a half-mirror and a rotating cog wheel, is reflected back by a mirror, passes through the cog wheel, and is reflected by the half-mirror into a monocular.
  • alt=A diagram of a planet's orbit around the Sun and of a moon's orbit around another planet. The shadow of the latter planet is shaded.
  • alt=Schematic of the working of a Michelson interferometer.
  • Measurement of the speed of light using the eclipse of Io by Jupiter
  • The [[Lorentz factor]] ''γ'' as a function of velocity. It starts at{{Nbsp}}1 and approaches infinity as ''v'' approaches ''c''.
  • One of the last and most accurate time of flight measurements, Michelson, Pease and Pearson's 1930–35 experiment used a rotating mirror and a one-mile (1.6 km) long vacuum chamber which the light beam traversed 10 times. It achieved accuracy of ±11 km/s.
  • alt=Three pairs of coordinate axes are depicted with the same origin A; in the green frame, the x axis is horizontal and the ct axis is vertical; in the red frame, the x′ axis is slightly skewed upwards, and the ct′ axis slightly skewed rightwards, relative to the green axes; in the blue frame, the x′′ axis is somewhat skewed downwards, and the ct′′ axis somewhat skewed leftwards, relative to the green axes. A point B on the green x axis, to the left of A, has zero ct, positive ct′, and negative ct′′.
  • alt=A star emits a light ray that hits the objective of a telescope. While the light travels down the telescope to its eyepiece, the telescope moves to the right. For the light to stay inside the telescope, the telescope must be tilted to the right, causing the distant source to appear at a different location to the right.
  • A beam of light is depicted travelling between the Earth and the Moon in the time it takes a light pulse to move between them: 1.255 seconds at their mean orbital (surface-to-surface) distance. The relative sizes and separation of the Earth–Moon system are shown to scale.
  • alt=A box with three waves in it; there are one and a half wavelength of the top wave, one of the middle one, and a half of the bottom one.
SPEED OF ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES IN VACUUM
Velocity of light; The speed of light in vacuum; Light speed; Speed of Light; Speed Of Light; Light speed barrier; Lightspeed; Speed of light (c); Weber's constant; Percentage of the speed of light; 299792458; Speed-of-light; Light Speed; Speed of Liht; 299,792,458; Speed of electricity/light; Speed of light in a vacuum; The speed of light in a vacuum; Speed of radio; The speed of radio; Fundamental Speed; Speed of ligth; 299,792,458 metres per second; Electromagnetic wave speed; The speed of light; 186282; Luminal speed; Speed of massless particles; Planck speed; Planck velocity; Vacuum speed of light; Celerity constant; 299792458 metres per second; Light-speed; 299792458 m/s; 299792458 metres/second; 299792458 metres / second; Speed of causality; C (speed of light); C (physics); C (constant); Speed of light in vacuum; History of the speed of light; Mach 874,030
n. velocità della luce, velocità fisica permanente dei raggi elettromagnetici nello spazio; unità di misura della velocità della luce (circa 299.792.5 km al secondo o 186.200.000 miglia al secondo)
velocity of light         
  • Hendrik Lorentz (right) with Albert Einstein (1921)
  • alt=A light ray passes horizontally through a half-mirror and a rotating cog wheel, is reflected back by a mirror, passes through the cog wheel, and is reflected by the half-mirror into a monocular.
  • alt=A diagram of a planet's orbit around the Sun and of a moon's orbit around another planet. The shadow of the latter planet is shaded.
  • alt=Schematic of the working of a Michelson interferometer.
  • Measurement of the speed of light using the eclipse of Io by Jupiter
  • The [[Lorentz factor]] ''γ'' as a function of velocity. It starts at{{Nbsp}}1 and approaches infinity as ''v'' approaches ''c''.
  • One of the last and most accurate time of flight measurements, Michelson, Pease and Pearson's 1930–35 experiment used a rotating mirror and a one-mile (1.6 km) long vacuum chamber which the light beam traversed 10 times. It achieved accuracy of ±11 km/s.
  • alt=Three pairs of coordinate axes are depicted with the same origin A; in the green frame, the x axis is horizontal and the ct axis is vertical; in the red frame, the x′ axis is slightly skewed upwards, and the ct′ axis slightly skewed rightwards, relative to the green axes; in the blue frame, the x′′ axis is somewhat skewed downwards, and the ct′′ axis somewhat skewed leftwards, relative to the green axes. A point B on the green x axis, to the left of A, has zero ct, positive ct′, and negative ct′′.
  • alt=A star emits a light ray that hits the objective of a telescope. While the light travels down the telescope to its eyepiece, the telescope moves to the right. For the light to stay inside the telescope, the telescope must be tilted to the right, causing the distant source to appear at a different location to the right.
  • A beam of light is depicted travelling between the Earth and the Moon in the time it takes a light pulse to move between them: 1.255 seconds at their mean orbital (surface-to-surface) distance. The relative sizes and separation of the Earth–Moon system are shown to scale.
  • alt=A box with three waves in it; there are one and a half wavelength of the top wave, one of the middle one, and a half of the bottom one.
SPEED OF ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES IN VACUUM
Velocity of light; The speed of light in vacuum; Light speed; Speed of Light; Speed Of Light; Light speed barrier; Lightspeed; Speed of light (c); Weber's constant; Percentage of the speed of light; 299792458; Speed-of-light; Light Speed; Speed of Liht; 299,792,458; Speed of electricity/light; Speed of light in a vacuum; The speed of light in a vacuum; Speed of radio; The speed of radio; Fundamental Speed; Speed of ligth; 299,792,458 metres per second; Electromagnetic wave speed; The speed of light; 186282; Luminal speed; Speed of massless particles; Planck speed; Planck velocity; Vacuum speed of light; Celerity constant; 299792458 metres per second; Light-speed; 299792458 m/s; 299792458 metres/second; 299792458 metres / second; Speed of causality; C (speed of light); C (physics); C (constant); Speed of light in vacuum; History of the speed of light; Mach 874,030
velocità di volo

Definición

phenobarbitone
[?fi:n?(?)'b?:b?t??n, ?f?n-]
(US phenobarbital)
¦ noun Medicine a narcotic and sedative barbiturate drug used chiefly to treat epilepsy.

Wikipedia

Luminal (film)

Luminal is the debut film from Italian director Andrea Vecchiato.

Named after the drug phenobarbitone, the film is based on the cult novel by Italian writer Isabella Santacroce. Santacroce's third novel, published in 2001, tells the story of teenagers caught up in the excesses of chemical culture.

French actor Denis Lavant stars, having previously worked with director Leos Carax.

Influenced by French New Wave cinema and Japanese aesthetics, the film has been described as postmodern, unorthodox and unconventional in terms of filming technology employed.

It was co-produced by Leo Pescarolo who has also worked with Lars von Trier, Federico Fellini and Raoul Ruiz.