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19 апреля, 2024

Translations in furniture production

07 февраля, 2024

Ghostwriting vs. Copywriting

30 января, 2024

Preparing a scientific article for publication in an electronic (online) journal

20 декабря, 2023

Translation and editing of drawings in CAD systems

10 декабря, 2023

About automatic speech recognition

30 ноября, 2023

Translation services for tunneling shields and tunnel construction technologies

22 ноября, 2023

Proofreading of English text



Глоссарии и словари бюро переводов Фларус

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Background (pt, mt)

Глоссарий терминов по технологиям неразрушающего контроля (NDT)
    The surface of the test part upon which the indication is viewed. it may be the natural surface of the test part, or it may be the developer coating on the surface. this background may contain traces of unremoved penetrant, fluorescent or visible, which if present, can interfere with the visibility of the indication.




Indication, английский
  1. Индикация

  2. A situation or sign which suggests that a specific treatment should be given or that a condition has a particular cause  sulpha drugs have been replaced by antibiotics in many indications.  contraindication

  3. (1) notice given by a dealer (through autex) or customer of an interest in buying or selling stock, sometimes including specific volume and price; (2) approximation of where a specialist sees buy and sell interest to tighten the range to an opening price.

  4. Выражение интереса (бирж.)

  5. In nondestructive inspection, a response or evidence of a response, that requires interpretation to determine its significance.

  6. Nondestructive test response that requires interpretation to determine its relevance. these include such things as meter deflections, shadows on radiographs, blips on screens, or localized discolorations on surfaces. see also defect; discontinuity; indication, false; indication, nonrelevant. indication, discontinuity: visible evidence of a material discontinuity. subsequent interpretation is required to determine the significance of an indication. indication, false: test indication that could be interpreted as originating from a discontinuity where no discontinuity exists. compare defect; ghost; indication, nonrelevant. false indications are an economic liability for inspection because they must be investigated. indication, nonrelevant: indication due to misapplied or improper testing. may also be an indication caused by an actual discontinuity that does not affect the usability of the test object (a change of section, for instance). indication, relevant: indication from a discontinuity (as opposed to a nonrelevant indication) requiring evaluation by a qualified inspector, typically with reference to an acceptance standard, by virtue of the discontinuity’s size, shape, orientation, or location.

  7. Nondestructive test response that requires interpretation to determine its relevance.4 see also defect; discontinuity; false indication; nonrelevant indication. indication, nonrelevant: indication that has no relation to a discontinuity that might constitute a defect.1 test response caused by geometry or by a physical condition that is not a discontinuity. indication, relevant: indication from a discontinuity (as opposed to a false indication) requiring evaluation by a qualified inspector, typically with reference to an acceptance standard, by virtue of the discontinuity’s size or location.1

  8. Nondestructive test response that requires interpretation to determine its relevance. compare defect; discontinuity; indication, false; indication, nonrelevant. indication, false: (1) test indication that could be interpreted as originating from a discontinuity but that actually originates where no discontinuity exists in the test object. (2) indication due to misapplied or improper testing. compare indication, nonrelevant; defect. indication, nonrelevant: indication that has no relation to a discontinuity that might constitute a defect. test response caused by geometry or by a physical condition that is not a discontinuity (a change of section, for instance). indication, relevant: indication from a discontinuity (as opposed to a false indication) requiring evaluation by a qualified inspector, typically with reference to an acceptance standard, by virtue of the discontinuity’s size or location.

  9. Nondestructive test response that requires interpretation to determine its relevance. compare defect; discontinuity. see also indication, false; indication, nonrelevant. indication, false: (1) test indication that could be interpreted as originating from a discontinuity but that actually originates where no discontinuity exists in the test object. (2) indication due to misapplied or improper testing. compare indication, nonrelevant. indication, nonrelevant: indication that has no relation to a discontinuity that might constitute a defect. test response caused by geometry or by a physical condition that is not a discontinuity (a change of section, for instance). indication, relevant: indication from a discontinuity (as opposed to a false indication) requiring evaluation by a qualified inspector, typically with reference to an acceptance standard, by virtue of the discontinuity’s size or location.

  10. Nondestructive test equipment response to a discontinuity that requires interpretation to determine its relevance.4 in magnetic particle testing, a visible accumulation of magnetic particles that serves as evidence of a magnetic leakage field.

  11. Defect, discontinuity, false indication and nonrelevant indication. induced current magnetization: noncontact means for testing delicate ring shaped objects for circumferential discontinuities. the technique is based on the fact that a time varying current passing through an internal conductor, often a soft iron or laminated core, self-induces an encircling magnetic field. this time varying magnetic field will induce a secondary current circling through the ring. this secondary current then self-induces the toroidal magnetic field used for testing.

  12. Nondestructive test equipment response to a reflector, requiring interpretation to determine its relevance. compare crack; defect; discontinuity; indication, false.10 indication, discontinuity: visible evidence of a material discontinuity. subsequent interpretation is required to determine the indication’s significance.10 indication, false: test indication that originates where no discontinuity exists in the test object. compare defect; indication, nonrelevant.10 indication, nonrelevant: indication possibly caused by an actual discontinuity that does not affect the usability of the test object (a change of section, for instance) or that is smaller than a relevant indication. compare indication, false and indication, relevant.10 indication, relevant: indication from a discontinuity (as opposed to a nonrelevant indication) requiring evaluation by a qualified inspector, typically with reference to an acceptance standard, by virtue of the discontinuity’s size, shape, orientation or location. compare indication, nonrelevant.10,19


Background, английский
  1. Фон

  2. The surface area against which the pattern is contrasted. the surface area of

  3. The portion of a scene that sits behind the main, foreground subject. the background can be made sharp or unsharp through the use of selective focusing techniques and depth of field manipulation.

  4. A фоновый; внеязыко- вой knowledge

  5. Sound or noise that interferes with radio or sonar reception.

  6. Фон, задний план о ~ for

  7. A page that you can assign to another page to create multiple layers in a drawing.

  8. In a graphical user interface such as windows, a pattern or picture in the screen background that can be chosen by the user.

  9. The area on a card that allows a user to make the card’s image a background when clicked on.

  10. The area that appears behind the tiles on the start screen.

  11. The color or image that appears behind the content of a visual element, for example, behind the text that is displayed in a textbox control or on your graphical user interface.

  12. The image that appears in the conversation window.

  13. The picture that appears in the photos hub.

  14. Formations on or signals from a test object that constitute the background to a discontinuity. the higher the level of background noise, the more difficult it is to distinguish a discontinuity. background signals may arise from visual, acoustic, chemical, electrical, or radiation sources that the sensor responds to. see also sensitivity; signal-to-noise ratio.

  15. Formations on or signals from a test object that constitutes the background to a discontinuity. the higher the level of background noise, the more difficult it is to distinguish a discontinuity. background signals may arise from visual, acoustic, chemical, electrical or radiation sources that the sensor responds to. see also neural acuity; sensitivity; signal-to-noise ratio.

  16. Formations on, or signals from, a test object that constitute the background to a discontinuity. the higher the level of background noise, the more difficult it is to distinguish a discontinuity. see also background fluorescence; neural acuity; sensitivity; signal-to-noise ratio. glossary b 491

  17. In magnetic particle testing, the appearance or brightness of the surrounding area acting to reduce the contrast of an indication. (2) nonrelevant signal that tends to interfere with the normal reception or interpretation of the target being sought.


Fluorescent, английский
  1. Флуоресцирующий; флуоресцентный (о надписи)

  2. U-lamp a tubular lamp whose bulb has a 180° bend at the center,

  3. Having the property to produce fluorescence.

  4. The ability of certain materials to absorb energy and then immediately release that energy in the form of light


Visibility, английский
  1. The greatest distance at which it is possible with the unaided eye to recognize a prominent dark object against the horizon sky. at night, it is defined as the greatest distance at which a moderately intense, unfocused light source can be seen on the hori

  2. Видимость

  3. [1] visual range. [2] the atmospheric property that determines ability to see and identify objects. [3] in meteorology, the distance at which a standard object can be seen and identified by the unaided human eye.

  4. Видимость. наибольшее расстояние, на котором можно увидеть и опознать черный предмет соответствующих размеров на фоне дневного неба или в ночных наблюдениях— при общем освещении на уровне нормального дневного света (вмо). при определении ночной видимости можно использо вать вместо чёрного объекта несфокусированный свет задан ной интенсивности. инструментально оценку видимости мож но проводить путем измерения ослабления света при прохож дении им достаточно протяженного отрезка пути. результаты измерения видимости обычно представляют собой средние значения наблюдений, проводимых по всему горизонту.

  5. A property of a replica that indicates which members of the replica set it can synchronize with and which conflict resolution rules apply. replicas fall into three visibility types: global, local, and anonymous.

  6. The ability of a bluetooth device to let any other bluetooth device discover and connect with it.

  7. The ability of one element to see or refer to another. for one element to send a message to another element, the latter must be visible to the former.

  8. Said of a variable. a variable is visible if its contents can be accessed by its name. a local variable in one function might not be visible from inside another function. vi - the classic text editor on a unix machine. generally available on all unix based operating systems. the modern version of vi is vim.

  9. Maximum distance at which an object of defined size, brightness and contrast can be seen and recognized.

  10. Quality or state of being perceivable by the eye. in many outdoor applications, visibility is defined in terms of the distance at which an object can be just perceived by the eye. in indoor applications it usually is defined in terms of the contrast or size of a standard test object, observed under standardized view conditions, having the same threshold as the given object.2,6

  11. Quality or state of being perceivable by the eye. outdoors, visibility is usually defined in terms of the distance at which an object can be just perceived by the eye. indoors, visibility usually is defined in terms of the contrast or size of a standard test object, observed under standardized view conditions and having the same threshold as the given object (iesna 1984).

  12. The prominence and positions a website occupies within the organic search results.


Reticulation (rt), английский
    The swelling of film emulsion because of sudden change of temperature, in excess of 15’f during processing.


Electron focus (rt), английский
    The surface of the intersection of the electron beam and the anode of the x-ray tube.