footprint

listen to the pronunciation of footprint
İngilizce - Türkçe
ayak izi

Polis, Mary'nin odasında Tom'un ayak izini buldu. - The police found Tom's footprint in Mary's room.

Hiç ayak izi gördün mü? - Did you see any footprints?

(Bilgisayar) ayakizi
kapladığı alan
Kaplama Alanı

Bu şirket çevresel kaplama alanını azaltmak için yeni teknolojiler kullanıyor. - This company is using new technologies to reduce its environmental footprint.

(Televizyon) kapsama alanı
(Çevre) iz bölgesi
{i} iz
ayak iz

Polisler Tom'un yatak odası penceresinin dışında herhangi bir ayak izi bulamadılar. - The police couldn't find any footprints outside Tom's bedroom window.

Yerde ayak izleri bırakılmıştı. - Footprints were left on the floor.

footprints
ayak izleri

Bir büyük ayak izi ve birkaç farklı boyutta daha küçük ayak izleri bulduk. - We found one large footprint and a couple of different size smaller footprints.

Yerde ayak izleri bırakılmıştı. - Footprints were left on the floor.

carbon footprint
Karbon ayakizi
carbon footprint
Çevreye verilen zararın ölçümü amacıyla, belirli bir zaman içinde bir kişi, kurum ya da yer tarafından doğaya verilen karbon miktarı
eco footprint
Ekolojik ayak izi
ecological footprint
Ekolojik ayak izi
footprints
izler

Suçlu ayak izleri bıraktı. - The criminal left footprints.

Masanın üstünde bir kedinin ayak izleri var. - There are footprints of a cat on the table.

İngilizce - İngilizce
Amount of hard drive space required for a program
Profession or lifestyle, as in

He is following in his father's footprints.

The ecological impact of a human activity, machine, etc

My carbon footprint is very high.

Availability of a satellite from the ground
A company's geographic market presence. Eg. The store, which is slated to open next month, increases the company's footprint in the market to 14 locations
The impression of the foot in a soft substance such as sand or snow
The audit trail left by a crashed program
Space required by a piece of equipment. Eg: This computer has a smaller footprint
The surface space occupied by a structure

the footprint of a building.

the geographic region on the earth underneath a satellite which is in the appropriate range to receive that satellite's information
The geographic area over which a satellite antenna receives or directs its signals There is often a collection of concentric footprints, each representing a particular satellite EIRP or G/T These quantities can be related to the size of the antenna that is needed on the ground to receive or transmit a particular service respectively
The area of the earth's surface in which a particular satellite signal can be received
The surface area of the earth which the Satellite "sees" No one Satellite can transmit a signal to the entire earth, though theoretically 3 equally spaced apart Satellites in a network could cover the entire earth The footprint is a roughly square area when represented on a flat-earth map Global beams cover the 1/3 of the entire surface of the earth, hemi beams cover a single hemisphere, zonal beams cover half a hemisphere, & steerable spot beams using phased array can cover single geopolitical areas
The area of Earth with sufficient antenna gain to receive a signal from a satellite
The area of the tire's tread that is in actual contact with the ground (See Contact Patch)
The area with which a satellite in geostationary orbit can communicate A footprint can be as large as an entire country; for example, many Canadian satellites have footprints almost the entire size of Canada, from coast to coast Click here for a picture of a satellite's footprint
{i} imprint left by a foot, footmark; (Computers) surface area taken by a particular hardware device (external - peripheral or internal); size of memory space required for a program
The amount of floor space that a piece of equipment (e g , a desktop/tower enclosure) occupies
The geographic area on earth in which a satellite signal can be received
homes that can be reached by the beam of a particular satellite and therefore receive that satellite's signals
  In satellite communications, that portion of the Earth's surface over which a satellite antenna delivers a specified amount of signal power under specified conditions   (188) Note:  The limiting case of footprint area is somewhat less than one-half the Earth's surface, and depends on the altitude of the satellite
The area in which a specific transmission can be received Some footprints cover as much as one-third of the earth, such as satellite or cell systems
French: zone de couverture The geographical area throughout which signals may be transmitted to, and received from, a particular satellite
A footprint is a mark in the shape of a foot that a person or animal makes in or on a surface
is the area on the surface illuminated by the Radar pulse The Altimeter boresite is pointed at Nadir and the antenna half-power beamwidth is 1 3 degrees At a height of 800km this corresponds to a circular area 18km across However the short duration of the radar pulse normally means that a much smaller area of illumination is seen by the instrument This is often referred to as the Pulse Limited Footprint
" the area taken up by some object; "the computer had a desktop footprint of 10 by 16 inches" a mark of a foot or shoe on a surface; "the police made casts of the footprints in the soft earth outside the window" a trace suggesting that something was once present or felt or otherwise important; "the footprints of an earlier civilization
In BGAs, this is the mechanical location of balls on a BGA package
(communications usage) The geographical coverage area of a satellite transmission within which the signal can be downlinked or received (See also: EIRP)
The shape of a roller coaster circuit, if traced on the ground, under the ride The view shown on plan diagrams
The area of the tire's tread that is in actual contact with the ground Sometimes called the Contact Patch
An area of the earth that the signal transmitted from a communications satellite is able to reach with a usable signal The footprint depends on the satellites beam
– signal coverage area of a satellite
a trace suggesting that something was once present or felt or otherwise important; "the footprints of an earlier civilization
Also called Location Each information bearing object (IBO) in the ADL collections has a representation of the area(s) it is about This "location" is represented by latitude and longitude coordinates in the following order: north latitude west longitude sourth latitude east longitude Currently (11/97), the footprints are either points or bounding boxes [LH]
the amount of floor space that a piece of equipment (e g , a rackmount enclosure) occupies
the pattern on a printed circuit board to which the component leads are mated See also pad
a mark of a foot or shoe on a surface; "the police made casts of the footprints in the soft earth outside the window"
the area taken up by some object; "the computer had a desktop footprint of 10 by 16 inches"
A companys geographic market presence. Eg. The store, which is slated to open next month, increases the companys footprint in the market to 14 locations
(1) That portion of the earth's surface illuminated by a narrow beam from a satellite (2) Floor or work space occupied by a given unit of equipment
a trace suggesting that something was once present or felt or otherwise important; "the footprints of an earlier civilization"
The impression of the foot; a trace or footmark; as, "Footprints of the Creator
The geographic area covered by the satellite, the outer edge of which is generally defined as that area where the quality of communication degrades below an acceptable commercial level due to too weak transmission
footprint evidence
evidence in the form of footprints; "there was footprint evidence that he had been at the scene of the crime
carbon footprint
A measure of the amount of carbon dioxide produced by a person, organization or state in a given time

House insulation is another way of reducing energy consumption and carbon footprint, as well as double glazing and draught-proofing.

ecological footprint
A measure of how much biologically productive land and water area an individual, population or activity requires to produce all the resources it consumes and to absorb the waste it generates using prevailing technology and resource management practices
carbon footprint
The amount of carbon dioxide that a person or organization produces by the things they do, used as a way of measuring the amount of harm they do to the environment

There are lots of ways you can reduce your carbon footprint.

carbon footprint
The total sets of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused by an organization, event, product or person."
eco footprint
The ecological footprint is a measure of human demand on the Earth's ecosystems. It is a standardized measure of demand for natural capital that may be contrasted with the planet's ecological capacity to regenerate. It represents the amount of biologically productive land and sea area necessary to supply the resources a human population consumes, and to mitigate associated waste
ecological footprint
The ecological footprint is a measure of human demand on the Earth's ecosystems. It is a standardized measure of demand for natural capital that may be contrasted with the planet's ecological capacity to regenerate. It represents the amount of biologically productive land and sea area necessary to supply the resources a human population consumes, and to mitigate associated waste
A footprint
print
footprints
plural of footprint
footprint