D9

D9, D09, D.IX, D IX, D.9 or D-9 may mean:

  • D-9 (video), a video format also known as Digital-S
  • D-IX, a name given to a drug created by Nazi scientists to create soldiers with higher endurance
  • D9-brane in string theory
  • D9 road (Croatia), a state road in Croatia
  • Albatros D.IX, a 1918 German prototype single-seat fighter
  • ATC code D09 Medicated dressings, a subgroup of the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification System
  • Bavarian D IX, an 1888 German steam locomotive model
  • Caldwell D9, a model in Polish Mountain Hillclimb
  • Caterpillar D9, a 1954 large bulldozer/track-type tractor
  • IDF Caterpillar D9, an armored bulldozer
  • District 9, a 2009 film
  • Dublin 9, a Dublin, Republic of Ireland postal district
  • HMS D9, a 1912 British E class submarine
  • HMS Imperial (D09), a 1936 British Royal Navy I-class destroyer
  • HMS Trumpeter (D09), a 1942 British Royal Navy escort aircraft carrier
  • Jodel D9, a 1948 French single-seat ultralight monoplane
  • and also :

  • D9, the IATA airline code for Aeroflot-Don
  • Digital-S

    D-9 or Digital-S as it was originally known, is a professional digital video videocassette format created by JVC in 1995. It is a direct competitor to Sony's Digital Betacam. Its name was changed to D-9 in 1999 by the SMPTE. It was used to a small extent in Europe and Asia and saw some use in the US, notably by the Fox news channel, but was a commercial failure compared with Digital Betacam. It was superseded by high definition tapeless formats.

    Technical details

    D-9 uses a tape shell of the VHS form factor, but the tape itself uses a much higher quality metal particle formulation. The recording system is digital and for video uses DV compression at a 50 Mbit/s bitrate. Video is recorded in 4:2:2 component format at a variety of standard definition resolutions, in either 4:3 or 16:9 aspect ratios. Audio is recorded as 16bit/48 kHz pcm with up to four separate channels. Video quality is generally very high; at standard definition, D-9's quality is comparable with Digital Betacam.

    Sonatas, duos and fantasies by Franz Schubert

    Sonatas, duos and fantasies by Franz Schubert includes all works for solo piano by Franz Schubert, except separate dances. It also includes a number of works for two players: piano four hands, or piano and a string instrument (violin, arpeggione).

    Sonatas for piano solo

    Twenty-four extant sonatas and sonata fragments are listed in the 1978 version of the Deutsch catalogue:

  • D 154, Piano Sonata in E major (1815, fragment; similarity with the first movement of the Piano Sonata in E major, D 157)
    I. Allegro (fragment)
  • D 157, Piano Sonata in E major (1815, unfinished – first three movements are extant)
    I. Allegro ma non troppo
    II. Andante
    III. Menuetto. Allegro vivace – Trio
  • D 279, Piano Sonata in C major (1815, unfinished – first three movements are extant; the Allegretto in C major, D 346 fragment is probably the fourth movement)
    I. Allegro moderato
    II. Andante
    III. Menuetto. Allegro vivace – Trio
    IV. Allegretto (D 346, fragment)
  • D 459, Piano Sonata in E major (1816, in 2 movements; also paired with D 459A to have a five movement sonata or five piano pieces "Fünf Klavierstücke")
    I. Allegro moderato
    II. Scherzo. Allegro
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