cryogenic$17903$ - traduzione in italiano
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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:

  • come viene usata la parola
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  • etimologia

cryogenic$17903$ - traduzione in italiano

FUELS THAT REQUIRE STORAGE AT EXTREMELY LOW TEMPERATURES IN ORDER TO MAINTAIN THEM IN A LIQUID STATE
Cryogenic propellant; Deep cryogenic

cryogenic      
adj. refrigerante
liquid oxygen         
  • Cape Canaveral]]
  • A [[U.S. Air Force]] technician transfers liquid oxygen to a [[Lockheed Martin C-130J Super Hercules]] aircraft at the [[Bagram Airfield]], Afghanistan.
  • When liquid oxygen is poured from a beaker into a strong magnet, the oxygen is temporarily suspended between the magnet poles, owing to its paramagnetism.
ONE OF THE PHYSICAL FORMS OF ELEMENTAL OXYGEN
LOX; Odorox; LOx (oxidizer); LOx; LO2; A-Stoff; Liquid O2; Liquid Oxygen; (LOX); Cryogenic LOX
ossigeno liquido, ossigeno congelato a -173 gradi Celsius (facilmente conservabile per il suo volume ridotto)
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
acciaio inossidabile

Definizione

Clio
·noun The Muse who presided over history.

Wikipedia

Cryogenic fuel

Cryogenic fuels are fuels that require storage at extremely low temperatures in order to maintain them in a liquid state. These fuels are used in machinery that operates in space (e.g. rockets and satellites) where ordinary fuel cannot be used, due to the very low temperatures often encountered in space, and the absence of an environment that supports combustion (on Earth, oxygen is abundant in the atmosphere, whereas human-explorable space is a vacuum where oxygen is virtually non-existent). Cryogenic fuels most often constitute liquefied gases such as liquid hydrogen.

Some rocket engines use regenerative cooling, the practice of circulating their cryogenic fuel around the nozzles before the fuel is pumped into the combustion chamber and ignited. This arrangement was first suggested by Eugen Sänger in the 1940s. All engines in the Saturn V rocket that sent the first crewed missions to the Moon used this design element, which is still in use today for liquid-fueled engines.

Quite often, liquid oxygen is mistakenly called cryogenic fuel, though it is actually an oxidizer and not fuel - like in any combustion engine, only the non-oxygen component of the combustion is considered "fuel", although this distinction is arbitrary.

Russian aircraft manufacturer Tupolev developed a version of its popular Tu-154 design but with a cryogenic fuel system, designated the Tu-155. Using a fuel referred to as liquefied natural gas (LNG), its first flight was in 1989.