View allAll Photos Tagged continuous
Combined media drawings.
Date; January 2015.
Woman full length from behind, continuous line pencil on cartridge - 15x30cm
Woman sitting facing away, watercolour on cartridge - 30x40cm
Woman full length from front, continuous line pencil on cartridge - 15x30cm
The Continuous Improvement Conference 2018 is an event designed for sharing best practices in continuous improvement across academic, business, and community organizations. This event will focus on helping industry professionals achieve operational and performance excellence through tools such as Lean Six Sigma. The event is capped at 70 attendees, representing academic and business organizations.
Continuous line drawing of visitors from within the EYE Film museum with the city skyline from A3 Amsterdam sketchbook
Hall D Scientist Malte Albrecht, left, and Staff Scientist Mark Dalton, right, talk about the forward calorimeter, which is open for repairs after approximately eight years, in Experimental Hall D at Jefferson Lab in Newport News, Va., on Thursday, Apr. 6, 2023. (Photo by Aileen Devlin | Jefferson Lab)
Hall D is dedicated to the operation of a large-acceptance detector for experiments with a broad-band, linearly-polarized photon beam produced by ~12 GeV electrons from the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF).
A nine-celled niobium cavity is displayed inside the SRF Test Lab at Jefferson Lab in Newport News, Va., on Friday, June 7, 2024. (Aileen Devlin | Jefferson Lab)
Niobium, at room temperature, has electrical resistance and behaves just like copper. If, however, niobium is cooled to very low temperatures, it loses all electrical resistance and becomes what scientists call a superconductor. Since superconductors have no electrical resistance, electrical currents flowing through them do not lose any energy and do not produce any waste heat. If no heat is created, the cavities can not heat up and the accelerator does not need to shut down to allow them to cool. The use of superconductive niobium cavities allows the accelerator to provide a continuous beam of electrons to the experiments.
Goa's Continuous lockdwon since 22 March 2020, Panaji 28.4.20
Video: youtu.be/uu_8b-H--SQ
Trimming of wild plants growth on the wall using high reach lift
Building fully occupied, rented rooms, guest house, stores, shops, restaurant, dairy shop, supermarket, jewelry, advocate etc
Police should raid this building periodically for illegal activities including search for anti-social elements including from other states for whom this has become a hiding place
The Continuous Improvement Conference 2018 is an event designed for sharing best practices in continuous improvement across academic, business, and community organizations. This event will focus on helping industry professionals achieve operational and performance excellence through tools such as Lean Six Sigma. The event is capped at 70 attendees, representing academic and business organizations.
The Continuous Improvement Conference 2018 is an event designed for sharing best practices in continuous improvement across academic, business, and community organizations. This event will focus on helping industry professionals achieve operational and performance excellence through tools such as Lean Six Sigma. The event is capped at 70 attendees, representing academic and business organizations.
The Legend of Cloelia from 1480.
tempera and gold in wood.
By Guiodocio di Giovanni Cozzarelli in Italy, Sienese 1450/1516.
OLD COAL MINE PHOTOS GIVEN TO ME BY VARIOUS PEOPLE OVER THE YEARS - some are identified others are not unfortunately
**Sanborn Field and Soil Erosion Plots** - National Register of Historic Places Ref # 66000413, date listed 10/15/1966
University of Missouri campus
Columbia, MO (Boone County)
A National Historic Landmark (www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalhistoriclandmarks/list-of-nh...).
The bacterium that led to the discovery of the world's first tetracycline antibiotic, aureomycin (chlortetracycline), was isolated from a soil sample taken from Plot 23 of Sanborn Field at the University of Missouri in Columbia, MO. This groundbreaking discovery occurred in 1945 and the antibiotic was made available to doctors by 1948.
The specific bacterium, Streptomyces aureofaciens strain A377, was found in soil from Plot 23, a section of Sanborn Field that had been continuously planted with timothy grass without soil amendments since 1888.
Dr. B.W. Duggar isolated the bacterium while working for Lederle Laboratories. He had previously been a faculty member at the University of Missouri.
Aureomycin was considered a "wonder drug," effective against a wide range of bacterial infections including pneumonia, typhus, and Rocky Mountain spotted fever, which did not respond to earlier antibiotics like penicillin.
A soil sample from Plot 23 was put on display at the Smithsonian Institution to commemorate the discovery, and Sanborn Field was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965. The antibiotic is still used today, particularly in veterinary medicine. (Google AI)
References (1) NRHP Nomination Form s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/opastorage/live/38/8181/...
Continuously Choose White Corrugated Mailing Tubes to send outlines, work of art and notices, Get further points of interest on our site. bit.ly/1yApDfE
We cover sport and wildlife related settings including:
Auto focus subject tracking
Continuous shooting
Metering
Giving notice to traffic participants at side street of potential presence of cyclists' (and pedestrians)
NB numerous vehicle and pedestrian exits on the right... cycling comes first.
Detail of the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF) injector site in the accelerator at Jefferson Lab in Newport News, Va., on Thursday, June 8, 2023. (Aileen Devlin | Jefferson Lab)
CEBAF's injector originates the electron beam, establishes its special characteristics, and then injects it into the accelerator.
Bought a triangular weaving loom from SAFF (Southeastern Animal Fiber Festival)
and this is my first weaving. It shrunk big time. It is chenile. Who'da thunk chenile would shrink?
NZNOG Conference 2007. Believe it or not there is a person at the front of the room talking. This is what happens at geek conferences now days. Continuous Partial Attention. - Taken at 2:23 PM on February 02, 2007 - cameraphone upload by ShoZu
(HGM 1975 M, Heisey Glass Museum, Newark, Ohio, USA)
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"1637A Town & Country" is the designation for a specific glass product design made in Newark, Ohio by the Heisey Glass Company (1896 to 1957). Heisey glass designs are called "patterns". Pattern designations include a number (not necessarily consecutively numbered during the history of the glass factory) and a name. Some pattern names were given by the Heisey company, while others were given by Heisey glass researchers.
"Dawn" refers to a type of colored glass that Heisey made - in this case, smoky gray.
The source of silica for Heisey glass is apparently undocumented, but was possibly a sandstone deposit in the Glassrock area (Glenford & Chalfants area) of Perry County, Ohio (if anyone can provide verfication of this, please inform me). Quarries in the area targeted the Pennsylvanian-aged Massillon Sandstone (Pottsville Group) and processed it into glass sand suitable for glass making.
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From Bredehoft (2004):
Dawn: 1955-1957. A charcoal or smoke colored glass with lavender tints. According to the Olson formulas it was most likely developed fom "Swedish Smoke Glass".
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From museum signage:
Augustus H. Heisey (1842-1922) emigrated from Germany with his family in 1843. They settled in Merrittown, Pennsylvania and after graduation from the Merrittown Academy, he worked for a short time in the printing business.
In 1861, he began his life-long career in the glass industry by taking a job as a clerk with the King Glass Company of Pittsburgh. After a stint in the Union Army, Heisey joined the Ripley Glass Company as a salesman. It was there that he earned his reputation of "the best glass salesman on the road".
In 1870, Heisey married Susan Duncan, daughter of George Duncan, then part-owner of the Ripley Company and later full owner, at which time he changed its name to George Duncan & Sons. A year later, he deeded a quarter interest to each of his two children. A few years after his death, A.H. Heisey and James Duncan became sole owners. In 1891, the company joined the U.S. Glass Company to escape its financial difficulties. Heisey was the commercial manager.
Heisey began to formulate plans for his own glass company in 1893. He chose Newark, Ohio because there was an abundance of natural gas nearby and, due to the efforts of the Newark Board of Trade, there was plenty of low cost labor available. Construction of the factory at 301 Oakwood Avenue began in 1895 and it opened in April of 1896 with one sixteen-pot furnace. In its heyday, the factory had three furnaces and employed nearly seven hundred people. There was a great demand for the fine glass and Heisey sold it all over the world.
The production in the early years was confined to pressed ware, in the style of imitation cut glass. The company also dealt extensively with hotel barware. By the late 1890s, Heisey revived the colonial patterns with flutes, scallops, and panels which had been so popular decades earlier. These were so well accepted that from that time on, at least one colonial line was made continuously until the factory closed.
A.H. Heisey's name appears on many different design patents including some when he was with George Duncan & Sons. Heisey patterns that he was named the designer include 1225 Plain Band, 305 Punty and Diamond Point, and 1776 Kalonyal.
Other innovations instituted by A.H. Heisey were the pioneering in advertising glassware in magazines nationally, starting as early as 1910 and the first glass company to make fancy pressed stems. That idea caught on quickly and most hand-wrought stemware is made in this manner, even now.
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Reference cited:
Bredehoft, N. (ed.) (2004) - Heisey glass formulas - and more, from the papers of Emmet E. Olson, Heisey chemist. The West Virginia Museum of American Glass. Ltd.'s Monograph 38.
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Info. at:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisey_Glass_Company
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