Windows styles
Modern windows come in many styles. These include:
- Double-hung sash window: The traditional style of window, with two parts (sashes) that overlap slightly and slide up and down inside the frame.
- Single-hung sash window: one sash is moveable and the other fixed.
- Sliding window: has two or more sashes that overlap slightly but slide horizontally within the frame.
- Casement window: A window that turns out at an angle, staying fixed along one side, usually opened using a crank.
- Vent Window: Like a casement window but with the hinge at the top or bottom.
- Jalousie window: A window comprising many slats of glass that open and close like a Venetian blind, usually using a crank. A Jalousie door is a door with a Jalousie window.
- Clerestory window: A vertical window set in a roof structure or high in a wall, used for daylighting.
- Skylight: A flat or sloped window built into a roof structure for daylighting
- Bay window: A multipanel window, with at least three panels set at different angles to create a protrusion from the wall line.
- Fixed window: A window that cannot be opened. (Clerestory windows are often fixed.)
- Picture window: A very large fixed window in a wall, intended to provide an unimpeded view as if framing a picture.
A replacement window is a framed window designed to slip inside the original window frame from the inside after the old sashes are removed.
A new construction window is a window with a nailing fin designed to be inserted into a rough opening from the outside before applying siding and inside trim.
Window materials
Modern windows have insulated glazing, called insulated glass when made from glass, which is usually double paned but might be triple paned.
Modern windows are made from large sheets of glass while windows in the past were made from multiple panes held together by a grille within the sash, also called muntin bars or mullions. Today, decorative muntin bars are attached on the surface of the glazing or sandwiched between the panes of the insulated glazing. Most companies use the term grille for the set of decorative muntin bars within a sash.
Frames and sashes were traditionally made of wood, but metal, vinyl, and composites are also common. Solid metal frames and sashes are inefficient because metal conducts heat and cold. Some frames are made of vinyl-clad or aluminum-clad wood. Modern metal window parts consist of two halves separated by insulating spacer.
The terms "single-light" or "double-light" (or "'more'-light") refer to the number of glass panes in a window.
The beam or arch over the top of a window is known as the lintel or transom.
Many windows have movable window coverings to keep out light, provide additional insulation, or ensure privacy.
See also
Astronomical window
In astronomy, an atmosphere can have a window for portions of the electromagnetic spectrum; that is, those wavelengths which pass through the atmosphere are said to "pass through a window."
World War II
Window was the WWII UK codename for a system intended to confuse German radar. It consisted of huge volumes of aluminium foil strips cut to a length corresponding to the radar wavelength which were dropped from aircraft so producing huge numbers of spurious echoes. A modern corresponding technique is "chaff". Other radar confusing techniques included Mandrel, Piperack and Jostle.
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