Acac
Encyclopedia
ACAC may refer to:
acac usually refers to:
- American Council for Accredited CertificationAmerican Council for Accredited CertificationThe Certification Council, Inc , the American Council for Accredited Certification and the The American Indoor Air Quality Council are predominantly a Charlie Wiles family owned, environmental credentialing organisation that markets and sells various professional certification credentials,...
, a private, non-profit certifying body - Atlanta Contemporary Art CenterAtlanta Contemporary Art CenterThe Atlanta Contemporary Art Center is a non-collecting contemporary art museum located in the West Midtown district of Atlanta. The center presents 8-10 art exhibitions per year that are free to the public every Thursday. The Contemporary also commissions artwork and organizes approximately 50...
, a contemporary art museum in Atlanta - ACAC consortiumACAC consortiumThe AVIC I Commercial Aircraft Company is a subsidiary of Aviation Industries of China I , formed in 2002 by various Chinese aviation companies, including:* Shanghai Aircraft Research Institute...
, a subsidiary of China Aviation Industry Corporation - Alberta Colleges Athletics ConferenceAlberta Colleges Athletics ConferenceThe Alberta Colleges Athletic Conference is the governing body for collegiate sports in Alberta, Canada. Founded in 1964, as the Western Inter-College Conference, the ACAC is represented by seventeen schools, including one in Saskatchewan, that compete in ten sports.The ACAC is a member of the...
, the governing body for colligiate sports in Alberta, Canada - Amador County Arts CouncilAmador County Arts CouncilThe Amador County Arts Council is the official Amador County, USA arts council.A non-profit, local partner of the California Arts Council.-Mission:...
, the official Amador County, USA arts council
acac usually refers to:
- AcetylacetoneAcetylacetoneAcetylacetone is an organic compound that famously exists in two tautomeric forms that rapidly interconvert. The less stable tautomer is a diketone formally named pentane-2,4-dione. The more common tautomer is the enol form. The pair of tautomers rapidly interconvert and are treated as a single...
, an organic compound