View allAll Photos Tagged laboratories

Image created in Midjourney and processed in Topaz Photo AI.

“We built extensive parts of the Lab underground to ensure the secrecy of our work and to save money on window washers.”

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Created for the Toy Sunday theme, UNDERGROUND.

This scene always reminds me of J. R. R. Tolkien tales. I don't know, it always seems like it could be somewhere in the Lord of the Rings movie...

 

The laboratory has been destroyed completely in April 2009. Too bad... I think it was a magnificent place on Cornell campus..

Le laboratoire des fluides FSL se trouve au plafond de Columbus, d’où le côté quand on y travaille. Cette fois-ci, on travaillait sur les mousses en impesanteur. Sur Terre, les effets de la gravité entraînent inévitablement un drainage de la mousse : le liquide est attiré vers le bas, les bulles montent, les plus grosses d’entre elles prennent la place des plus petites, puis éclatent à leur tour, et ainsi la mousse disparaît rapidement pour reprendre un état liquide. Affranchis de ce facteur dans l’espace, les fluides produisent beaucoup plus de mousse et cette dernière est plus stable que sur Terre. De quoi permettre aux scientifiques d’observer avec précision l’évolution d’une bulle qui grossit avant d’éclater, et le comportement des mousses de manière générale ! Les applications dans la vie de tous les jours vont de l’agro-alimentaire aux produits d’hygiène, en passant par les matériaux de protection (bruits, chocs). Et comment crée-t-on de la mousse sur la Station ? En secouant les cartouches de liquides, tout simplement…

 

Working on Fluid Science Laboratory on the ceiling in Columbus, like a bat (and Aki photobombing my timelapse). The FSL (of course we call it by its acronym!) is a facility that offers researchers a place to experiment with... fluids. 😂 On this particular day we were running the Foam Coarsening experiment, making foams by shaking them and researchers on Earth can study them. Why do this in space? Well on Earth, their own weight breaks foams down quickly, so it is easier to understand all the complex processes behind foams if you remove this external factor and run the experiments in weightlessness. This is typical of science in general, to investigate how light behaves, you would generally run an experiment in a dark room so you can concentrate on the light that interests you. Why foams though? Well they are more prevalent than you might think, especially in food: cappuccino, chocolate mousse and much, much, more... www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Images/2020/06/Foam_of_coarse

 

Credits: ESA/NASA–T. Pesquet

 

607D5587

A laboratory from the 1700 or 1800's...

 

Soli Deo Gloria!

A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket with NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover onboard launches from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Thursday, July 30, 2020, from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The Perseverance rover is part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program, a long-term effort of robotic exploration of the Red Planet. Photo Credit: (NASA/Joel Kowsky)

The first "practical light bulb" was perfected in this laboratory. Photographed at Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan.

 

Vulture Gold Mine, Vulture City, Arizona

 

Lepidoptera, Sphingidae

Gifu, Japan :Nawa Entomological Laboratory,1904.

biodiversitylibrary.org/page/38620544

Taken with sony A77 mkII + sony 35mm f1.8

At the laboratory.

Red lighting

Publication: 1944

 

Language(s): English

 

Format: Still image

 

Subject(s): Laboratories, Women, Schools, Medical

Laboratory Personnel

 

Genre(s): Pictorial Works

 

Abstract: Interior view: narrow room with two large windows, a table on the left, and cabinets on the right; in the background a woman sits at a bench looking into a microscope; another woman stands to the right.

 

Extent: 1 photograhic print : 21 x 26 cm.

 

Technique: black and white

 

NLM Unique ID: 101394456

 

NLM Image ID: A02037

Permanent Link: resource.nlm.nih.gov/101394456

1000toys synthetic human

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Delta Laboratories is the best science lab around. Although, the crew is limited, due to the recent death of Mr. and Mrs. Sloane (see Talon v.1). They major in many categories, and it has the smartest crew around. So without further ado, left to right:

 

Hank, the security guard. A pretty stand up guy.

 

Samantha Green, a young and talented scientist, majoring in botany.

 

Cassius Crimson, the first manager at the labs, oversees everything, can often be a stick in the mud.

 

Eric Suchug, I'll leave his profession as a mystery, but you can still find out what he's studying if you really want to know. He's Korean.

 

Emilio Perez, the labs robotics guy, very hands on, loves to weld.

  

Sorry for not uploading yesterday, I was to busy and im pretty sure I ran out of uploads for the week for LoLH. I'll try not to let it happen again, only two more days to go!

The crumbs from my last urbex adventure. These three shots have a nice feeling for me, although this time I very nearly stumbled into the demolition crew in one of these, and hid behind a bush.

 

This shot's for Garthamundo, whilst I did not find the door that this was previously attached to, I somehow found the sign on the ground in the same area, I took the liberty of placing the sign into some nearby rubble to let me get that amazing building into the shot.

A closer look to the inside.

 

This is a Galaxy Explorer based upon the LL928 set.

It is build for the small trophy figures (like the ones that came with the Saturn V set) and has a full interieur. You can remove the roof parts for access to the interieur.

I just finished color and part aviability check in Stud.IO for a BL order.

The Ship comes with a couple of features:

- complete interieur

- ramp for the rover

- retractable landing gear

- a Rover

A laboratory from the 1700 or 1800's...

 

Soli Deo Gloria!

In the Laboratory of Minifigurization, animals, objects and plants are analyzed to create minifigures. The most experienced and best prepared scientists work tirelessly, and applying the highest safety protocols, to create original, beautiful and fun minifigures.

A laboratory from the 1700 or 1800's...

 

Soli Deo Gloria!

The Beautiful but poisonous Fly Agaric, Amanita muscaria.

Abandoned chemical plant

A model of the Juno spacecraft is seen while a video is shown about the collaboration between Apple Inc. and NASA that serves to enhance NASA's efforts to inform and excite the public about dramatic missions of exploration like Juno, on Thursday, June 30, 2016 at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, CA. The works resulting from this collaboration showcase exploratory sounds from artists who have been inspired by Juno and other NASA missions, including Brad Paisley, Corinne Bailey Rae, GZA, Jim James featuring Lydia Tyrell, QUIÑ, Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, Weezer and Zoé. The Juno mission launched August 5, 2011 and will arrive at Jupiter July 4, 2016 to orbit the planet for 20 months and collect data on the planetary core, map the magnetic field, and measure the amount of water and ammonia in the atmosphere. Photo Credit: (NASA/Aubrey Gemignani)

Abandoned administration building

Astronauts with severe radiation sickness are treated in the DRL on Mars. Advanced medicine can now repair the human body cell by cell, although the therapy can take up to several years to complete. Typically the patient is kept in near-frozen state for the duration. Here we can see the incubator cell is extruded for a treatment session, after which the cell is withdrawn inside the machine.

 

My first entry for the Space Jam contest. Onto entry number two then!

 

For #FlickrFriday. These are pipettes used in the laboratory to measure small quantities, microliters. Using the 100 microliter pipette, one would need to pipette 50 times to fill a teaspoon.

The Mobile Laboratory is designed to withstand some of the harshest frontier conditions and can be placed in some of the roughest terrain by way of towing, airdrop, or even under its own self driving GPS system. The driving system is not not the fastest, but it can move between 2-5 miles a day under its own power.

 

The power for the scientific equipment and engines are collected by two solar panels that are on a 360* swivel and are able to fold up or down almost 180* atop the roof. The power is collected and stored into batteries throughout the Lab to be used for different purposes. Some of the power is directed to external batteries that can be used to charge the Expeditionary Rover and other devices.

 

There is a range of transmission equipment on the Lab for quick connection to colonies and their main labs.

 

The crew does not live inside the lab, but rather usually sets up temporary living quarters with a Forward Living Pod.

 

So this was built in addition to my Expeditionary Rover for FebRovery 2015, but I just never got around to posting it. But here it is, 2 months late.

 

Enjoy.

Delano, Jack,, photographer.

 

Locomotive lubrication chart in the laboratory of the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad. The laboratory assistant in foreground is working at a precision balance. Chicago, Ill

 

1942 Dec.

 

1 transparency : color.

 

Notes:

Title from FSA or OWI agency caption.

Transfer from U.S. Office of War Information, 1944.

 

Subjects:

Chicago and North Western Railway Company

World War, 1939-1945

Railroads

Laboratories

United States--Illinois--Chicago

 

Format: Transparencies--Color

 

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.

 

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

 

Part Of: Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Collection 12002-1 (DLC) 93845501

 

General information about the FSA/OWI Color Photographs is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsac

 

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsac.1a34614

 

Call Number: LC-USW36-520

  

Can we make it? There will probably be a gap, but the way the cheese slopes fit with the log brick is too pretty! This image is deceiving: in the model, those pieces are smooshed together! In real bricks I think there would maybe be a gap as well as one or both elements needing to smudge out of alignment with the studs. What do you guys think?

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