View allAll Photos Tagged mathmatical
Brain S.T.E.M. hosted S.T.E.M. Chem at the Oro Valley Public Library where they did experiments with hot ice, vanishing fire, and fireworks water.
The Mathematical Bridge is the popular name of a wooden footbridge in the southwest of central Cambridge, England. It bridges the River Cam about one hundred feet northwest of Silver Street Bridge and connects two parts of Queens' College. Its official name is simply the Wooden Bridge.
The bridge was designed by William Etheridge, and built by James Essex in 1749. It has been rebuilt on two occasions, in 1866 and in 1905, but has kept the same overall design. Although it appears to be an arch, it is composed entirely of straight timbers built to an unusually sophisticated engineering design, hence the name.
The original "mathematical bridge" was another bridge of the same design, also commissioned by James Essex, crossing the Cam between Trinity and Trinity Hall colleges, where Garret Hostel Bridge now stands
A punt is a flat-bottomed boat with a square-cut bow, designed for use in small rivers or other shallow water. Punting refers to boating in a punt. The punter generally propels the punt by pushing against the river bed with a pole. A punt should not be confused with a gondola, which is propelled by an oar rather than a pole.
Punts were originally built as cargo boats or platforms for fowling and angling, but in modern times their use is almost exclusively confined to pleasure trips
A Boy Scout practices tying knots with his father during the Science,Technology,Engineering and Mathmatics (STEM) day at MacArthur Middle School,Fort Meade, Md., on April 23, 2016. STEM day is an initiative the Boy Scouts of America has taken to encourage the youth members to explore existing programs in Science,Technology,Engeneering and Mathmatics. (U.S. Army Photo by Spc. Jacquelynn Gaines/Released)
Boy Scouts program a drone during Science,Technology,Engineering and Mathmatics (STEM) day at MacArthur Middle School,Fort Meade, Md., on April 23, 2016. STEM day is an initative the Boy Scouts of America has taken to encourage the youth members to explore existing programs in Science,Technology,Engeneering and Mathmatics. (U.S. Army Photo by Spc.Kiara Flowers/Released)
Throw your hands in the air (hey), this is a robbery
And release the bats in fact I think they on to me
Your pretty face is going to hell
That's what Iggy Pop said before they learned to sell
Fake rebelion, You're not a hellion, You're not E-V-I-L
I can tell from the smell of the burning rock stars
That are stacked up in piles
So take a picture and don't forget to smile
I'll give you five splats up on the blood splat rating system
In case you missed em, That's the one from 95
It's got stories of rat boys and kung fu inside
The rules are breaking before they're getting written
The blood from your fingers got your grip slightly slipping
It's ok cause we're all going down troubles always brewing
Cause there's one in every town
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
(Yeah)
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
(Right)
Take a rock from the dead kings crown
You're feeling at home when you're in a ghost town
So disappear and here's the last warning, lay down your head
Close your eyes, you'll feel better in the morning light at
The end of the tunnel is a train, relax your head and shut off
Your brain... I got nothing else
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
(Yeah)
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
Check it out
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
(Yeah)
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
(Yeah)
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
(Yeah)
This is a horror show, Real horror show
Real horror show
Blacklight thriller disguised as a killer, not feeeling sick but
Always getting iller, things go erratic when the beats get mathmatic
Turn up the guns cause they always shooting static
Yeah I invented it but you resented it, everything I own
That's right you only renting it
You want rock n roll, how deep you want the soul
I got the shovel so tell me can you dig it
Newton, after William Blake by Eduardo Paolozzi, 1995. Bronze statue outside the British Library on Euston Road, London.
For Blake's Newton, follow the link.
Carnegie Library - 1907 - Building Cost : $150,00. Architects: Frederick W. Revels and Earl Hallenbeck, Syracuse - In Beaux-Arts fashion a grand stairway leads to the columned portico that shelters the entrance to the library. Carnegie Library and Bowne Hall face the main quadrangle and close off its southern border. Originally designed as Syracuse University's main library, it now houses the Science and Technology Library. The steel-frame building, with a granite base, is faced with gray brick and terra cotta. It was named after its donor Andrew Carnegie. In 1972 with the opening of the Bird Library the Carnegie Building was renovated to house the Engineering, Life Sciences, and Mathmatics libraries along with the Mathmatics Department. The Chemistry Library was added in 1982 and the collection was renamed the Science and Technology Library. Renovations were begun on the building in 2011. Located on the Syracuse University Campus in Syracuse, NY. (AS379)
Brain S.T.E.M. hosted S.T.E.M. Chem at the Oro Valley Public Library where they did experiments with hot ice, vanishing fire, and fireworks water.
The 2018 Expanding Your Horizons conference, a hands-on STEM Conference for Middle School Girls and their Parents, held in the Jacobs Science Building on the campus of the University of Kentucky on Saturday, April 21, 2018.
University of Nevada Reno: L ~ Davidson Mathmatics & Science Center, background center Life Science & Fleischmann Agriculture Bldg. R ~ Paul Laxalt Mineral Research Bldg.
Brain S.T.E.M. hosted S.T.E.M. Chem at the Oro Valley Public Library where they did experiments with hot ice, vanishing fire, and fireworks water.
Brain S.T.E.M. hosted S.T.E.M. Chem at the Oro Valley Public Library where they did experiments with hot ice, vanishing fire, and fireworks water.
Reduce, Reuse. Recycle! There were many recycling bins in this building, for glass, paper, alluminum, plastic, and even paper. This reduces the production of wasteful resources, and conserves others.
"Remember what you told me
Remember what you told me
Remember what you told me
Told me, told me, oh yeah
Shut up and put your money where your mouth is
That's what you get for waking up in Vegas
Get up and shake the glitter off your clothes now
That's what you get for waking up in Vegas."
---- Waking Up in Vegas by Katy Perry
Sorry I have been gone for two days, I forgot to tell you all I had student orientation for Ripon college. It was a two day event, which meant we got to spend the night in dorms with no AC. Usually it wouldn't matter, except wisconsin has been unusually hot, with 95 degree weather but feeling over 100 with the humidity. Boy am I glad I brought a fan.
Overall it was good, I signed up for my classes:
organic chemistry 111
enviornmental studies 120
fencing
mathmatical thinking and writing 130
spanish 211
survey of world cinema 180
& a First Year Seminar class which is where all first years must select four classes out of a possible 10 we are interested in taking & are assigned one of our 4 choices. I narrowed mine down to:
Love in the Western World (history)
On the Construction & Deconstruction of Character (philosophy)
Principled Stories and Stories Principles (spanish)
The Anthropology of Identity (anthro.)
I hope I get either the anthropology class or spanish one. :D
Along with touting their mathmatically incorrect "One Million Jobs" the provincial Progressive Conservatives are looking to shift even more taxes from corporations to people,
Carmen Agouridis (left) (Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering) and Ellen Crocker (Forestry and Natural Resources) were both Planing Chairs along with Susan Odom (Chemistry, not pictured). The 2018 Expanding Your Horizons conference, a hands-on STEM Conference for Middle School Girls and their Parents, held in the Jacobs Science Building on the campus of the University of Kentucky on Saturday, April 21, 2018.
I wrote numbers all over my face, but you can't see them. Boo.
Maybe more of an indicator of my math phobia.
To graduate college I had to pass a math class...it was one of the last classes I took and it was called, "Math: Spirit and Use", it was specifically designed for those liberal arts majors. I passed, but barely. I do appreciate, sincerely, those who are mathmatically inclined, and I can also appreciate that I do not fit in that category. I have other skillz.
The East Midlands STEM (Science Technology Engineering Mathmatics) Partnership held their Student Journalist Awards at the National Space Centre Leicester on Wed evening.
In the picture,Louise Downie of the Beaumont Leys School is receiving her teachers award.
With her are, Des Coleman, (left) the BBC weatherman, who was the compere for the evening.
Julie Owen of 3M, sponsors of the event and Andrew Morgan, Skills and Communication director of EMDA.
The Boyscouts learn how to use a 3-D printer to create robothic hands during Science,Technology,Engineering and Mathmatics (STEM) day at MacArthur Middle School,Fort Meade, Md., on April 23, 2016. STEM day is an initative the Boy Scouts of America has taken to encourage the youth members to explore existing programs in Science,Technology,Engeneering and Mathmatics. (U.S. Army Photo by Spc. Kiara Flowers/Released)
This Kmart opened sometime in the 1970s (I think) and closed permanently on Sunday, April 27, 2014, with its liquidation beginning on Sunday, February 9, 2014.
March 14, 2014 (known to many as Pi Day, mathmatically speaking) happened to be the day of my second time checking out the Xenia Kmart's liquidation. As told by the big signs inside, discounts were 20%-40% at least. More shelves were seen completely bare, but if I recall correctly no fixtures had been removed yet.
I have less photos from this visit because I wasn't there as long, but it's definitely better than nothing! (Heck, this isn't even my shortest visit!)
Kmart #9611 - W Main St - Xenia, Ohio
Jenna Gulick, 11, and her brother Jacob, 9, prepare to demonstrate their Lego robot, April 12, as coaches Lt. Col. Ed Koharik, USTRANSCOM, and Jeff Gulick, the children's father, offer words of encouragement. The children were at the U.S. Transportation Command to as part of the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) program's robotics demonstaration. Photo by Bob Fehringer, USTRANSCOM/PA
Brain S.T.E.M. hosted S.T.E.M. Chem at the Oro Valley Public Library where they did experiments with hot ice, vanishing fire, and fireworks water.
A Boy Scout plays with a fire truck hose during Science,Technology,Engineering and Mathmatics (STEM) day at MacArthur Middle School,Fort Meade, Md., on April 23, 2016. STEM day is an initative the Boy Scouts of America has taken to encourage the youth members to explore existing programs in Science,Technology,Engeneering and Mathmatics. (U.S. Army Photo by Spc. Kiara Flowers/Released)
David Hedgley Jr.This month we salute a man that changed the face of computers and computer graphics forever. I introduce you to David Hedgley Jr. And what is it exactly that David Hedgley do that changed the face of computers? When computers became a booming field in the 70s and late 80s all kinds of incredible innovations were being created to accomplish task faster and more efficient with the aid of computers. We did all types of complex mathmatical equations and automated services. There was one stumbling block that all programmers couldn’t leap over. The transition from boring flat 2-D graphical display to 3-D graphics.
Enter in David Hedgley Jr., though many programmers attempted to solved this issue only David Hedgley was able to accomplish the task. In 1985 David Hedgely created a mathmatical algorithim that would tell the computer which lines to display and which lines to make invisible hence creating 3-D graphics. He was able to solve the problem that was decades old. Of course this was not without problems as many programmers in the field didn’t believe it was solved and there was a constant attempt to disprove the algorithim but of course it didn’t fail. As David Hedgley said “hey gave me a hard time saying we don’t believe you. Being a Black man your credibility is questioned anyway.”
David didn’t stop there in 1999 he created an alogrithim that traces routes on a circuit boards. Simply put, the algorithim cut the time on finding a route on a circuit board exponentially. The algorithim was so complex that new symbols had to be invented to explain the complexity of his work. In the past this type of alogrithim either cost to much money to make or took too much time to create. David Hedgely changed all of that by himself.
Let’s celebrate David Hedgley Jr. for his accomplishments, He is a true African-American Trailblazer
2nd Place: Cedar Creek High School’s Jordan White
From the left are Dr. Judith Vogel, associate professor of Mathematics, Dr. Chia-Lin Wu, associate professor of Mathematics, Jordan White, Dr. Bradley Forrest, assistant professor of Mathmatics, and John Gazo, Cedar Creek High School math teacher.
Photo: Susan Allen/ The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey