View allAll Photos Tagged SCIENCES
Shot with the Holga.
Trinity Science Gallery - something about having electric waistcoats, glow-on-breath garments.....that kinda thing.
Bono's "bubble" suit from the POP Tour was on display. On screen (and on Bono) it looked rubber but it was, in fact made from lots of tiddlywinks stitched together.
Looks better viewed large
The main floor of the Science Complex building at the University of Guelph.
Photo By: Agri-Food and Rural Link
Città della Scienza - Fondazione Idis - Foto del Science Centre - Album Bambini
Città della Scienza - Fondazione Idis - Foto del Science Centre - Album Bambini
Photo: Courtesy of Penny O'Connor
Event: Northeastern Ohio Science and Engineering Fair (NOSEF)
Date: March 10, 2015
Location: Cleveland State University, Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH, United States
Western Cuyahoga Audubon Society contributes special awards at the Northeastern Ohio Science and Engineering Fair (NEOSEF), held March 14-17, 2016 at Cleveland State University.
NEOSEF is open to students in grades 7-12 in a seven-county area. In 2015, more than 600 students took part. The NEOSEF grand prize winners will go on the International Science and Engineering Fair. Western Cuyahoga Audubon makes special awards by judges Michelle Manzo and Penny O'Connor.
Established in 1953, the Northeastern Ohio Science and Engineering Fair (NEOSEF) is a non-profit, all volunteer organization, whose goal is to get young adults interested in science and engineering by participating in a science and engineering competition. The Fair has been held every year since 1954 and is affiliated with the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF).
NOSEF is sponsored by the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland State University, and the Great Lakes Science Center.
More: www.neosef.org/about.htm
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Science Museum, Kensington, London, May 1979; Lunar Module replica. Shot on tungsten balanced slide film with (probably) a Praktica LLC. Not sure what lens. That's the real Apollo 10 Command Module in the foreground. I'm not sure where all this stuff is now. (update: both are still there, the LM replica has been refurbished and moved to a different part of the museum - a quick Google Image search shows this. The historic CM has not been moved as far as I can see.)
By Pascale Pollier-Green
Confronting Mortality with Art and Science Conference, Antwerp.
Of or related to the Morbid Anatomy blog.
Annual Science Week is a week long celebration of science held in August each year. Check out the Sapphire Coast Marine Discovery centre's web page and facebook for all of the activities happening in the region and especially what is going on in the centre. Making science FUN!
Scenes from the Team Science workshop held at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science's Eastern Shore Lab in Wachapreague,Virginia in November 2018.
Virginia Sea Grant, VIMS, Virginia Commonwealth University, University of Virginia, and the University of Central Florida selected 36 graduate students to participate in a pilot professional development workshop focusing on team problem-solving and research fieldwork through a trans-disciplinary approach.
(Photo by Aileen Devlin | Virginia Sea Grant)
The Ensley Branch Library's afterschool Science Club continues its experiment on how to make electricity. This week students made a nine cell battery with the help of Elinor and Winfield Burks.
The Ensley Branch Library's afterschool Science Club continues its experiment on how to make electricity. This week students made a nine cell battery with the help of Elinor and Winfield Burks.
Città della Scienza - Fondazione Idis - Foto del Science Centre - Album Bambini
Taken on January 28, 2012 at Star Wars: Where Science Meets Imagination Exhibit at the Discovery Science Center in Santa Ana, CA
Black Arrow was a British satellite carrier rocket. Developed during the 1960s, it was used for four launches between 1969 and 1971. Its final flight was the first and only successful orbital launch to be conducted by the United Kingdom, and placed the Prospero satellite into low Earth orbit.
Black Arrow originated from studies by the Royal Aircraft Establishment for carrier rockets based on the Black Knight rocket, with the project being authorised in 1964. It was initially developed by Saunders-Roe, and later Westland Aircraft as the result of a merger.
Black Arrow was a three-stage rocket, fuelled by RP-1 paraffin (kerosene) and high test peroxide, a concentrated form of hydrogen peroxide. It was retired after only four launches in favour of using American Scout rockets, which the Ministry of Defence calculated to be cheaper than maintaining the Black Arrow programme