Damascus Steel - traduction vers allemand
Diclib.com
Dictionnaire ChatGPT
Entrez un mot ou une phrase dans n'importe quelle langue 👆
Langue:

Traduction et analyse de mots par intelligence artificielle ChatGPT

Sur cette page, vous pouvez obtenir une analyse détaillée d'un mot ou d'une phrase, réalisée à l'aide de la meilleure technologie d'intelligence artificielle à ce jour:

  • comment le mot est utilisé
  • fréquence d'utilisation
  • il est utilisé plus souvent dans le discours oral ou écrit
  • options de traduction de mots
  • exemples d'utilisation (plusieurs phrases avec traduction)
  • étymologie

Damascus Steel - traduction vers allemand

TYPE OF STEEL USED IN MIDDLE EASTERN SWORDMAKING
Demascus steel; Damascene steel; Damask steel; Damascened steel; Watered steel; Damask Steel; Damascus Steel; Damast steel; Valyrian steel
  • Macroscopic section of crucible steel (left) and false color labeling (right) showing rafts rich in carbide forming elements (CFEs) which lead to clustered cementite spheroids, as well as divorced cementite spheroids.
  • A bladesmith from Damascus, c. 1900
  • Pattern on modern "Damascus knife".
  • Detail of handmade hair-cutting scissors from a Japanese company, 2010s.
  • Cementite crystal structure. Iron atoms are in blue, carbon atoms are  in black.
  • Close-up of a 13th-century Persian-forged Damascus steel sword.

Damascus Steel         
Damaskusstahl, starker geschmeidiger Stahl mit wellenartigen Verzierungen geschmückt (wurde ursprünglich in Damaskus produziert)
mild steel         
  • Iron-carbon [[phase diagram]], showing the temperature and carbon ranges for certain types of heat treatments
STEEL IN WHICH THE MAIN INTERSTITIAL ALLOYING CONSTITUENT IS CARBON
Mild steel; Medium-carbon steel; Medium carbon steel; High-carbon steel; High carbon steel; Very high carbon steel; Very high-carbon steel; Plain carbon steel; Low carbon steel; Mild Steel; Plain-carbon steel; Spheroidite; Carbon steels; Plain steel; High carbon; Spheroidizing; Low-carbon steel; 1018 steel; Hi-ten steel; High-tensile steel; Carbon Steel; Advanced High Strength Steel; Carbon-steel
Weichstahl, Stahl aufgrund seines niedrigen Kohlenstoffgehalts weicher als der reguläre Stahl
stainless steel         
  • 316L stainless steel, with an unpolished, mill finish
  • Stainless steel (bottom row) resists [[salt-water]] [[corrosion]] better than [[aluminium-bronze]] (top row) or [[copper-nickel]] alloys (middle row)
  • Stainless steel is not completely immune to corrosion as shown in this [[desalination]] equipment.
  • Brown Firth Research Laboratory]] in [[Sheffield]], England
  • Stainless steel is used for industrial equipment when it is important that the equipment lasts and can be kept clean
  • nut]] on the left is not stainless steel and is [[rust]]y, unlike the nut on the right.
CHROMIUM-CONTAINING STEEL ALLOY RESISTANT TO CORROSION
Rustproof Iron; Rustproof iron; The history of stainless steel; Stainless-steel; Stainless Steel; Chromium steel; Stainless steels; Stainless steal; Duplex Stainless Steel; Stainless steel wire; Inox steel; Valadium; Stainless steel products; Cryogenic cold-forming; Corrosion-resistant steel; Rustless steel; Inoxydable steel
Edelstahl

Définition

Damascus steel
[d?'mask?s, -'m?:sk?s]
¦ noun historical damascened steel, used chiefly for knife and sword blades.

Wikipédia

Damascus steel

Damascus steel was the forged steel of the blades of swords smithed in the Near East from ingots of Wootz steel either imported from Southern India or made in production centres in Sri Lanka, or Khorasan, Iran. These swords are characterized by distinctive patterns of banding and mottling reminiscent of flowing water, sometimes in a "ladder" or "rose" pattern. Such blades were reputed to be tough, resistant to shattering, and capable of being honed to a sharp, resilient edge.

Wootz (Indian), Pulad (Persian), Fuladh (Arabic), Bulat (Russian) and Bintie (Chinese) are all names for historical ultra-high carbon crucible steel typified by carbide segregation. "Wootz" is an erroneous transliteration of "utsa" or "fountain" in Sanskrit, however, since 1794, it has been the primary word used to refer to historical hypereutectoid crucible steel.