jump operation - tradução para árabe
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jump operation - tradução para árabe

UNITED STATES NAVY OPERATION
U.S. Operation Highjump; OpHjp; U.S. Navy Operation Highjump; Operation High Jump; USN OpHjp
  • ''Balao''-class submarine]],  participating in Operation Highjump
  • USCGC ''Northwind'']] during Operation Highjump

jump operation      
عملية القفز
jump up         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Jump-up; Jump up music; Jumping up; Jump-Up; Jump up (disambiguation); Jump Up!; Jump Up! (album); Jump up; Jump Up (disambiguation)
هب على قدمية ، وثب على قوائمه
long jump         
  • 250px
  • Sand pit where [[Bob Beamon]] set the 8.90 m record in Mexico City
  • Halteres]] used in athletic games in ancient Greece
  • Multi-eventer]] [[Jessica Ennis]] during a long jump, preparing to land
  • Takeoff board
  • An indicator of wind direction and a device for measuring wind speed (here +2.6 m/s) along a run-up track
  • Women's Long Jump Final – 28th Summer Universiade 2015
  • An athlete performing a long jump as part of the [[heptathlon]] at the 2013 French Athletics Championships in [[Stade Charléty]], Paris
TRACK AND FIELD EVENT
Broad jump; Long Jump; Longjumper; Longjump; Long jumper; Long-jumping; Long jumping; Long-jumper; Farthest jumper; Long jump (sport); Running long jump; Broad jumper
رياضة القَفزُ الطَّوِيل

Definição

jump-up
¦ noun
1. a Caribbean dance or celebration.
2. Austral. informal an escarpment.

Wikipédia

Operation Highjump

Operation HIGHJUMP, officially titled The United States Navy Antarctic Developments Program, 1946–1947, (also called Task Force 68), was a United States Navy (USN) operation to establish the Antarctic research base Little America IV. The operation was organised by Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, Jr., USN (Ret), Officer in Charge, Task Force 68, and led by Rear Admiral Ethan Erik Larson, USN, Commanding Officer, Task Force 68. Operation HIGHJUMP commenced 26 August 1946 and ended in late February 1947. Task Force 68 included 4,700 men, 13 ships, and 33 aircraft.

HIGHJUMP's objectives, according to the U.S. Navy report of the operation, were:

  1. Training personnel and testing equipment in frigid conditions;
  2. Consolidating and extending the United States' sovereignty over the largest practicable area of the Antarctic continent (publicly denied as a goal before the expedition ended);
  3. Determining the feasibility of establishing, maintaining, and utilizing bases in the Antarctic and investigating possible base sites;
  4. Developing techniques for establishing, maintaining, and utilizing air bases on ice, with particular attention to later applicability of such techniques to operations in interior Greenland, where conditions are comparable to those in the Antarctic;
  5. Amplifying existing stores of knowledge of electromagnetic, geological, geographic, hydrographic, and meteorological propagation conditions in the area;
  6. Supplementary objectives of the Nanook expedition (a smaller equivalent conducted off eastern Greenland).