naval$51792$ - definizione. Che cos'è naval$51792$
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  • etimologia

Cosa (chi) è naval$51792$ - definizione

MARITIME FLAG USED BY WARSHIPS IN ADDITION TO THE ENSIGN
Naval jack; Naval Jack
  • ''Sankt Peterburg'']] displaying the Russian naval jack at the bow and the naval ensign at the stern
  • [[Royal Netherlands Navy]] jack
  • [[Union Jack of Sweden and Norway]] flown by Swedish armored cruiser ''Wasa'' in 1903
  • Dutch naval jack onboard HNLMS ''Tjerk Hiddes''
  • Naval jack of the [[Irish Naval Service]]
  • 6}}'s jackstaff in December 2011
  • Norwegian gunboat ''Sleipner'' at [[Kiel]], June 1895, flying the [[Union Jack of Norway and Sweden]]

Naval aviator (United States)         
  • Marine Corps Aviation Pipeline
  • Leather naval aviator "soft patch" worn on flight suits and flight jackets.
  • Naval Astronaut insignia
COMMISSIONED OFFICER OR WARRANT OFFICER QUALIFIED AS A MANNED AIRCRAFT PILOT IN THE UNITED STATES NAVY OR UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS
Naval Aviator insignia; Primary Flight Training; Wings of Gold; Naval Aviator Badge; Naval aviator insignia; Primary flight training; United States Naval Air Corps; U.S. Naval Air Corps; U. S. Naval Air Corps; United States Navy Air Corps; U.S. Navy Air Corps; United States Navy aviation; Naval Aviation Pilot; United States naval aviator; US Naval Air Corps; U.S. Naval Aviator; U.S. naval aviator; US Naval Aviator; US naval aviator; United States Naval Aviator
A naval aviator is a commissioned officer or warrant officer qualified as a crewed aircraft pilot in the United States Navy or United States Marine Corps. United States Coast Guard crewed aircraft pilots are officially designated as "Coast Guard aviators", although they complete the same undergraduate flight training as Navy and Marine Corps crewed aircraft pilots, and are awarded the same aviation breast insignia.
Naval artillery         
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  • 1}}s in line
  • Gunhouse}}
  • [[36-pounder long gun]] at the ready. The pointing system and accessories can be seen clearly.
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  • [[Carronade]] was a small gun, devastating at short range.
  • Examples of [[canister shot]].
  • 6}} c. 1940.
  • 12-pounder guns]] for defence against torpedo boats are mounted on the roof.
  • 6}}, a pioneering turret ship, designed by naval engineer [[Cowper Phipps Coles]]
  • 6}} burst in 1879.
  • ''The cannon shot'' (c. 1680), by [[Willem van de Velde the Younger]]
  • Fort Nelson]] near Portsmouth
  • In this view of the [[Battle of Copenhagen (1801)]], bomb vessels in the left foreground fire over the British and Danish lines of battle into the city in the background
  • alt=
  • Screw breech system of 7-inch [[Armstrong gun]].
  • [[Palliser shot]], the first armour-piercing shot for [[RML 7 inch gun]], 1877.
  • Accurate fire control systems were introduced in the early 20th century. Pictured, a cut-away view of a destroyer. The below decks [[analog computer]] is shown in the centre of the drawing and is labelled "Gunnery Calculating Position".
  • ''New Principles in Gunnery'' by [[Benjamin Robins]] put the art of gunnery onto a scientific basis.
  • Scarborough]] by the [[Imperial German Navy]] in 1914.
  • The [[line of battle]] was used from the beginning of the 16th century by the Portuguese, especially in the Indian Ocean, and from the 17th century, by the other Europeans in general, beginning with the Dutch and the English, in the English Channel and the North Sea. Pictured, the [[battle of Öland]] between an allied Danish-Dutch fleet under [[Cornelis Tromp]] and the Swedish navy.
  • Firing of an 18-pounder aboard a French ship.
  • alt=
  • 6}}, an example of the intermediate battery principle with its forward 13-inch and forward port 8-inch gun turrets
  • Monitor}}.
  • 6}} fires a broadside of nine 16"/50 and six 5"/38 guns during an exercise
ARTILLERY MOUNTED ON A WARSHIP
Naval gunnery; Naval rifle; Naval gun; Cannon Types; Cannons in the Age of Sail; Naval guns; Naval artillery in the age of sail; Double-shotted; Naval cannon; Naval artillery support
Naval artillery is artillery mounted on a warship, originally used only for naval warfare and then subsequently used for shore bombardment and anti-aircraft roles. The term generally refers to tube-launched projectile-firing weapons and excludes self-propelled projectiles such as torpedoes, rockets, and missiles and those simply dropped overboard such as depth charges and naval mines.
Lycée naval         
Lycee naval
The lycée naval of Brest, created in 1966 as « collège naval », is one of France's six military high school under custody of the French ministry of Defense. This school is part of the Naval Instruction Center of Brest and has two missions: to help the families and to help the Navy's recruitment.

Wikipedia

Jack (flag)

A jack is a flag flown from a short jackstaff at the bow (front) of a vessel, while the ensign is flown on the stern (rear). Jacks on bowsprits or foremasts appeared in the 17th century. A country may have different jacks for different purposes, especially when (as in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands) the naval jack is forbidden to other vessels. The United Kingdom has an official civil jack; the Netherlands has several unofficial ones. In some countries, ships of other government institutions may fly the naval jack, e.g. the ships of the United States Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the case of the US jack. Certain organs of the UK's government have their own departmental jacks. Commercial or pleasure craft may fly the flag of an administrative division (state, province, land) or municipality at the bow. Merchant ships may fly a house flag. Yachts may fly a club burgee or officer's flag or the owner's private signal at the bow. Practice may be regulated by law, custom, or personal judgment.