- Tupian (people)
Tupian, South American Indians who speak languages of the Tupian linguistic group. Tupian-speaking peoples were widespread south of the Amazon. The similarity between dialects suggests that their scattering was fairly recent. Aboriginal Tupian speakers were found from the mouth of the Amazon to the
- Tupian languages
Tupian languages, family of South American Indian languages with at least seven subgroups, spoken or formerly spoken in scattered areas from the Andes Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean and (with two exceptions) south of the Amazon River to southernmost Brazil and Paraguay. About one half of the 50
- Tupinambá (people)
Tupinambá, South American Indian peoples who spoke Tupian languages and inhabited the eastern coast of Brazil from Ceará in the north to Porto Alegre in the south. The various groups bore such names as Potiguara, Caeté, Tupinambá, Tupinikin, and Guaraní but are known collectively as Tupinambá. The
- Tupinamba language
South American Indian languages: Lingua francas and cultural tongues: …influence the modified form of Tupinamba known as língua-geral (“general language”) was the medium of communication between Europeans and Indians and among Indians of different languages in Brazil. It was still in common use along the coast in the 18th century, and it is still spoken in the Amazon. Tupí,…
- Tupinambarama Island (island, Brazil)
Amazon River: Physiography of the river course: …200-mile- (320-km-) long island of Tupinambarana. Beyond its first cataract, 600 miles (970 km) up the river, its three major affluents—the Madre de Dios, the Beni, and the Mamoré—provide access to the rubber-rich forests of the Bolivian Oriente; the meandering Purus and Juruá rivers that flank the Madeira on the…
- Tupinambis (lizard)
tegu, (genus Tupinambis), any of about seven large, carnivorous, tropical South American lizards of the family Teiidae. The background colour of most species is black. Some have yellow, reddish, or white bands across the back, whereas others have broad lines extending down the body with irregular
- Tupinambis longilineus (lizard)
tegu: …conspicuous lizards, two new species, T. longilineus and T. quadrilineatus, were described as late as the mid-1990s, and additional undescribed species are known to exist. Several species have been heavily exploited commercially, primarily in Argentina, for their hides—a source of high-quality leather used for making shoes and purses. Tegus are…
- Tupinambis merianae (lizard)
tegu: …long; however, one species, the black-and-white tegu (T. merianae), reaches 1.3 metres (about 4 feet) in total length. Like other teiids, the tegu uses its tongue and Jacobson’s organ (a chemoreceptor organ located on the roof of its mouth) to detect and discriminate chemical cues associated with prey and other…
- Tupinambis quadrilineatus (lizard)
tegu: longilineus and T. quadrilineatus, were described as late as the mid-1990s, and additional undescribed species are known to exist. Several species have been heavily exploited commercially, primarily in Argentina, for their hides—a source of high-quality leather used for making shoes and purses. Tegus are considered a delicacy…
- Tupiza (Bolivia)
Tupiza, town, southwest Bolivia. It lies in a region of the Andes Mountains at an elevation of 9,800 feet (2,990 metres) about 130 miles (210 km) west of Tarija. Once a thriving mining centre, Tupiza is mainly a commercial and trade hub; however, some nearby mining operations remained after the
- Tupolev (Russian design bureau)
Tupolev, Russian aerospace design bureau that is a major producer of civilian passenger airliners and military bombers. As a Soviet agency, it developed the U.S.S.R.’s first commercial jetliner and the world’s first supersonic passenger jet. Headquarters are in Moscow. Tupolev consists of the main
- Tupolev Tu-144 (Soviet aircraft)
Tupolev Tu-144, world’s first supersonic transport aircraft, designed by the veteran Soviet aircraft designer Andrey N. Tupolev and his son Alexey. It was test-flown in December 1968, exceeded the speed of sound in June 1969, and was first publicly shown in Moscow in May 1970. In its production
- Tupolev Tu-22M (Soviet aircraft)
bomber: …actually a strategic bomber) and Tu-26 Backfire and the long-range B-1 and Tu-160 Blackjack, respectively. These planes were designed to slip under early-warning radar at low level and to approach military targets using terrain-following radars and inertial-guidance systems. They could carry gravity bombs (nuclear or conventional), air-launched cruise missiles, or…
- Tupolev, Aleksey Andreyevich (Russian aircraft designer)
Aleksey Andreyevich Tupolev was a Russian aircraft designer who contributed to the design of many of the Soviet Union’s most successful jet airplanes, including the Tu-104 (the country’s first commercial jetliner), the Tu-134 (for short-range commercial flights), and the Tu-154 (for medium-range
- Tupolev, Alexey (Russian aircraft designer)
Aleksey Andreyevich Tupolev was a Russian aircraft designer who contributed to the design of many of the Soviet Union’s most successful jet airplanes, including the Tu-104 (the country’s first commercial jetliner), the Tu-134 (for short-range commercial flights), and the Tu-154 (for medium-range
- Tupolev, Andrey Nikolayevich (Soviet aircraft designer)
Andrey Nikolayevich Tupolev was one of the Soviet Union’s foremost aircraft designers, whose bureau (see Tupolev) produced a number of military bombers and civilian airliners—including the world’s first supersonic passenger plane. In 1909 Tupolev entered the Moscow Imperial Technical School (now
- Tupou VI (Tongan monarch)
Tonga: History of Tonga: …Tupouto‘a Lavaka, who ruled as Tupou VI. Following the Democratic Party’s victory in December 2014 elections, ‘Akilisi Pohiva took office as prime minister in January 2015. Pohiva died in September 2019, however, and was replaced by Semisi Sika, who held the title of acting prime minister until later that month,…
- Tupper, Sir Charles Hibbert (prime minister of Canada)
Sir Charles Tupper, 1st Baronet was the premier of Nova Scotia from 1864 to 1867 and prime minister of Canada in 1896, who was responsible for the legislation that made Nova Scotia a province of Canada in 1867. As Canada’s minister of railways and canals (1879–84), Tupper introduced the bill giving
- Tupper, Sir Charles, 1st Baronet (prime minister of Canada)
Sir Charles Tupper, 1st Baronet was the premier of Nova Scotia from 1864 to 1867 and prime minister of Canada in 1896, who was responsible for the legislation that made Nova Scotia a province of Canada in 1867. As Canada’s minister of railways and canals (1879–84), Tupper introduced the bill giving
- Tuppy, Hans (Austrian biochemist)
Frederick Sanger: Insulin research: …Sanger and the Austrian biochemist Hans Tuppy to determine the complete sequence of amino acids in the phenylalanine chain of insulin. Similarly, Sanger and the Australian biochemist E.O.P. Thompson determined the sequence of the glycine chain.
- Tupqaraghan Peninsula (peninsula, Kazakhstan)
Kazakhstan: Relief: …the Ustyurt Plateau and the Tupqaraghan (formerly Mangyshlak) Peninsula jutting into the Caspian Sea. Vast amounts of sand form the Greater Barsuki and Aral Karakum deserts near the Aral Sea, the broad Betpaqdala Desert of the interior, and the Muyunkum and Kyzylkum deserts in the south. Most of these desert…
- tupu (unit of measurement)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Inca technology and intellectual life: …was done by units called tupu, since the Andean concern was with units of human energy expended. Somehow, two measurements that belonged to very different European systems of reckoning were part of a single Andean concern. Units of land measurement, called papakancha, also differed: where the land was in continuous…
- Tupungato, Cerro (mountain, South America)
Mount Tupungato, volcanic peak in the Central Andes Mountains of South America. It is situated on the Chile-Argentina boundary and rises to 22,310 feet (6,800 metres). The peak was first climbed in 1897 by members of the expedition led by the British mountaineer Edward
- Tupungato, Mount (mountain, South America)
Mount Tupungato, volcanic peak in the Central Andes Mountains of South America. It is situated on the Chile-Argentina boundary and rises to 22,310 feet (6,800 metres). The peak was first climbed in 1897 by members of the expedition led by the British mountaineer Edward
- Tupuri language (language)
Adamawa-Ubangi languages: …are Mumuye (500,000 speakers) and Tupuri (250,000). The Adamawa group contains the least-studied languages in the Niger-Congo family.
- Tuque, La (Quebec, Canada)
La Tuque, city, Mauricie–Bois-Francs region, southern Quebec province, Canada, situated on the Saint-Maurice River. During the French regime the site was occupied by a trading post of the Company of New France. The original lumbering settlement of 1908 was named for a rock on the river’s edge that
- Tuquy-Timurid dynasty (Asian history)
history of Central Asia: The Uzbeks: …and even more under the Ashtarkhanids (also known as Astrakhanids, Tuquy-Timurids, or Janids) who succeeded them during the 1600s, Central Asia experienced a decline in prosperity compared with the preceding Timurid period, in part because of a marked reduction in the transcontinental caravan trade following the opening of new oceanic…
- Tur (work by Jacob ben Asher)
Joseph ben Ephraim Karo: …Bet Yosef on the codification Arbaʿa ṭurim (1475; “Four Rows”) of Jacob ben Asher. Following Asher’s topical arrangement, Karo brought together the legal decisions of three leading representative Talmudists: Moses Maimonides, Isaac Alfasi, and Asher ben Jehiel. When he found disagreement among the three, Karo took the majority opinion as…
- Ṭūr, Al- (Egypt)
Al-Ṭūr, town, capital of Janūb Sīnāʾ muḥāfaẓah (governorate), southwestern Sinai Peninsula, Egypt. It lies on the coast of the Gulf of Suez. Al-Ṭūr has been an administrative centre and seaport since the Roman and Byzantine periods. In the town the Byzantine emperor Justinian I (527–565) built a
- Ṭūr, Aṭ- (Egypt)
Al-Ṭūr, town, capital of Janūb Sīnāʾ muḥāfaẓah (governorate), southwestern Sinai Peninsula, Egypt. It lies on the coast of the Gulf of Suez. Al-Ṭūr has been an administrative centre and seaport since the Roman and Byzantine periods. In the town the Byzantine emperor Justinian I (527–565) built a
- Ṭūr, Jabal Al- (ridge, Jerusalem)
Mount of Olives, multi-summit limestone ridge just east of the Old City of Jerusalem and separated from it by the Kidron Valley. Frequently mentioned in the Bible and later religious literature, it is holy to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The peak usually regarded as the Mount of Olives proper
- Ṭur, Jabal aṭ- (mountain, Lower Galilee, Israel)
Mount Tabor, historic elevation of northern Israel, in Lower Galilee near the edge of the Plain of Esdraelon (ʿEmeq Yizreʿel). Though comparatively low (1,929 feet [588 metres]), it dominates the level landscape around it, leading to the biblical expression “like Tabor among the mountains”
- Tura (Russia)
Tura, urban settlement and administrative centre of the former Evenk autonomous okrug (district), now merged with Krasnoyarsk kray (territory), east-central Russia. The settlement lies along the Nizhnaya (Lower) Tunguska River at its confluence with the Kochechum. Tura is a transshipment point on
- Tura Berikha (mountain, West Bank)
Mount Gerizim, mountain located in the West Bank just south of Nāblus, near the site of biblical Shechem. In modern times it was incorporated as part of the British mandate of Palestine (1920–48) and subsequently as part of Jordan (1950–67). After 1967 it became part of the West Bank (territory
- Tura, Cosimo (Italian painter)
Cosmè Tura was an early Italian Renaissance painter who was the founder and the first significant figure of the 15th-century school of Ferrara. His well-documented career provides a detailed glimpse of the life of a court painter. Tura was probably trained in Francesco Squarcione’s workshop in
- Tura, Cosmè (Italian painter)
Cosmè Tura was an early Italian Renaissance painter who was the founder and the first significant figure of the 15th-century school of Ferrara. His well-documented career provides a detailed glimpse of the life of a court painter. Tura was probably trained in Francesco Squarcione’s workshop in
- Turabah, Battle of (Arabian history)
Ikhwān: …King Hussein ibn Ali at Turabah (1919) and then conducted border raids against his sons Abdullah of Transjordan and Faisal of Iraq (1921–22). In 1924, when Hussein was proclaimed caliph in Mecca, the Ikhwān labelled the act heretical and accused Hussein of obstructing their performance of the pilgrimage to Mecca.…
- Turābī, Ḥasan al- (Sudanese religious scholar and lawyer)
Ḥasan al-Turābī was a Sudanese Muslim religious scholar and lawyer. After receiving a law degree at Gordon Memorial College (later the University of Khartoum)—where, in the early 1950s, he joined the Sudanese branch of the Muslim Brotherhood—he pursued graduate studies at the University of London
- Turabi, Hassan al- (Sudanese religious scholar and lawyer)
Ḥasan al-Turābī was a Sudanese Muslim religious scholar and lawyer. After receiving a law degree at Gordon Memorial College (later the University of Khartoum)—where, in the early 1950s, he joined the Sudanese branch of the Muslim Brotherhood—he pursued graduate studies at the University of London
- Turabi, Hassan al- (Sudanese religious scholar and lawyer)
Ḥasan al-Turābī was a Sudanese Muslim religious scholar and lawyer. After receiving a law degree at Gordon Memorial College (later the University of Khartoum)—where, in the early 1950s, he joined the Sudanese branch of the Muslim Brotherhood—he pursued graduate studies at the University of London
- Turabi, Hassan ʿAbd Allah al- (Sudanese religious scholar and lawyer)
Ḥasan al-Turābī was a Sudanese Muslim religious scholar and lawyer. After receiving a law degree at Gordon Memorial College (later the University of Khartoum)—where, in the early 1950s, he joined the Sudanese branch of the Muslim Brotherhood—he pursued graduate studies at the University of London
- turaco (bird)
turaco, (order Musophagiformes), any of about 18 species in six genera of colourful, fruit-eating African birds. The green and iridescent turacos (Tauraco, Musophaga, and Corythaeola) are primarily residents of dense broad-leaved evergreen forest; the grayer forms (Crinifer), most of which are
- Tūrān (region, Iran)
ancient Iran: Rise of Ardashīr I: …sovereigns, including the rulers of Tūrān (Quzdar, south of modern Quetta) and of Mokrān (Makran), whose surrender was received by Ardashīr. These military and political successes were further extended by Ardashīr when he took possession of the palace at Ctesiphon and assumed the title “king of kings of the Iranians”…
- Turan Plain (region, Central Asia)
Turan Plain, extensive lowland in southwestern Kazakhstan and northwestern Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. It is bounded by the Saryarqa (Kazakh uplands) in the north, the outliers of the Tien Shan, Pamir, and Alay mountains in the east, the Kopet-Dag Range in the south, and the Caspian Sea in the
- Tūrān-Shāh (sultan of Egypt)
Baybars I: …year murdered the new sultan, Tūrān Shāh. The death of the last Ayyūbid sultan was followed by a period of confusion that continued throughout the first years of the Mamlūk sultanate.
- Turandot (work by Puccini)
Ferruccio Busoni: …other short operas, Arlecchino and Turandot, composed at Zürich, attempted to revive the commedia dell’arte in modern form. Busoni’s piano works include an immense concerto with choral finale; six sonatinas, which contain the essence of his musical thought; and the great Fantasia Contrappuntistica on an unfinished fugue by Bach (two…
- Turandot (work by Gozzi)
Yevgeny Bagrationovich Vakhtangov: …Carlo Gozzi’s Chinese fairy tale Turandot, he introduced commedia dell’arte techniques and had actors dress and make up on the stage and stagehands change sets in view of the audience. The production of Turandot, which was begun when Vakhtangov was fatally ill, was nevertheless infused with the gaiety, charm, and…
- Turangalîla-Symphonie (work by Messiaen)
Olivier Messiaen: …important orchestral works is the Turangalîla-Symphonie (1948) in 10 movements—containing a prominent solo piano part and using percussion instruments in the manner of the Indonesian gamelan orchestra, along with an ondes martenot (an electronic instrument). Also notable is Chronochromie for 18 solo strings, wind, and percussion (1960). Le Réveil des…
- Turanian (people)
classification of religions: Ethnographic-linguistic: …dwell three great races, the Turanians (including the Ural-Altaic peoples), the Semites, and the Aryans, to which correspond three great families of languages. Originally, in some remote prehistory, each of these races formed a unity, but with the passage of time they split up into a myriad of peoples with…
- Turanian Lowland (region, Central Asia)
Turan Plain, extensive lowland in southwestern Kazakhstan and northwestern Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. It is bounded by the Saryarqa (Kazakh uplands) in the north, the outliers of the Tien Shan, Pamir, and Alay mountains in the east, the Kopet-Dag Range in the south, and the Caspian Sea in the
- Turatam (space center, Kazakhstan)
Baikonur Cosmodrome, former Soviet and current Russian space centre in south-central Kazakhstan. Baikonur was a Soviet code name for the centre, but American analysts often called it Tyuratam, after the railroad station at Tyuratam (Leninsk), the nearest large city. The Baikonur Cosmodrome lies on
- Turati, Filippo (Italian political leader)
Italy: Years of crisis: …1892 a young Milanese lawyer, Filippo Turati, had helped to found the Italian Workers’ Party (Partito dei Lavoratori Italiani), which in 1893 became the Italian Socialist Party (Partito Socialista Italiano; PSI). The PSI united the various socialist and labour groups of northern and central Italy and Sicily and stood in…
- Turba (Spain)
Teruel, town, capital of Teruel provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Aragon, northeastern Spain. Located at the confluence of the Guadalaviar and Alfambra rivers, northwest of Valencia, it originated as the Iberian settlement of Turba, which was destroyed by the
- turban (headdress)
turban, a headdress consisting of a long scarf wound round the head or a smaller, underlying hat. Turbans vary in shape, colour, and size; some are made with up to 50 yards (45 metres) of fabric. In the Old World, the turban is of Eastern origin and is often worn by Muslim men, though after the
- turban buttercup (plant)
buttercup: Major species: The Persian buttercup (Ranunculus asiaticus) is the florist’s ranunculus. Among the many wild species are the tall meadow buttercup (R. acris), native to Eurasia but widely introduced elsewhere; the swamp buttercup (R. hispidis) of eastern North American wetlands; and the Eurasian creeping
- turban shell (gastropod family)
turban shell, any marine snail of the family Turbinidae (subclass Prosobranchia of the class Gastropoda) that has a wide aperture in the first whorl of the stout shell, which is topped by a bulbous, turbanlike coil. The shell may be beaded, knobbed, or ridged. The largest species of turban shell is
- Turbat (Pakistan)
Turbat, town, Balochistān province, Pakistan. The town is located on the left bank of the Kech River, which is a tributary to the Dasht River. The area in which Turbat is situated is drained to the south by the Dasht River; the Makrān Range to the north and east descends to coastal plains in the
- Turbay Ayala, Julio César (president of Colombia)
Julio César Turbay Ayala was the president of Colombia from 1978 to 1982. He was a centrist liberal who proved unable to end his country’s continuing social unrest. Born into a middle-class family descended from Lebanese immigrants, Turbay was educated at the National Commercial School in Bogotá
- türbe (mausoleum)
türbe, form of mausoleum architecture developed by and popular among the Seljuq Turks in Iran (mid-11th to 13th century) and later carried by them into Iraq and Anatolia. The tower form of the tomb may have been based on the cylindrical and conical forms of Seljuq tents. The earliest towers,
- Turbellaria (flatworm class)
flatworm: (flukes), Cestoda (tapeworms), Turbellaria (planarians), and Monogenea. It should be noted that some authorities consider Monogenea, which contains the order Aspidogastrea, to be a subclass within the class Trematoda. Members of all classes except Turbellaria are parasitic during all or part of the life cycle. Most turbellarians are…
- turbellarian (flatworm class)
flatworm: (flukes), Cestoda (tapeworms), Turbellaria (planarians), and Monogenea. It should be noted that some authorities consider Monogenea, which contains the order Aspidogastrea, to be a subclass within the class Trematoda. Members of all classes except Turbellaria are parasitic during all or part of the life cycle. Most turbellarians are…
- Turbervile, George (English poet)
George Turberville was the first English poet to publish a book of verses to his lady, a genre that became popular in the Elizabethan age. After attending the University of Oxford, Turberville went to Russia (1568–69) as secretary to Thomas Randolph, the first English ambassador there, and later
- Turberville, George (English poet)
George Turberville was the first English poet to publish a book of verses to his lady, a genre that became popular in the Elizabethan age. After attending the University of Oxford, Turberville went to Russia (1568–69) as secretary to Thomas Randolph, the first English ambassador there, and later
- turbidimetry (chemistry)
nephelometry and turbidimetry: turbidimetry, in analytical chemistry, methods for determining the amount of cloudiness, or turbidity, in a solution based upon measurement of the effect of this turbidity upon the transmission and scattering of light. Turbidity in a liquid is caused by the presence of finely divided suspended…
- turbidite (rock deposit)
turbidite, a type of sedimentary rock composed of layered particles that grade upward from coarser to finer sizes and are thought to have originated from ancient turbidity currents in the oceans. They are integral components of sedimentary deep-sea fans adjacent to the base of continental slopes,
- turbidity (water impurity)
water supply system: Health concerns: Turbidity refers to cloudiness caused by very small particles of silt, clay, and other substances suspended in water. Even a slight degree of turbidity in drinking water is objectionable to most people. Turbidity also interferes with disinfection by creating a possible shield for pathogenic organisms.…
- turbidity current (oceanography)
turbidity current, underwater density current of abrasive sediments. Such currents appear to be relatively short-lived, transient phenomena that occur at great depths. They are thought to be caused by the slumping of sediment that has piled up at the top of the continental slope, particularly at
- Turbina (plant genus)
Turbina, a genus of some 15 species of plants, native in tropical America and Southeast Asia, belonging to the morning glory family (Convolvulaceae). Of special interest is the woody stemmed perennial climber known to the ancient Aztecs as ololiuqui (Turbina corymbosa), the brown seeds of which
- Turbina corymbosa (plant)
Convolvulaceae: Major genera and species: The seeds of two species, Turbina corymbosa and Ipomoea violacea, are sources of hallucinogenic drugs of historical interest and contemporary concern.
- turbinal (anatomy)
nasal concha, any of several thin, scroll-shaped bony elements forming the upper chambers of the nasal cavities. They increase the surface area of these cavities, thus providing for rapid warming and humidification of air as it passes to the lungs. In higher vertebrates the olfactory epithelium is
- turbinate (anatomy)
nasal concha, any of several thin, scroll-shaped bony elements forming the upper chambers of the nasal cavities. They increase the surface area of these cavities, thus providing for rapid warming and humidification of air as it passes to the lungs. In higher vertebrates the olfactory epithelium is
- turbine
turbine, any of various devices that convert the energy in a stream of fluid into mechanical energy. The conversion is generally accomplished by passing the fluid through a system of stationary passages or vanes that alternate with passages consisting of finlike blades attached to a rotor. By
- turbine pump
pump: Kinetic pumps.: A regenerative pump is also called a turbine, or peripheral, pump. The impeller has vanes on both sides of the rim that rotate in a ringlike channel in the pump’s casing. The fluid does not discharge freely from the tip of the impeller but is recirculated…
- turbine staging (engineering)
turbine: Turbine staging: Only a small fraction of the overall pressure drop available in a turbine can be extracted in a single stage consisting of a set of stationary nozzles or vanes and moving blades or buckets. In contrast to water turbines where the total head…
- Turbinia (ship)
ship: Passenger liners in the 20th century: Parsons designed the yacht Turbinia, using a steam turbine engine with only rotating parts in place of reciprocating engines. It proved a success, and in the late 1890s, when competition intensified in the Atlantic Ferry, the question arose as to whether reciprocating or turbine engines were the best for…
- Turbinidae (gastropod family)
turban shell, any marine snail of the family Turbinidae (subclass Prosobranchia of the class Gastropoda) that has a wide aperture in the first whorl of the stout shell, which is topped by a bulbous, turbanlike coil. The shell may be beaded, knobbed, or ridged. The largest species of turban shell is
- Turbo (gastropod genus)
gastropod: Importance to humans: …Japan, and turban shells (Turbo) in the Pacific are the most frequently eaten marine snails. Occasionally limpets and whelks are used for food, but they are more commonly used as fish bait. Freshwater snails rarely are eaten. Land snails of the family Helicidae have been eaten in the Middle…
- Turbo (film by Soren [2013])
Paul Giamatti: …2013 include the animated film Turbo, in which he provided the voice of a snail; Parkland, a drama about the assassination of Pres. John F. Kennedy; 12 Years a Slave, in which he played a slave trader; and Saving Mr. Banks, in which he appeared as the driver of Mary…
- Turbo marmoratus (snail)
turban shell: …shell is the 20-centimetre (8-inch) green turban (Turbo marmoratus), native to the East Indies and Australia; its broad, round “cat’s-eye” operculum (lid for closing the aperture) is used for making buttons.
- turbo train (transportation)
turbo train, high-speed passenger train powered by a gas-turbine engine similar to that used in jet aircraft. Unlike conventional trains, the turbo variety does not have a separate locomotive; its turbine power unit is small enough to be built into a passenger car. A typical turbo train consists of
- Turbo, Marcius (Roman prefect)
Hadrian: Policies as emperor: …installed as prefects the distinguished Marcius Turbo, a general to whom the new emperor owed much, and Septicius Clarus, the patron of Suetonius the biographer. Before many years had passed, both of these men had fallen into disgrace. Hadrian was mercurial or possibly just shrewdly calculating in dispensing favours.
- turbocharger (mechanical device)
gasoline engine: Supercharger: A turbocharger employs a gas turbine operated by the exhaust gases to drive a centrifugal blower. The turbocharged engine not only gains increased power capacity but also operates at improved fuel economy. Historically, large airplane reciprocating gasoline engines were usually supercharged both by geared blowers and…
- turbocompounding (mechanics)
ship: Combinations of machinery: This technique was known as turbocompounding. Turbocompounding, in the guise of turbocharging, is common in diesel technology. Absent an excessively long stroke, a diesel cylinder cannot fully expand its working fluid. One remedy is to exhaust the cylinder gas into a turbine that drives a compressor that in turn supplies…
- turbodrill (tool)
petroleum production: The turbodrill: One variation in rotary drilling employs a fluid-powered turbine at the bottom of the borehole to produce the rotary motion of the bit. Known as the turbodrill, this instrument is about nine metres long and is made up of four major parts: the upper…
- turbofan (engineering)
jet engine: The propulsor: …of engines, such as the turbofan, thrust is generated by both approaches: A major part of the thrust is derived from the fan, which is powered by a low-pressure turbine and which energizes and accelerates the bypass stream (see below). The remaining part of the total thrust is derived from…
- turbojet (engineering)
turbojet, jet engine in which a turbine-driven compressor draws in and compresses air, forcing it into a combustion chamber into which fuel is injected. Ignition causes the gases to expand and to rush first through the turbine and then through a nozzle at the rear. Forward thrust is generated as a
- turbopause (atmosphere)
atmosphere: Vertical structure of the atmosphere: …and heterosphere, is called the turbopause.
- turboprop (engineering)
turboprop, hybrid engine that provides jet thrust and also drives a propeller. It is basically similar to a turbojet except that an added turbine, rearward of the combustion chamber, works through a shaft and speed-reducing gears to turn a propeller at the front of the engine. The first
- turboramjet
jet engine: Turboramjets: As noted above, the ramjet provides a simple and efficient means of propulsion for aircraft at relatively high supersonic flight speeds. It is, however, quite inefficient at transonic flight speeds and is completely ineffective at subsonic velocities. The turboramjet has been developed to overcome…
- turboshaft (engineering)
jet engine: Turboshaft engines: The helicopter is designed to operate for substantial periods of time hovering at zero flight speed. Even in forward flight, helicopters rarely exceed 240 kilometres per hour or a Mach number of 0.22. (The Mach number is the ratio of the velocity of…
- turbosupercharger (device)
supercharger: …brought the introduction of the turbosupercharger, or simply turbocharger, a centrifugal blower driven by a small gas turbine powered by the exhaust gases from the engine cylinders.
- turbot (fish)
turbot, (Psetta maxima), broad-bodied European flatfish of the family Scophthalmidae. A highly valued food fish, the turbot lives along sand and gravel shores. It is a left-sided flatfish, with its eyes normally on the left side of the head, and it is scaleless, though its head and body are studded
- Turbot War (Canada and Spain [1995])
exclusive economic zone: Examples of international disputes involving EEZs: …to conflicts such as the Turbot War, which was a bloodless dispute between Canada and Spain. In 1995 a Spanish fleet was fishing for turbot 28 miles (45 km) beyond Canada’s EEZ, which was a disputed area where Ottawa attempted to extend its jurisdiction. Turbot populations in the area were…
- Turbotrain (transportation)
turbo train, high-speed passenger train powered by a gas-turbine engine similar to that used in jet aircraft. Unlike conventional trains, the turbo variety does not have a separate locomotive; its turbine power unit is small enough to be built into a passenger car. A typical turbo train consists of
- Turbott Wolfe (work by Plomer)
William Plomer: His first novel, Turbott Wolfe (1925), caused a scandal because it touched upon miscegenation and dared to criticize the supposed benevolence of whites toward blacks, even casting some white characters in the role of villains. I Speak of Africa (1927), a collection of short stories, exacerbated his reputation.…
- turbulence (physics)
turbulence, In fluid mechanics, a flow condition (see turbulent flow) in which local speed and pressure change unpredictably as an average flow is maintained. Common examples are wind and water swirling around obstructions, or fast flow (Reynolds number greater than 2,100) of any sort. Eddies,
- turbulence inversion (meteorology)
temperature inversion: A turbulence inversion often forms when quiescent air overlies turbulent air. Within the turbulent layer, vertical mixing carries heat downward and cools the upper part of the layer. The unmixed air above is not cooled and eventually is warmer than the air below; an inversion then…
- turbulence, atmospheric (meteorology)
atmospheric turbulence, small-scale, irregular air motions characterized by winds that vary in speed and direction. Turbulence is important because it mixes and churns the atmosphere and causes water vapour, smoke, and other substances, as well as energy, to become distributed both vertically and
- turbulence, primordial (astronomy)
nebula: Turbulence: …always show chaotic motions called turbulence. This is a well-known phenomenon in gas dynamics that results when there is low viscosity in flowing fluids, so the motions become chaotic eddies that transfer kinetic and magnetic energy and momentum from large scales down to small sizes. On small-enough scales viscosity always…
- turbulent flow (physics)
turbulent flow, type of fluid (gas or liquid) flow in which the fluid undergoes irregular fluctuations, or mixing, in contrast to laminar flow, in which the fluid moves in smooth paths or layers. In turbulent flow the speed of the fluid at a point is continuously undergoing changes in both