- radiative forcing (atmospheric sciences)
radiative forcing, a measure, as defined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), of the influence a given climatic factor has on the amount of downward-directed radiant energy impinging upon Earth’s surface. Climatic factors are divided between those caused primarily by human
- radiative nuclear encounter (physics)
radiation: Electrons: …part of its energy by radiative nuclear encounter. Lost energy is carried by energetic X rays (i.e., bremsstrahlung). The ratio of energy loss by nuclear radiative encounter to collisional energy loss (excitation and ionization) is given approximately by the incident electron energy (E) in units of 1,000,000 eV times atomic…
- radiator (heat dispersal device)
cooling system: …carry away heat; (2) a radiator, consisting of many small tubes equipped with a honeycomb of fins to convect heat rapidly, that receives and cools hot liquid from the engine; (3) a water pump, usually of the centrifugal type, to circulate the liquid through the system; (4) a thermostat to…
- radiator hydrometer (measurement device)
hydrometer: Another instrument is the radiator hydrometer, in which the float is calibrated in terms of the freezing point of the radiator solution. Others may be calibrated in terms of “proof ” of an alcohol solution or in terms of the percentage of sugar in a sugar solution.
- Radić, Stjepan (Croatian political leader)
Stjepan Radić was a peasant leader and advocate of autonomy for Croatia (within a federalized Yugoslavia). With his brother Ante, he organized the Croatian Peasant Party in 1904. In March 1918 Radić began to cooperate with the National Council in Zagreb for the establishment of a Yugoslav union
- radical (ideologist)
radical, in politics, one who desires extreme change of part or all of the social order. The word was first used in a political sense in England, and its introduction is generally ascribed to Charles James Fox, who in 1797 declared for a “radical reform” consisting of a drastic expansion of the
- radical (mathematical power)
arithmetic: Irrational numbers: …number a, called the nth root of a, whose nth power is a. The root symbol is a conventionalized r for radix, or “root.” The term evolution is sometimes applied to the process of finding a rational approximation to an nth root.
- radical (chemistry)
radical, in chemistry, molecule that contains at least one unpaired electron. Most molecules contain even numbers of electrons, and the covalent chemical bonds holding the atoms together within a molecule normally consist of pairs of electrons jointly shared by the atoms linked by the bond. Most
- radical behaviourism (psychology)
philosophy of mind: Radical behaviourism: While acknowledging that people—and many animals—do appear to act intelligently, eliminativists thought that they could account for this fact in nonmentalistic terms. For virtually the entire first half of the 20th century, they pursued a research program that culminated in B.F. Skinner’s (1904–90)…
- Radical Civic Union (political party, Argentina)
Radical Civic Union (UCR), major centre-left political party in Argentina. For much of the 20th century, the Radical Civic Union (UCR) was the primary opposition party to the Peronists, who are represented by the Justicialist Party. The UCR draws significant support from Argentina’s urban middle
- radical critique (economics)
economics: Radical critiques: The question of relevance was at the centre of a “radical critique” of economics that developed along with the student revolts and social movements of the late 1960s. The radical critics declared that economics had become a defense of the status quo and…
- radical ecofeminism (sociology and environmentalism)
ecofeminism: Radical ecofeminism and cultural ecofeminism: As ecofeminism continued to develop, it witnessed the first of several splinterings. By the late 1980s ecofeminism had begun to branch out into two distinct schools of thought: radical ecofeminism and cultural ecofeminism. Radical ecofeminists contend that the dominant patriarchal…
- radical empiricism (philosophy)
radical empiricism, a theory of knowledge and a metaphysics (theory of Being) advanced by William James, an American pragmatist philosopher and psychologist, based on the pragmatic theory of truth and the principle of pure experience, which contends that the relations between things are at least as
- Radical Faeries (American organization)
Harry Hay: …a result, Hay cofounded the Radical Faeries, another semipublic gay community through which the rights of homosexuals were coupled with ideas of spiritual renewal and New Age practices. A champion for a diverse homosexual identity, Hay often waded into contentious debates, notably by advocating for such controversial organizations as the…
- radical feminism (sociology)
feminism: Dissension and debate: …approach taken by liberal feminism, radical feminism aimed to reshape society and restructure its institutions, which they saw as inherently patriarchal. Providing the core theory for modern feminism, radicals argued that women’s subservient role in society was too closely woven into the social fabric to be unraveled without a revolutionary…
- radical geography
geography: Influence of the social sciences: …and adopted the term “radical geography.” Others accepted the power of Marxist-inspired analysis without also agreeing with the associated socialist agenda. From these twin positions, a more broadly based critical geography emerged that identified spatial problems of contemporary societies and their causes and promoted solutions, while at the same…
- radical hysterectomy (medical procedure)
cervical cancer: Treatment: …cases, whereas in others a radical hysterectomy is necessary to remove the underlying connective tissue (parametrium) and ligaments along with the upper portion of the vagina. If warranted, either of these surgeries may be done in conjunction with removal of the fallopian tubes and ovaries. Surgical removal of the uterus…
- Radical Jack (British statesman)
John George Lambton, 1st earl of Durham was a British reformist Whig statesman sometimes known as “Radical Jack.” He served as the governor-general and lord high commissioner of Canada, and was the nominal author of the Report on the Affairs of British North America (1839), which for many years
- Radical Left Party (political party, Denmark)
Denmark: Parliamentary democracy and war, c. 1900–45: …broke away to become the Radical Left Party (Radikale Venstre), the most important members of which were Peter Rochegune Munch and Ove Rode.
- Radical Left, Coalition of the (political party, Greece)
Greece: Political process: …Sosialistiko Kinima; PASOK), Syriza (Coalition of the Radical Left), and the Communist Party of Greece (Kommunistiko Komma Elladas; KKE). New Democracy, founded by the veteran conservative politician Konstantinos Karamanlis, consistently supported “neoliberal” policies that aimed at limiting the power of the state and encouraging private initiatives and market economics.…
- Radical Liberal Party (political party, Germany)
Maximilian Franz August von Forckenbeck: …wing to form the secessionist Radical Liberal Party (1881)—a belated and ultimately futile attempt to salvage a compromised liberalism. As his national political career waned, he rose to prominence in the city government of Berlin, where, as chief burgomaster from 1878, he carried out a program of public services and…
- Radical Liberal Party (political party, Ecuador)
Ecuador: Shift to liberalism (1875–97): …anticlerical liberals, proclaiming themselves the Radical Liberal Party (Partido Liberal Radical; PLR), gradually removed the church from state education: they instituted civil marriage and burial, proclaimed freedom of religion, permitted divorce, and eased controls on the press. The church’s tithe was abolished, and many of its large estates were confiscated…
- radical mastectomy (surgery)
breast cancer: Treatment: Radical mastectomies involving removal of the breast, underlying muscle, and other tissue are rarely performed. Surgery is associated with a wide range of side effects, including changes in arm or shoulder mobility, swelling, infection, numbness, and, when lymph nodes are removed, fluid buildup in the…
- radical mastoid operation (surgery)
ear disease: Chronic middle-ear infection: …a radical mastoid or a modified radical mastoid operation. If during the same procedure the perforation in the tympanic membrane is closed and the ossicular chain repaired, the operation is known as a tympanoplasty, or plastic reconstruction of the middle-ear cavity.
- Radical Optimism (album by Lipa)
Dua Lipa: Future Nostalgia and Radical Optimism: …released her third studio album, Radical Optimism. Later that year she was scheduled to headline Glastonbury Festival in England.
- Radical Party (political party, Serbia)
Nikola Pašić: Early career: …also helped to found the Radical Party (1881).
- Radical Party (political party, Denmark)
Hilmar Baunsgaard: After entering the Radical Party’s youth organization in 1936, Baunsgaard rose to become its chairman in 1948. He remained in that office until 1957, and then, after a successful career in the grocery industry, he entered the Folketing (parliament). The recognized spokesman of the Radical Party, he became…
- Radical Party (political party, Chile)
Chile: Formation of new political parties: …secularization of the country—became the Radical Party in 1888 and tended progressively to voice the concerns of the growing middle class.
- Radical Party (political party, France)
Édouard Daladier: …as a member of the Radical Party from Vaucluse département. Daladier quickly made his mark in Paris. In June 1924 he joined the first Herriot government as the minister of colonies. In the turbulent years from 1925 to 1933 he served in several different Cabinets as minister of war, minister…
- Radical Party (political party, Italy)
Italy: Years of crisis: …by Felice Cavallotti and the Radical group in parliament, who in the 1890s strongly denounced bank scandals, tariff protectionism, colonial wars, and the Triple Alliance. The Radicals were a northern, anticlerical, moralistic group that denounced the corruption of the south (Crispi was the first southern prime minister), of the monarchy,…
- Radical Reconstruction (United States history)
Radical Reconstruction, process and period of Reconstruction during which the Radical Republicans in the U.S. Congress seized control of Reconstruction from Pres. Andrew Johnson and passed the Reconstruction Acts of 1867–68, which sent federal troops to the South to oversee the establishment of
- Radical Republican (American history)
Radical Republican, during and after the American Civil War, a member of the Republican Party committed to emancipation of enslaved people and later to the equal treatment and enfranchisement of the freed African Americans. The Republican Party at its formation during the 1850s was a coalition of
- Radical Republican and Radical-Socialist Party (political party, France)
Radical-Socialist Party, the oldest of the French political parties, officially founded in 1901 but tracing back to “radical” groups of the 19th century. Traditionally a centrist party without rigid ideology or structure, it was most prominent during the Third Republic (to 1940) and the Fourth
- Radical Republican Party (Spanish history)
Alejandro Lerroux: …the leader of the Spanish Radical Party who headed four governments during the period of centre-right rule (1933–35) in the Second Republic (1931–39).
- radical scavenger (chemistry)
food additive: Antioxidants: …the free radicals (called free radical scavengers) can slow the rate of autoxidation. These antioxidants include the naturally occurring tocopherols (vitamin E derivatives) and the synthetic compounds butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT), and tertiary butylhydroquinone (TBHQ).
- radical theory (sociology)
criminology: Sociological theories: Radical theories tend to view criminal law as an instrument by which the powerful and affluent coerce the poor into patterns of behaviour that preserve the status quo. One such view, the so-called “peacemaking” theory, is based on the premise that violence creates violence. Advocates…
- Radical-Socialist Party (political party, France)
Radical-Socialist Party, the oldest of the French political parties, officially founded in 1901 but tracing back to “radical” groups of the 19th century. Traditionally a centrist party without rigid ideology or structure, it was most prominent during the Third Republic (to 1940) and the Fourth
- radicalism (philosophy)
Jeremy Bentham: Early life and works: …mark the beginning of philosophical radicalism. It is also a very good essay on sovereignty. Lord Shelburne (afterward 1st marquess of Lansdowne), the statesman, read the book and called upon its author in 1781. Bentham became a frequent guest at Shelburne’s home. At this period Bentham’s mind was much occupied…
- radicalism (politics)
social science: New ideologies: The radicals accepted democracy but only in terms of its extension to all areas of society and its eventual annihilation of any form of authority that did not spring directly from the people as a whole. And although the radicals, for the most part, accepted the…
- radicalism (French political movement)
radicalism, in French history, a political movement that emerged following the July Revolution of 1830 and eventually resulted in the formation of the Radical Party (Parti Radical; in full Parti Radical et Radical-Socialiste) in 1901, the oldest existing French political party. The French term
- Radicalism of Impressionism, The
When you look at Impressionist paintings, with their depictions of middle-class leisure and their pleasing palettes, it can be easy to forget that in the 19th century the artists who made them were radicals. Like the Realists before them, the Impressionists broke from prevailing academic
- Radičević, Branko (Serbian author)
Serbian literature: The lyric verses of Branko Radičević contributed to the break with earlier didactic-objective poetry. Notable Romantic writers included Radičević, Jovan Jovanović (known as Zmaj), Ðura Jakšić, and Laza Kostić. From 1870 to 1900 there was a tendency toward realism, reflected in the fiction of Laza Lazarević, Simo Matavulj, and…
- radicidation (radiation)
food preservation: Positive effects: Radicidation involves doses of less than 1 kilogray for extending shelf life and inhibiting sprouting.
- radicle (plant anatomy)
plant development: Origin of the primary organs: …and the primary root (radicle). The hypophysis will give rise to the radicle and the root cap; the cells of the suspensor will degenerate as the embryo matures.
- Radicova, Iveta (prime minister of Slovakia)
Slovakia: History of Slovakia: That April Gašparovič defeated Iveta Radičová, of the Slovak Democratic and Christian Union (SDKU), to be reelected president. A significant issue leading up to the June 2010 parliamentary elections was the question of Slovakia’s role in the bailout of debt-laden euro zone countries. The four-party center-right coalition government that…
- radīf (Iranian music)
dastgāh: …constituent pieces, make up the radīf, a body of music consisting of 200 to 300 pieces that are memorized and then become the basis of composition and improvisation.
- Radiguet, Raymond (French author)
Raymond Radiguet was a precocious French novelist and poet who wrote at 17 a masterpiece of astonishing insight and stylistic excellence, Le Diable au corps (1923; The Devil in the Flesh), which remains a unique expression of the poetry and perversity of an adolescent boy’s love. At 16 Radiguet
- Radikale Venstre (political party, Denmark)
Denmark: Parliamentary democracy and war, c. 1900–45: …broke away to become the Radical Left Party (Radikale Venstre), the most important members of which were Peter Rochegune Munch and Ove Rode.
- Radin, Max (American author)
satire: The satirist, the law, and society: Max Radin, a Polish-born American author, noted how satirical journals in Germany before World War I, even in the face of a severe law, vied with each other to see how close they could come to caricatures of the Kaiser without actually producing them. “Satire…
- Radin, Paul (American anthropologist)
Paul Radin was a U.S. anthropologist who was influential in advancing a historical model of social structures based on a synthesis of approaches, including social theory, economics, religion, philosophy, and psychology. He pioneered in such important fields of anthropology as culture-personality
- Radini-Tedeschi, Giacomo (Italian bishop)
Saint John XXIII: Early life and career: …consecration for a new bishop, Giacomo Radini-Tedeschi, who had been appointed to take over the diocese of Bergamo. The new bishop, a member of the Italian nobility, was much taken by the young priest and asked him to serve as his secretary.
- radio (broadcasting)
radio, a form of mass media and sound communication by radio waves, usually through the transmission of music, news, and other types of programs from single broadcast stations to multitudes of individual listeners equipped with radio receivers. From its birth early in the 20th century, broadcast
- Radio 1 (British broadcasting station)
Capital Radio: …recruited and diluted to shape Radio 1, the British Broadcasting Corporation’s new outlet. However, if those who had campaigned for a legitimate commercial radio network in the United Kingdom were expecting the flagship of Independent Local Radio to rehoist the Jolly Roger, they were soon disabused by the slick, seamless—and…
- Radio Act (United States [1912])
Communications Act of 1934: Radio Act of 1927: The Radio Act of 1912 had declared the secretary of commerce to be the regulatory authority over radio, but the secretary was compelled by law to issue licenses to all who applied for one. In 1922 there were five radio stations on the air, and in…
- Radio Act (United States [1927])
radio: The need for regulation: …was accomplished with the landmark Radio Act of 1927. This act provided basic assumptions that have continued to underpin broadcasting policy in the United States to this day. Frequencies used for broadcasting were to be held by the government, not owned by licensees. A license would be issued only if…
- radio altimeter (instrument)
altimeter: measuring atmospheric pressure, and the radio altimeter, which measures absolute altitude (distance above land or water) based on the time required for a radio wave signal to travel from an airplane, a weather balloon, or a spacecraft to the ground and back.
- radio and radar astronomy
radio and radar astronomy, study of celestial bodies by examination of the radio-frequency energy they emit or reflect. Radio waves penetrate much of the gas and dust in space, as well as the clouds of planetary atmospheres, and pass through Earth’s atmosphere with little distortion. Radio
- radio antenna (physics)
radio wave, wave from the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum at lower frequencies than microwaves. The wavelengths of radio waves range from thousands of metres to 30 cm. These correspond to frequencies as low as 3 Hz and as high as 1 gigahertz (109 Hz). Radio-wave communications signals
- Radio Astronomical Telescope of the Academy of Sciences (telescope, Zelenchukskaya, Russia)
radio telescope: Filled-aperture telescopes: The Russian RATAN-600 telescope (RATAN stands for Radio Astronomical Telescope of the Academy of Sciences), located near Zelenchukskaya in the Caucasus Mountains, has 895 reflecting panels, each 7.4 metres (24.3 feet) high, arranged in a ring 576 metres (1,890 feet) in diameter. Using long parabolic cylinders, standing…
- radio beacon
George Washington Pierce: …utilizes quartz crystal to keep radio transmissions precisely on the assigned frequency and to provide similar accuracy for frequency meters.
- Radio Caroline (British radio station)
pirate radio: The golden age of offshore radio: On Easter, 1964, Radio Caroline began broadcasting from a ship anchored in international waters off the coast of Essex in southeastern England. Moves to outlaw the station were under way within a week. But by the time Radio London, a station with a slickly professional sound and commercial…
- Radio Church of God
Worldwide Church of God, Adventist church founded in 1933 as the Radio Church of God by Herbert W. Armstrong (1892–1986), an American newspaper advertising designer. Until the mid-1990s the church taught a non-Trinitarian theology, held Saturday worship services, and preached the imminent return of
- Radio City (album by Big Star)
Alex Chilton: …release of the group’s follow-up, Radio City (1974). Perhaps the standout track from Radio City was “September Gurls,” now widely acclaimed as a Chilton masterpiece that anticipated the work of artists such as Tom Petty and Cheap Trick. Big Star’s final album, Third (also released as Sister Lovers; 1978), was…
- Radio City Music Hall (building, New York City, New York, United States)
the Rockettes: …the signature act of the Radio City Music Hall within Rockefeller Center in midtown Manhattan, New York City.
- Radio City Rockettes (American dance troupe)
the Rockettes, world-famous American precision dance team that is especially known for its annual Christmas Spectacular. They are the signature act of the Radio City Music Hall within Rockefeller Center in midtown Manhattan, New York City. The origins of the Rockettes can be traced to 1925, when
- radio compass (instrument)
radio direction finder, radio receiver and directional antenna system used to determine the direction of the source of a signal. It most often refers to a device used to check the position of a ship or aircraft, although it may also direct a craft’s course or be used for military or investigative
- Radio Corporation of America (American company)
RCA Corporation, major American electronics and broadcasting conglomerate that is a unit of General Electric Company. Among its subsidiaries is the National Broadcasting Company (NBC). Headquarters are in New York City. RCA was founded as Radio Corporation of America by the General Electric Company
- Radio Days (film by Allen [1987])
the Andrews Sisters: …tracks of numerous movies, including Radio Days (1987), Jakob the Liar (1999), The Polar Express (2004), and The Chronicles of Narnia (2005).
- radio direction finder (instrument)
radio direction finder, radio receiver and directional antenna system used to determine the direction of the source of a signal. It most often refers to a device used to check the position of a ship or aircraft, although it may also direct a craft’s course or be used for military or investigative
- radio direction finder (instrument)
direction finder, radio receiver and antenna system for determining the direction of the source of a radio signal. A direction finder (DF) can be used by an aircraft or ship as a navigational aid. This is accomplished by measuring the direction (bearing) of at least two transmitters whose locations
- radio emission (astronomy)
radio telescope: Extraterrestrial radio emission was first reported in 1933 by Karl Jansky, an engineer at the Bell Telephone Laboratories, while he was searching for the cause of shortwave interference. Jansky had mounted a directional radio antenna on a turntable so that he could point it at different…
- radio energy (physics)
altimeter: …it takes a pulse of radio energy to travel from the aircraft to the ground and back multiplied by the speed of the pulse (equivalent to the speed of light). The measured altitude is displayed on a video screen. Radio altimeters are used in automatic navigation and blind-landing systems.
- Radio Engineering (work by Terman)
Frederick Emmons Terman: …1932 until the 1960s, Terman’s Radio Engineering was the leading book in its field.
- Radio Ethiopia (album by Smith)
Patti Smith: After Radio Ethiopia (1976) she released her most commercially successful album, Easter, in 1978. It included a hit single, “Because the Night,” written with Bruce Springsteen.
- Radio Flyer (film by Donner [1992])
Richard Donner: The 1990s and beyond: The well-intentioned Radio Flyer (1992) may have been Donner’s attempt to keep himself from being typecast as an action director, but its disturbing story about two abused boys who retreat into fantasy never struck the right tone, and neither critics nor audiences gave it a home. By…
- Radio Free Europe (song by R.E.M.)
R.E.M.: …shifting sonic tapestry of “Radio Free Europe” (first released in 1981), R.E.M. drew on influences as various as the Byrds, the Velvet Underground, Big Star, Patti Smith, the Rolling Stones, and the New York Dolls to regale fans with albums fashioned from unpredictable blends of nonmetal rock and impressionistic…
- Radio Free Europe (United States radio network)
Radio Free Europe, radio broadcasting organization created by the United States government in 1950 to provide information and political commentary to the people of communist eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. In the absence of unbiased media in the communist countries, Radio Free Europe provided
- Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (United States radio network)
Radio Free Europe, radio broadcasting organization created by the United States government in 1950 to provide information and political commentary to the people of communist eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. In the absence of unbiased media in the communist countries, Radio Free Europe provided
- radio frequency integrated circuit (electronics)
integrated circuit: Radio-frequency ICs: Radio-frequency ICs (RFICs) are widely used in mobile phones and wireless devices. RFICs are analog circuits that usually run in the frequency range of 3 kHz to 2.4 GHz (3,000 hertz to 2.4 billion hertz), circuits that would work at about 1 THz…
- radio frequency modulation (electronics)
frequency modulation, (FM), variation of the frequency of a carrier wave in accordance with the characteristics of a signal. See
- Radio Ga Ga (song by Taylor)
Lady Gaga: Early life and career: …derived from Queen’s song “Radio Ga Ga”—she created a character that came to occupy a unique space in the music world. Her fashion combined with her up-tempo, synthetic dance music and her edgy, theatrical performance to create stunning sounds and visuals. Indeed, while producing music, Lady Gaga also created…
- radio galaxy (astronomy)
active galactic nucleus: example, quasars, radio galaxies, and Seyfert galaxies. The observed energy is generated as matter accretes onto a supermassive black hole with a mass millions or even billions of times that of the Sun. The accreting matter can outshine the rest of the galaxy as it is heated…
- Radio Golf (play by Wilson)
August Wilson: Wilson completed the cycle with Radio Golf, first produced in 2005. Set in the 1990s, the play concerns the fate of Aunt Ester’s house, which is slated to be torn down by real-estate developers. Music, particularly jazz and blues, is a recurrent theme in Wilson’s works, and its cadence is…
- radio interferometer (astronomical instrument)
radio interferometer, apparatus consisting of two or more separate antennas that receive radio waves from the same astronomical object and are joined to the same receiver. The antennas may be placed close together or thousands of kilometres apart. (Using the Japanese VSOP satellite together with
- radio jet (astronomy)
radio jet, material spewing from the centres of some galaxies at close to the speed of light and emitting strong radio waves. The most powerful extragalactic sources of radio waves are double-lobed sources (or “dumbbells”) in which two large regions of radio emission are situated in a line on
- Radio Liberty (United States radio network)
radio: Economic and political concerns: …Europe beginning in 1950, and Radio Liberty (RL), which broadcast into the Soviet Union beginning in 1953, were actually secretly funded by the Central Intelligence Agency until the early 1970s and more openly from then on. Transmitters were built in Germany and elsewhere in Europe. American efforts were expanded with…
- Radio London (British radio station)
John Peel: …hippy-trippy Perfumed Garden on pirate Radio London. While his fellow deejays cultivated wild and crazy personalities, Ravenscroft, having adopted the last name Peel as a pirate mask, was droll and unflappable but ever the iconoclast. Still, when the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) established Radio 1 in September 1967 in response…
- Radio Luxembourg (Luxembourg radio station)
Radio Luxembourg: Groundbreaking Belgian Broadcaster: Until the advent of pirate radio in 1964, the evenings-only English-language broadcasts from Radio Luxembourg—208 on the dial and transmitted from the grand duchy—represented the only pop music radio regularly available to British fans. Although the station’s policy of leasing airtime to record companies meant…
- Radio Luxembourg: Groundbreaking Belgian Broadcaster
Until the advent of pirate radio in 1964, the evenings-only English-language broadcasts from Radio Luxembourg—208 on the dial and transmitted from the grand duchy—represented the only pop music radio regularly available to British fans. Although the station’s policy of leasing airtime to record
- Radio Murcur (pirate radio station)
radio: Pirates and public-service radio: The first, Radio Murcur, began service off Denmark in July 1958; it was followed by Radio Veronica two years later. A Swedish pirate station began operating in 1961, and Radio Veronica provided transmissions into Britain the same year. Radio Caroline began popular music broadcasts into Britain in…
- Radio Music Society (album by Spalding)
Esperanza Spalding: For her fourth album, Radio Music Society (2012), Spalding moved in a more pop-friendly direction. The record, which mixed love songs (including a Michael Jackson cover) with socially charged material, debuted in the top 10 of the Billboard all-genre album chart and earned Spalding a Grammy Award for best…
- Radio Nacional Española (Spanish government station)
Spain: Television and radio: A government station, Radio Nacional de España (RNE), was set up by the Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War, but the government never established the same kind of monopoly over radio that it held over television. The number of privately owned radio stations increased markedly during the 1980s…
- radio navigation
navigation: Radio navigation: To avoid any navigation hazards marked on the charts, a mariner needs to know the vessel’s exact position. By means of a sight fitted to the compass, the direction of any visible landmark or buoy can be measured. This direction, called…
- Radio Normandy (private radio station)
broadcasting: Radio developments in other countries: …stations were granted licenses, including Radio Normandy, which broadcast to the United Kingdom. Some of these private commercial stations continued operation, broadcasting under government control until 1945, when their licenses were withdrawn and radio became a complete state monopoly, independent of the Administration of Posts and Telegraphs but answerable to…
- Radio Pakistan (Pakistan radio network)
radio: In Asia: Radio Pakistan, for example, offered regional services tailored to specific language populations instead of national stations. India, conversely, offered only one main service (save for a few local stations created in the 1990s): All India Radio (AIR) broadcast in 24 languages and 146 dialects to…
- radio range (navigation)
radio range, in aerial navigation, a system of radio transmitting stations, each of which transmits a signal that not only carries identification but also is of intrinsic value to a navigator in fixing his position. The older “A–N” type, dating from 1927, operates at low and medium frequencies. The
- radio reflector (instrument)
radio telescope: Filled-aperture telescopes: The largest single radio telescope in the world is the Five-hundred-metre Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST), located in a natural depression in Guizhou province in China. It was completed in 2016. FAST was designed to observe objects within 40° from the zenith.
- radio relay (radio technology)
military communication: World War II and after: Radio relay, born of the necessity for mobility, became the outstanding communication development of World War II. Sets employing frequency modulation and carrier techniques were developed and used, as were also radio relay sets that used radar pulse transmission and reception techniques and multiplex time-division…
- radio repeater (communications device)
telecommunications media: Satellite links: …sophisticated space-based cluster of radio repeaters, called transponders, that link terrestrial radio transmitters to terrestrial radio receivers through an uplink (a link from terrestrial transmitter to satellite receiver) and a downlink (a link from satellite transmitter to terrestrial receiver). Most telecommunications satellites have been placed in geostationary
- Radio Research Laboratory (laboratory, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Frederick Emmons Terman: …more than 850 at the Radio Research Laboratory at Harvard University; this organization was the source of Allied jammers to block enemy radar, tunable receivers to detect radar signals, and aluminum strips (“chaff”) to produce spurious reflections on enemy radar receivers. These countermeasures significantly reduced the effectiveness of radar-directed antiaircraft…