Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Ian Montagu Fraser (14 October 1916 – 8 November 1987) was a British Conservative party politician. Fraser stood for Tottenham in 1955 and was defeated. In the run-up to the 1959 general election he tried to win the Conservative nomination for Finchley , but at the selection meeting was narrowly defeated by Margaret Thatcher .
The United Kingdom Chemistry and Aerosols (UKCA) is a community Chemistry-Aerosol-Climate model which are research runs of the Met Office's operational Unified Model.It runs within the Hadley Centre example with multiple flavours of varying horizontal resolutions and vertical layers.
Ian Hector Frazer AC (born 6 January 1953) is a Scottish-born Australian immunologist, the founding CEO and Director of Research of the Translational Research Institute (Australia). [1] Frazer and Jian Zhou developed and patented the basic technology behind the HPV vaccine against cervical cancer at the University of Queensland .
The computer model is only adjusted towards the observations using assimilation, rather than forcing the model to accept an observed value that might make the system unstable (and could be an inaccurate observation). [6] The Unified Model software suite is written in Fortran (originally 77 but predominantly 90 as of 2003). [7]
Sir Ian Fraser FRSE PRCSI PBMA DSO OBE LLD (1901–1999) was a Northern Irish [1] surgeon. He served as President of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1954-1956 and was President of the British Medical Association .
Ian Fraser, Baron Fraser of Tullybelton (1911–1989), British judge; Ian Fraser (Plymouth Sutton MP) (1916–1987), British politician, MP for Plymouth Sutton; Ian Edward Fraser (1920–2008), British Royal Navy officer and Victoria Cross recipient; Ian Fraser (Royal Navy pilot) (1921–2015), Royal Navy officer and diplomat
Ian Fraser Muir (26 August 1921 – 6 December 2008) MBE FRCS FRCSEd was an English plastic surgeon at the West Middlesex Hospital and Mount Vernon Centre for Plastic Surgery. While working there he developed what became known as the 'Muir and Barclay formula' which estimates the volume of fluid replacement required in the initial resuscitation ...
Nash & Thompson was established in 1929 at Kingston upon Thames by business partners Archibald Goodman Frazer Nash and Esmonde Grattan Thompson [1]. Nash & Thompson developed the hydraulic gun turrets that Frazer-Nash invented and his designs were consequently numbered in a series prefixed with "FN".