View allAll Photos Tagged array.
The Allen Telescope Array (ATA is a joint effort by the SETI Institute and the Radio Astronomy Laboratory (RAL) at the University of California, Berkeley to construct a radio interferometer that is dedicated to astronomical observations and a simultaneous search for extraterrestrial intelligence.
Source Allen Telescope Array
lt 027
All Rights Reserved !!!!!
No parts of this material can be published, copied, downloaded or sold without a permission from me. PLEASE ask me before you post this material in a blog or on your page ! Please respect these rules !!!!
Aerial view from June 1964 of a portion of the grounds of the Selinsgrove State School and Hospital, later Selinsgrove Center. Shown adjacent to the water towers are four residential cottages, each housing about forty-eight persons. The center building is a kitchen, dining room, and bakery for this group of residences. The four residential buildings were connected to the central building by tunnels. These buildings (designated E-Group) were erected in the late 1930s, when boys and female patients were first admitted. This photo was taken by a man flying in a small plane, from Peoria, Illinois to New York City, for the 1964 World's Fair. The array of "x-shaped" buildings caught his eye.
Two transporters are used to move the radio telescopes. A transporter will slide under a radio telescope, lift it from the three piers on which it rests and move it by rails to another set of three piers.
The Antenna Assembly Building was used to assemble the radio telescopes when the system was constructed. Now, it's used for maintenance and upgrade of the individual radio telescopes. Normally, 27 radio telescopes are in service, while an extra one is in this building being maintained or upgraded.
The Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) is a radio astronomy observatory located about 50 miles (64 km) west of Socorro, New Mexico. The VLA consists of twenty-seven 25-meter (82 feet) diameter radio telescopes deployed in a Y-shaped array, together with all the equipment needed to process the collected data and function as an interferometer. Each of the radio telescopes is mounted along double parallel railroad tracks, which allows changing the configuration of the system. Placing the radio telescopes closer together increases surface brightness sensitivity. Spreading them out increases angular resolution. The system was built from 1973 to 1980 and is being modernized, starting in 2011.
Imaris Snapshot
Microscopy images taken during my fall quarter rotation in Stephen Smith's lab at Stanford. The technique is array tomography, which produces for these crisp, 3D, high resolution, large scale, many-channel fluorescence images.
smithlab.stanford.edu
Legend:
White: DAPI (cell nuclei)
Green: YFP (Subpopulation of layer V pyramidal neurons)
Purple: Tubulin
Blue/Red: Neurofilament
Orange: Myelin Basic Protein
An array of umbrella displayed at a store in Cochin Kerala.
There are so many varieties of umbrellas croping up, what with the three folds and four folds, to fit in your pocket (but the price is not good for the pocket)
*"We're a small north side neighborhood known for our Swedish heritage,
welcoming attitude & diverse array of locally-owned businesses." *
*"Andersonville is a quaint neighborhood in the middle of a world class
city."*
The Edgeville Buzz showcases local issues, culture and impact in
#Chicago's #Andersonville and #Edgewater neighborhoods on Twitter. *@Pink
says our 'hood rocks - and we agree!*
The *Andersonville Farmers Market* takes place every Wednesday on Berwyn
Street, between Clark and Ashland beginning on May 21st- Sept. 3rd, 3pm-
8pm, and Sept. 10th- Oct. 15th, 3pm- 7pm.
Andersonville reminds me of my college years at Northeastern Illinois
University on the north side of Chicago. During the late 1970s and early
1980s, I was attending NEIU and worked as a student aide at the Financial
Department with Marilyn Kuhn and Marie Lizewski Ruiz who lived and commuted
from Andersonville to work from Foster Avenue to the Historic Bryn Mawr
District and Catalpa Street by the B-Wing.
Another friend of my family, the late Bob Roessler lived on North Rascher
Street with my brother near Clark Street in Andersonville, not far from the
Travel School near Pelencho Travel Agency where I worked teaching Business
English and Communications with Fabiola. After work sometimes, I used to
stop by to visit them.
*Ann Sather's* is one of my favorite places to visit in Andersonville for
brunch or dinner with friends and family. Twenty-six (26) years ago, I had
a Family Brunch for Father's Day weekend at Ann Sather's after my wedding
on June 18, 1988.
*Reza's Restaurant* has a vegetarian selection of dishes to enjoy the whole
year round.
*Andie's Restaurant* also offers appetizing dishes and global menu for
epicureans.
*Figure 1 Christmas Dinner at Andie's Restaurant with Paul Tong and Robert
S. Hung*
More than thirty (30) years ago, I used to go shopping in Andersonville
after work at the Travel Agency which used to be next to *Pelencho's Travel
Agency*. Pelencho was a Cuba-American Radio Personality, known familiarly
as the *"Pelencho Show" *for Hispanic and Spanish-speaking radio fans and
listeners.
While I was reading the Neighborhood Watch in Today's Chicago Woman, I
found out that Andersonville was a distant suburb of Chicago during the
1850's boasting about a large cherry orchard which attracted Swedish
immigrants to settle in greater numbers to the area known today as the
Edgewater neighborhood by Lake Michigan in Illinois. The Swedes in
Andersonville built a school in 1854 to establish a permanent Swedish
community with cultural influence in Chicago. Afterwards, Andersonville
thrived and eventually boasted that there were more Swedes in Chicago than
in any city outside of Stockholm, Sweden.
The Swedish American Museum in Andersonville was visited by HRH the King of
Sweden during its inauguration. The Museum is located at 5211 N. Clark St.
in Andersonville, a traditionally Swedish area of Chicago's north side. The
entire community welcomes Swedish Americans and celebrates the Swedish
holidays. Merchants and residents turn out for the very traditional
Midsummer, Lucia and Christmas celebrations. Tourists visit the area
continually to sample Swedish food, buy gifts, and visit the Museum.
swedishamericanmuseum.org
For additional info, contact museum@samac.org.
Andersonville brings back a lot of memories about people and places along
Clark Street and in the Edgewater neighborhood. I used to work at Saint
Augustine College on Argyle Street not far from Clark Street in the Uptown
neighborhood and Little Chinatown. Commuting to Andersonville is easy and
accessible by public transportation.
Walking leisurely through Andersonville is a good form of exercise along
Clark Street, starting on Foster Avenue, to discover quaint and
old-fashioned Swedish shops, restaurants, and something for everyone to
enjoy in this taste of a Swedish neighborhood in the middle of Edgewater
by Lake Michigan in Chicago.
Imaris Snapshot
Microscopy images taken during my fall quarter rotation in Stephen Smith's lab at Stanford. The technique is array tomography, which produces for these crisp, 3D, high resolution, large scale, many-channel fluorescence images.
smithlab.stanford.edu
Legend:
White: DAPI (cell nuclei)
Green: YFP (Subpopulation of layer V pyramidal neurons)
Purple: Tubulin
Blue/Red: Neurofilament
Orange: Myelin Basic Protein
left: sumi ink on arches 88
middle two: sumi ink on lettra
right: sumi ink+oil ink on lettra ( i like that it shows the brush texture)
My photo adventure yesterday involved driving twenty miles (approximately 32 km) along Mulholland Highway from the Paramount Ranch near my home through the rugged Santa Monica Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. If you look at a Google satellite map of the Malibu, California area you will get an idea of what the terrain and drive can be like. Mulholland Highway is a snakelike road and has its share of really sharp hairpin turns, continuous "S" curves" and numerous rises and drops of elevation along the route. You drive through some gorgeous countryside while seeing almost no cars (even so it took me an hour and a half to make the trip one-way). This is so close to large populated metropolitan areas yet some areas of the Santa Monica Mountains feel remote. There are some pockets of populated areas and some beautiful ranch lands along the route.
Zoom in on the satellite image and the dishes are clearly visible. This array of three large satellite dishes (at least that's what I think they are) is visible from quite a distance away as you are driving down the steep canyon. This little pull out was the only place I found to stop to get a view and take a few photographs. There is a road that leads directly to these dishes but I'm not certain if its accessible to the general public. I'd like to get closer look sometime. I'm a 'space buff' and I remember a larger array of radio telescope dishes in the Jodie Foster movie "Contact". I believe that array is in New Mexico near White Sands or Los Alamos (I urge you to view Pete Tuner's marvelous images of the New Mexico Large Array in the December 2003 edition of Harper's Magazine if you want to see how beautifully they can be photographed).
© Lawrence Goldman 2010, All Rights Reserved
This work may not be copied, reproduced, republished, edited, downloaded, displayed, modified, transmitted, licensed, transferred, sold, distributed or uploaded in any way without my prior written permission.
Imaris Snapshot
Microscopy images taken during my fall quarter rotation in Stephen Smith's lab at Stanford. The technique is array tomography, which produces for these crisp, 3D, high resolution, large scale, many-channel fluorescence images.
smithlab.stanford.edu
Legend:
White: DAPI (cell nuclei)
Green: YFP (Subpopulation of layer V pyramidal neurons)
Purple: Tubulin
Blue/Red: Neurofilament
Orange: Myelin Basic Protein
About the design:
Brollybus was inspired by the early iconic London Transport posters with umbrellas on and the wonderfully unpredictable British weather. Illustrated with an array of colourful umbrellas, it turns the bus into a giant 'brollybus' itself, to shelter from the autumn weather of sun and rain, which of course produces a rainbow. There are London landmarks including St Paul's Cathedral and the Millennium Bridge representing the old and new, and autumn leaves representing the city's many beautiful parks.
About the artist:
Jane Veveris Callan is a painter and printmaker who has created designs for many public art projects, both in the UK and internationally, for a variety of events including Stroll Discovery Trails London 2012, Elephant Parade Copenhagen and Books about Town London 2014.
Sponsored by Cubic.
2014 saw a number of anniversaries which will help us tell this story. It's been 60 years since the creation of the iconic Routemaster, 75 years since the launch of the RT-Type bus and 100 years since the world's first mass-produced motor bus, the B-Type 'Battle Bus' that carried soldiers to the frontline during the First World War.
Our buses are the arteries of the capital, moving large numbers of people around the city - across the centre and to the extremities. They have affected great social change and continue to offer a lifeline to a diverse range of Londoners. Buses also support the needs of our growing city and in turn help London to function as the engine room of the UK's economy.
London is naturally proud of its bus network, one of the largest and most accessible in the world. Despite its size, the bus network remains flexible and able to adapt to the challenges of operating in a constantly changing streetscape.
To meet the future needs of the city, while minimising the environmental impact, we are using innovation and new green technology. Our fleet is already one of the cleanest in the UK, but we're constantly striving to see how new technology can further reduce our impact on the environment.
The bus sculptures, which are 2.5m long, 1m high and 0.5m wide, are painted and adorned by well-known and aspiring artists to showcase the vital role that London’s buses play in the life and economy of the city and the UK as a whole.
Londoners and visitors to the city will get the chance to discover the bus sculptures, which will be organised in clusters, on foot by following public art trails in four areas of the capital – three in central London and one in outer London.
The Allen Telescope Array (ATA is a joint effort by the SETI Institute and the Radio Astronomy Laboratory (RAL) at the University of California, Berkeley to construct a radio interferometer that is dedicated to astronomical observations and a simultaneous search for extraterrestrial intelligence.
Source Allen Telescope Array
lt 028
PictionID:46536020 - Catalog:Array - Title:Array - Filename:AL-248C_061 Travel Air 4000 accident.tif - Robert Reedy was a native of Amarillo Texas. He attended college in Wichita Kansas, studying aeronautical engineering. On graduation he was quickly snapped up by Stearman Aircraft. During his subsequent career he made stops at Lockheed, Thorp and back to Lockheed where he retired as a vice president of sales. Reedy was involved in the design of several Stearman, Vega and Thorp types, the Lockheed P2V, Little Dipper, Big Dipper, and L-1011.--Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum
Not surprisingly, many things remind me of the sun these days.
Back to what I do best, even though I don't do flowers.
The sun always COMES UP tomorrow.
Imaris Snapshot
Microscopy images taken during my fall quarter rotation in Stephen Smith's lab at Stanford. The technique is array tomography, which produces for these crisp, 3D, high resolution, large scale, many-channel fluorescence images.
smithlab.stanford.edu
Legend:
White: DAPI (cell nuclei)
Green: YFP (Subpopulation of layer V pyramidal neurons)
Purple: Tubulin
Blue/Red: Neurofilament
Orange: Myelin Basic Protein
Imaris Snapshot
Microscopy images taken during my fall quarter rotation in Stephen Smith's lab at Stanford. The technique is array tomography, which produces for these crisp, 3D, high resolution, large scale, many-channel fluorescence images.
smithlab.stanford.edu
Legend:
White: DAPI (cell nuclei)
Green: YFP (Subpopulation of layer V pyramidal neurons)
Purple: Tubulin
Blue/Red: Neurofilament
Orange: Myelin Basic Protein
ayenforpaper.typepad.com/folios/2009/08/decorative-japane...
These A6 size notebooks are handbound, using 90 g/m soft white text block with Japanese handmade Washi covers. These bindings are variations of the tradtional Four-Hole bindings, namely Kangxi and Hemp-Leaf (asa-no-ha toji, the japanese name for this really pretty stitched pattern).