Приклади вживання Blodgett Англійська мовою та їх переклад на Українською
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The Langmuir- Blodgett.
Blodgett received numerous awards during her lifetime.
She was the second child of Katharine Buchanan(Burr) and George Bedington Blodgett.
Blodgett was the treasurer of the Traveler's Aid Society there.
In an autobiographical memoir,[16]Gebbie recalled that on family visits her Aunt Blodgett:.
Blodgett was born on January 10, 1898 in Schenectady, New York.
Also in 1951, she was honored in Boston's First Assembly of American Women in Achievement(the only scientist in the group)[1]and the mayor of Schenectady honored her with Katharine Blodgett Day on June 13, 1951 because of all the honor she had brought to her community.
Dr. Blodgett was issued eight U.S. patents during her career.
They lived there for several years, returned to New York for a year, during which time Katherine attended school in Saranac Lake, then spent time traveling through Germany.[5]In 1912, Blodgett returned to New York City with her family and attended New York City's Rayson School.
Blodgett received a total of eight patents over the course of her career.
The visible light reflected by the layers of film canceled the reflections created by the glass.[1] This type of nonreflectivecoating is now called Langmuir- Blodgett film and is widely used.[12] The first major cinematic production to use Blodgett's invisible glass was the popular film Gone with the Wind(1939), noted for its crystal-clear cinematography.
Katharine Blodgett received a master's degree in the University of Chicago in 1918.
Using this technique, Blodgett developed practical uses for Langmuir's gossamer films.
Blodgett also invented the colour gauge, a method of measuring molecular coatings on glass.
Katharine Burr Blodgett(1898- 1979) was the first woman to receive her Ph. D.
Blodgett bought a home in Schenectady overlooking her birthplace where she spent most of her adult life.
The household arrangement freed Blodgett from most domestic responsibilities- except for making her famous applesauce and popovers.".
Blodgett also invented the color gauge, a method to measure the molecular coatings on the glass to one millionth of an inch.
In 1935, Blodgett extended Langmuir's work by devising a method to spread monomolecular coatings one at a time onto glass or metal.
Blodgett used a barium stearate film to cover glass with 44 monomolecular layers, making the glass more than 99% transmissive and creating"invisible" glass.
Blodgett never married and lived a vibrant life, living in a Boston marriage for many years with Gertrude Brown, who came from an old Schenectady family.
Blodgett and Langmuir explored the application of similar techniques to lipids, polymers, and proteins, creating monomolecular coatings designed to cover surfaces of water, metal, or glass.
Blodgett was also an avid amateur astronomer; she collected antiques, played bridge with friends[1] and wrote funny poems in her spare time.[citation needed] She died in her home on October 12, 1979.
Blodgett published over 30 technical papers in various scientific journals and was the inventor of poison gas adsorbents, methods for deicing aircraft wings, and improving smokescreens.[1].
Katharine Burr Blodgett(January 10, 1898- October 12, 1979) was an American physicist and chemist known for her work on surface chemistry, in particular her invention of"invisible" or nonreflective glass while working at General Electric.
Blodgett was hired by General Electric as a research scientist in 1918 after receiving a master's degree from the University of Chicago.[8] She was the first woman to work as a scientist for General Electric Laboratory in Schenectady, NY.