piksel (bir görüntünün (imaj) birbirinin aynı en küçük şekillere bölünmesinden elde edilen bir yüzey elemanı)
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
تعريف pel في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
(computer science) the smallest discrete component of an image or picture on a CRT screen (usually a colored dot); "the greater the number of pixels per inch the greater the resolution"
Permissible Exposure Limit set by the U S federal government The maximum amount of a chemical in air, that an employee can safely be exposed to eight hours a day and five days a week These limits are legally binding PELs are difficult to update because changing them requires a complicated legislative process
Permissible Exposure Limit An exposure limit that is published and enforced by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration as a legal standard
Concentration in air that has been declared safe to breathe by governmental regulation (OSHA)
Permissible Exposure Limit: An exposure limit established by OSHA May be a time- weighted average (TWA) limit or a maximum concentration exposure limit
Permissible Exposure Limit Employee exposure, without regard to the use of respirators, to an airborne concentration of lead in micrograms per cubic meter of air (µg/m3) calculated as an eight hour time-weighted average (TWA) The PEL for lead is 50 µg/m3
(OSHA) Permissible Exposure Limit, 0 1 f/cc (fibers per cubic centimeter) of air as an eight hour time weighted average (TWA) airborne concentration Triggers restricted areas, reparatory protection, protective clothing, and other requirements
a legal limit to the amount of a specific chemical allowed in workroom air, usually averaged over a full work day If the PEL says "S" or "skin", it means your skin can absorb the chemical and the employer must protect you against skin contact Only about 600 of the most common chemicals have PELs; thousands of other hazardous chemicals are not regulated by Cal/OSHA and have no PELs
Permissible Exposure Limit as established by the Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA)
(noun) Picture element; one discrete element of an image whose dimensional domain is defined by the printing system resolution A pixel
Permissible Exposure Limit Occupational exposure limit established by OSHA Time weighted average limit or maximum concentration exposure limit
Permissible exposure limit established as legal limit by OSHA to which nearly all workers may be exposed to as an eight-hour time-weighted average without adverse effects
A time-weighted average (TWA) or absolute value (usually prescribed by regulation) setting out the maximum permitted exposure to a hazardous chemical
PEL stands for Permissible Exposure Limit PEL's are legal limits in the United States set by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) (See Exposure Limits for a general explanation)
Permissible Exposure Level; The WA concentration that must not be exceeded during any eight-hour workshift of a 40-hour work week Set by the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Chemical manufacturers publish similar recommendations (acceptable exposure level, AEL; industrial exposure limit, IEL; or occupational exposure limit, OEL, depending on the company), generally for substances for which a PEL has not been established
{i} unit of information which depicts one point within a computerized graphic image (Computer Graphics)
Permissible Exposure Limit is an occupational exposure limit established by OSHA's regulatory authority It may be a time-weighted average (TWA) limit or a maximum concentration exposure limit
Permissible Exposure Limit An eight hour time weighted average level at which the majority of employees may be exposed to without undue health effects Established by OSHA and listed in 29 CFR 1910 1000