lambert

listen to the pronunciation of lambert
Englisch - Türkisch
lambert
lambert projection
(Askeri) LAMBERT PROJEKSİYONU: Konik harita projeksiyonu. Bu projeksiyonda; meridyenler kutup istikametinde birbirine yaklaşan düz çizgileri; paralel ise meridyenlere dik açıda kesişen, özekleri bir daireler halindedir
foot-lambert
futlambert
foot-lambert
ayak-lambert
Englisch - Englisch
A patronymic surname
A male given name; in modern use partly transferred back from the surname
A lunar impact crater
a cgs unit of illumination; the brightness of a surface that emits one lumen per square centimetre
An English and Germanic surname derived from the words for land and bright
A male given name transferred from the surname
A unit of luminance (or brightness) equal to 1/pi candle per square centimeter Physically, the lambert is the luminance of a perfectly diffusing white surface receiving an illuminance of 1 lumen per square centimeter
Calculates surface by interpolating between normals of two adjacent polygon normals, resulting in a smoothly shaded object The surface reflectance is not incorporated, which yields lambert shader suitable for matte surfaces with unpolished, chalk-like look This shader is based on the lambert's cosine law discovered by Johan Lambert, a sixteenth-century astronomer and physicist Lambert's cosine law simply states that the intensity of light on a surface is proportional to the angle at which the light hits the surface
a cgs unit of illumination equal to the brightness of a perfectly diffusing surface that emits or reflects one lumen per square centimeter
A unit of luminance One lumen per square centimeter leaves a surface whose luminance is 1 lambert in all directions within a hemisphere (The candela per square meter is the preferred unit of luminance )
English composer and conductor (1905-1951) a cgs unit of illumination equal to the brightness of a perfectly diffusing surface that emits or reflects one lumen per square centimeter
{i} unit of illumination (Optics)
A unit of luminance (or brightness) equal to 1/6 candles per square centimeter
English composer and conductor (1905-1951)
default surface material has no eccentricity or specular highlighting
- Refers to a unit of measure of light luminance
Lambert Adolphe Jacques Quetelet
born Feb. 22, 1796, Ghent, Belg. died Feb. 17, 1874, Brussels Belgian statistician, sociologist, and astronomer. He is known for his application of statistics and the theory of probability to social phenomena. He collected and analyzed government statistics on crime, mortality, and other subjects and devised improvements in census taking. In Sur l'homme (1835) and L'Anthropométrie (1871) he developed the notion of the homme moyen, the statistically "average man." A founder of quantitative social science, he was nonetheless widely criticized for the crudeness of his methodology
Lambert Simnel
{i} (around 1477-1534) English child impostor who claimed succession to the throne of England
lambert pine
The timber is soft, and like that of the white pine of the Eastern States
lambert pine
The gigantic sugar pine of California and Oregon (Pinus Lambertiana)
lambert pine
It has the leaves in fives, and cones a foot long
lambert-eaton syndrome
a disease seen in patients with lung cancer and characterized by weakness and fatigue of hip and thigh muscles and an aching back; caused by antibodies directed against the neuromuscular junctions
foot-lambert
a former luminance unit equal to one lumen per square foot
lamberts
plural of lambert
Türkisch - Englisch
Lambert
ayak-lambert
foot-lambert
lambert

    Silbentrennung

    Lam·bert

    Türkische aussprache

    lämbırt

    Aussprache

    /ˈlambərt/ /ˈlæmbɜrt/

    Etymologie

    [ 'lam-b&rt ] (noun.) 1915. Old High German lant (“land”) + beraht (“bright”), a saint's name (of a Bishop of Maastricht) brought to England by Normans, and partly merged with a corresponding Old English name.
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