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Discontinuity resolution

Глоссарий по неразрушающему контролю в авиации
    Property of a test system that enables the separation of nearby indications in a test specimen.




Discontinuity, английский
  1. Разрывность (течения, кривой)

  2. Разрыв (непрерывности); нарушение сплошности; перегиб кривой; разрезность {конструкции) о ~

  3. [stratigraphy] any interruption in sedimentation, whatever its cause or length, usually a manifestation of nondeposition and accompanying erosion; an unconformity. gg part 629 - glossary 629-24 (430-vi-nssh, 2008)

  4. An interruption in the normal physical structure or configuration of a part such as cracks, laps, seams, inclusions, porosity. a discontinuity may or may not affect the usefulness of a part. see defect.

  5. Interruption in the physical structure or configuration of a test object. after nondestructive testing, a discontinuity indication may be interpreted to be a defect. compare defect; indication. discontinuity, artificial: reference discontinuity such as hole, indentation, crack, groove, or notch introduced into a reference standard to provide accurately reproducible indications for determining test sensitivity levels.

  6. Interruption in the physical structure or configuration of a test object. after nondestructive testing, a discontinuity indication can be interpreted to be a defect.4,7 compare defect; indication. discontinuity, artificial: reference discontinuity such as hole, indentation, crack, groove or notch introduced into a reference standard to provide accurately reproducible indications for determining test sensitivity levels.4 discontinuity, inherent: material anomaly originating from solidification of cast metal. pipe and nonmetallic inclusions are the most common inherent discontinuity and can lead to other types of discontinuities in fabrication.2,5 discontinuity, primary processing: discontinuity produced from the hot or cold working of an ingot into forgings, rods, bars and other shapes.2,5 discontinuity, secondary processing: discontinuity produced during machining, grinding, heat treating, plating or other finishing operations.2,5 discontinuity, service induced: discontinuity caused by the intended use of the part.

  7. Intentional or unintentional interruption in the physical structure or configuration of a part.1,4 after nondestructive testing, unintentional discontinuities interpreted as detrimental in the host object may be called flaws or defects. compare defect, dislocation and indication.1 discontinuity, artificial: reference discontinuities such as holes, indentations, cracks, grooves or notches that are introduced into a reference standard to provide accurately reproducible indications for determining sensitivity levels.1 discontinuity, primary processing: in metals processing, a material anomaly produced from the hot or cold working of an ingot into forgings, rod and bar.1 discontinuity, service induced: material anomaly caused by the intended use of the part.1 display resolution, thermal: precision with which an instrument displays its assigned measurement parameter (temperature), usually expressed in degrees, tenths of degrees, hundredths of degrees and so forth.3

  8. Interruption in the physical structure or configuration of a test object. after nondestructive testing, a discontinuity indication may be interpreted as a defect. compare anomaly; defect; indication. drift (electronic): change in output reading of an instrument, usually due to temperature change.

  9. Interruption in the physical structure or configuration of a test object. after nondestructive testing, a discontinuity indication may be interpreted as a defect. compare anomaly; defect; indication. discontinuity, artificial: reference anomaly such as hole, indentation, crack, groove, or notch introduced into a reference standard to provide accurately reproducible indications for determining test sensitivity levels. see also known discontinuity standard. discontinuity, inherent: material anomaly originating from solidification of metal. pipe, banding, and nonmetallic inclusions are the most common inherent discontinuities and can lead to other types of discontinuities in fabrication. discontinuity, primary processing: discontinuity produced from the hot or cold working of an ingot into forgings, rods, bars, and other shapes. glossary d-e 497 discontinuity, secondary processing: discontinuity produced during machining, grinding, heat treating, plating, or other finishing operations. discontinuity, service induced: discontinuity caused by the intended use of the part. see also brittle crack propagation; creep; ductile crack propagation; fatigue crack propagation.

  10. Interruption in the physical structure or configuration of a test object. after nondestructive testing, a discontinuity indication can be interpreted to be a flaw or a defect.10 compare defect; indication.5,6 discontinuity, artificial: reference discontinuity such as hole, indentation, crack, groove, or notch introduced into a reference standard to provide accurately reproducible indications for determining sensitivity levels.4

  11. Interruption in the physical structure or configuration of a test object. after nondestructive testing, a discontinuity indication can be interpreted to be a flaw or a defect.10 compare defect; indication.


Discontinuity characterization, английский
    The process of quantifying the size, shape, orientation, location, growth, or other properties of a discontinuity based on test data.


Discontinuity depth, английский

Discontinuity detection device, английский

Discontinuity development intensifying device, английский

Discontinuity lattice, английский

Discontinuity length, английский

Discontinuity of object magnetic particle nondestructive inspection, английский

Discontinuity opening width, английский

Resolute, английский
    Решительный человек


Resolutio, английский

Resolutio [onis, f], латинский

Resolutioll, английский

Resolution, английский
  1. The smallest change in the parameter being measured that causes a detectable change in the output of the instrument.

  2. Разрешение

  3. Defines the smallest resolvable object in the target plane at a given range-to-target, atmospheric condition and target signal level ability of a telescope to differentiate between two objects in the sky which are separated by a small angular distance

  4. The measure of the fine detail that can be seen in an image. for analog systems this is typically measured in television lines or tvl. the higher the tvl rating, the higher the resolution.

  5. Refers to the degree of detail of an image. it is usually measured in dots per inch (dpi) or lines per inch (lpi). a high resolution gives a high quality image and vice versa.

  6. The quality of any digital image, whether printed or displayed on a screen, depends in part on its resolution—the number of pixels used to create the image. more and smaller pixels adds detail and sharpens edges. l optical is an absolute number that the camera`s image sensor can physically record. l interpolated adds pixels to the image using complex software algorithms to determine what color they should be. it is important to note that interpolation doesn`t add any new information to the image it just makes it bigger! camera makers often specify the resolution as: qvga (320 x 240), vga (640 x 480), svga (800 x 600), xga (1024 x 768) or uxga (1600 x 1200)

  7. A measure of picture resolving capabilities of a television system determined primarily by bandwidth, scan rates and aspect ratio. relates to fineness of details perceived.

  8. The ability to distinguish fine detail or resolve information within an image.

  9. Refers to the number of pixels, both horizontally and vertically, used to either capture or display an image. the higher the resolution, the finer the image detail will be.

  10. The quality of any digital image, whether printed or displayed on a screen, depends on its resolution, or the number of pixels used to create the image. more, smaller pixels add detail and sharpen the edges.

  11. 1. the amount of detail which can be seen in a microscope or on a computer monitor 2. a point in the development of a disease where the inflammation begins to disappear

  12. Наименьшее расстояние между деталями, обеспечивающее их захват роботом

  13. Разложение (на составляющие) ~ of forces разложение сил ~ of vector разложение вектора

  14. Resolution is a rule used in logical inference. it states that if there is an axiom of the form (a or b) and another of the form (not(b) or c), then (a or c) logically follows. see also: modus ponens, modus tollens.

  15. Разрешающая способность. способность значимо различать близкие значения [28].

  16. A measure of the fineness of detail in an image or text, usually as produced by a monitor or printer.

  17. Loosely speaking, the quality of an image. when printing or working with images, the resolution is usually measured in dots per inch (dpi) - the more dots per inch, the higher the quality of the image but the larger the file needed to store it. in windows, the screen resolution is how many- pixels- fit on the desktop, the most popular being 800 x 600 and 1024 x 768 - the former makes images, icons etc look bigger, but the latter means you can fit more of them on the screen.

  18. The process of translation between a domain name address and an ip address.

  19. A document that records a decision or action by a board of directors, or a bond resolution by a government entity authorizing a bond issue.

  20. The number of dots in an image’s screen display or printed output. a monitor’s resolution refers to the number of pixels per linear inch. printed resolution refers to dots per linear inch. (see dpi.)

  21. The ability to distinguish between two points in an image

  22. Разрешающая способность. мера способности видеокамеры или телевизионной системы воспроизводить детали. число элементов изображения, которые могут быть воспроизведены с хорошей четкостью.

  23. Aspect of image quality pertaining to a system’s ability to reproduce objects, often measured by resolving a pair of adjacent objects or parallel lines. see also line pair; resolving power.

  24. Aspect of image quality pertaining to a system’s ability to depict objects, often measured by distinguishing (resolving) a pair of adjacent objects or parallel lines.

  25. A system’s ability to depict two objects or signals in close proximity as separate from one another. resolution, or resolving power, varies with size, distance, sensor characteristics, object shape, object color, and contrast. see also line pair; vision acuity.

  26. An aspect of image quality pertaining to a system’s ability to reproduce objects, often measured by resolving a pair of adjacent objects or parallel lines.6


Resolution, английский

Resolution, английский

Resolution, французский
    The amount of small detail visible in an image; low resolution shows only large features, high resolution shows many small details


Resolution (1), английский

Resolution (2), английский

Resolution (horizontal), английский
    The amount of resolvable detail in the horizontal direction in a picture. it is usually expressed as the number of distinct vertical lines, alternately black and white, which can be seen in a distance equal to picture height.


Separation, английский
  1. Разделение, отделение; эшелонирование; интервал эшелонирования

  2. Отделение, разделение; эшелонирование; интервал эшелонирования

  3. The development of layers of paint of different composition in a can during storage when the materials are not completely soluble, miscible, or stable.

  4. The act of separating or dividing two or more people or things, or the state of being separated

  5. Супругов, судебное разлучение


Indications, английский
    Показания (к иммунизации)


Distal, английский
  1. In a manipulative or interrogating system, of or pertaining to the end opposite from the eyepiece and farthest from the person using the system. objective; tip.

  2. In a manipulative or interrogating system, of or pertaining to the end opposite from the eyepiece and farthest from the person using the system. objective; tip. e

  3. In a manipulative or interrogating system, of or pertaining to the end opposite from the eyepiece and farthest from the person using the system. objective; tip.1 e effective emissivity (?*): measured emissivity value of a particular surface under existing measurement conditions (rather than the generic tabulated value for the surface material) that can be used to correct a specific measuring instrument to provide a correct temperature measurement.3 effusivity, thermal: ability of heat to escape from a body, expressed as a characteristic of that body.3 square root of the product of thermal conductivity, mass density and specific heat.


Discontinuity characterization, английский
    The process of quantifying the size, shape, orientation, location, growth, or other properties of a discontinuity based on test data.