lécher les bottes - definizione. Che cos'è lécher les bottes
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In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

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  • etimologia

Cosa (chi) è lécher les bottes - definizione

Lecher wire system; Lecher lines
  • VHF]] range, with a wavelength of several meters.  The inset shows types of Geissler tube used with Lecher lines.
  • Lecher-line educational kit sold by [[Central Scientific Company]] in the 1930s for teaching radio theory in college. It contains everything necessary, including an [[absorption wavemeter]] for independently measuring frequency.
  • Lecher line wavemeter, from "DIY" article in 1946 radio magazine
  • Lecher line as a tank circuit in an RF [[amplifier]]. Not shown in this simplified diagram are the chokes that feed the tube anodes from the HT source.  Without them the two anodes are shorted together.

LES         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
L.E.S.; LES (disambiguation); Les
LAN Emulation Server (Reference: LANE, ATM)
Les         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
L.E.S.; LES (disambiguation); Les
·noun A Leash.
LES         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
L.E.S.; LES (disambiguation); Les
Line Errored Seconds (Reference: DS1/E1, DS3/E3)

Wikipedia

Lecher line

In electronics, a Lecher line or Lecher wires is a pair of parallel wires or rods that were used to measure the wavelength of radio waves, mainly at VHF, UHF and microwave frequencies. They form a short length of balanced transmission line (a resonant stub). When attached to a source of radio-frequency power such as a radio transmitter, the radio waves form standing waves along their length. By sliding a conductive bar that bridges the two wires along their length, the length of the waves can be physically measured. Austrian physicist Ernst Lecher, improving on techniques used by Oliver Lodge and Heinrich Hertz, developed this method of measuring wavelength around 1888. Lecher lines were used as frequency measuring devices until frequency counters became available after World War 2. They were also used as components, often called "resonant stubs", in VHF, UHF and microwave radio equipment such as transmitters, radar sets, and television sets, serving as tank circuits, filters, and impedance-matching devices. They are used at frequencies between HF/VHF, where lumped components are used, and UHF/SHF, where resonant cavities are more practical.