Burns Wallis
| Burns Sir Wallis | |
|---|---|
| The birth | Barnes Neville Wallis 1887September 26 ・State of Derbyshire Ripley |
| Death | 1979October 30() (92 years old) |
| Graveyard | Cent Laurence church (Surrey エフィンガム) |
| House | Surrey エフィンガム |
| Nationality | |
| Occupation | Scientist, engineer, inventor |
| The well-known results | Invention of the backward jump bomb |
Burns Neville Wallis (Barnes Neville Wallis, from September 26, 1887 to October 30, 1979) is the British scientist, engineer who played an active part during World War II.
I developed a weapon for an original idea to contribute to a backward jump bomb and tallboy, victory of the Allied Forces including the grand slam. I am picked in 1945 by Royal Society fellow, and a royal medal is won in 1975 by the association.
Outside link
- Examples of papers from RAF museum
- The Papers of Sir Barnes Neville Wallis, Janus Archive, Cambridge
- A short biography of Wallis
- The Barnes Wallis Memorial Trust
- Sir Barnes Wallis, Iain Murray
- BBC history page on Barnes Wallis
- The Dambusters (617 Squadron) and Barnes Wallis
- HEYDAY torpedo, Explosion! Museum of Naval Firepower.
- "The Development of Rocket-propelled Torpedoes", by Geoff Kirby (2000) includes HEYDAY.
- Wallis's impact on Effingham where he lived and the story of the swing-wing aircraft that flew without a tail
This article is taken from the Japanese Wikipedia Burns Wallis
This article is distributed by cc-by-sa or GFDL license in accordance with the provisions of Wikipedia.
In addition, Tranpedia is simply not responsible for any show is only by translating the writings of foreign licenses that are compatible with CC-BY-SA license information.
0 개의 댓글:
댓글 쓰기