View allAll Photos Tagged physics
This is the finished microscope for a physics class lab. We only had a greyscale camera. Using the technique of primary color addition we were able to produce a color photo. Light from the sample was passed through a red filter, thus capturing a greyscale image of only the red "information". This was done again with a blue filter, and finally a green filter. The three photos were brought into photoshop as individual color channels and a color image was produced. Very cool!
Written in the early 1960s a classic student text I remember reading in Chelsea Library. I found these paperback volumes in Malvern Oxfam shop.
Magnetic field around transformer with open core. Note it is stronger on the primary than on the secondary indicated by the more parallel alignment of the needles.
Electric circuits, resistance/resistors, current and Ohms Law were all under investigation in an Introduction to Physics Lab/Class taught by Tabatha Collins on February 25, at the Cutler Science Center. 2021, Photography by Glenn Minshall.
This is a good community outreach from the University of Maryland
(cc) Shashi Bellamkonda www.shashi.name Please feel free to use this picture in your blog ,website or presentation and credit as shown. Thanks.
Title: Physics Classroom & Equipment
Creator (Photographer) : Unknown
Publisher : Graphic Services
Place of Publication : College Station, Texas
Year (Coverage) : 1966
Document Type : Image
Format : Photographic negative
Dimensions : 4 x 5 inches
Digitization Date : August2010
Description : Unknown
Note : Brazos County, Texas
Collection : Texas A&M University Archives
Resource Identifier : Graphic Services Photos, Box 21, File 21-707
Institution : Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas
Repository : Cushing Memorial Library and Archives
Contact Information : Email: cushing-library@tamu.edu Phone: 979-845-1951
Copyright : It is the users responsibility to secure permission from the copyright holders for publication of any materials. Permission must be obtained in writing prior to publication. Please contact the Cushing Memorial Library for further information
Ram Rai mentored a participant in the physics Alpha Immersion program, which took place at the college from August 8 through August 10, 2011.
The Poynting Physics Building, with its blue plaque sign, University of Birmingham. The sign reads: "John Henry Poynting, first professor of Physics, determined the mass of the earth in Birmingham in 1890". Clever old he.
hahaha
laugh with me !
or laugh at me?
hmmm
:)
pic.. care of joecel's studio :)
official photog of University of San Carlos College of Arts and Sciences Graduating Class of 2008 :)
hehe so ew face :) lolzz
can you find a job fit for my degree? haha :)
this is an applied physics graduate currently a call center agent! haha :)
The physics department teachers at the point of the Head of Department's retirement in summer 2015. Left to right: Linda Parr (now teaching at Rendcombe College, via two years on the Falkland Islands), Gareth Dunn (now Head of Physics at Monmouth School for Girls), Anne Callicott (retired 2020 after excellent service as a teacher and Chief Technician), Linda Parr (still teaching physics and running a house). The rugby ball is a wind-up. Three heads of physics in a row (Tim Gibson, Mark Ellse and Keith Moseley) showed little interest in school sport.
© Copyright Jan Richards All rights reserved
Tim Lincecum, a 22-year-old pitcher for the San Francisco Giants, pitches in a Friday night game against the Oakland A's.
As Pope pointed out, The Roadrunner cartoons run on an odd sort of humour.
Almost all of the jokes are based on sophisticated physics (pendulums, gravity, kinetic energy) or surreal caveats (roadrunner can run through Wile E's paintings, Coyote's ordering demolition supplies from catalogs).
Look at that expression in the second to last frame. Heartbreaking.
This is a good community outreach from the University of Maryland
(cc) Shashi Bellamkonda www.shashi.name Please feel free to use this picture in your blog ,website or presentation and credit as shown. Thanks.
Physics, in simple words, can be called the study of matter and energy and their interactions across different fields. It provides quantitative and analytic skills needed for analyzing data and solving problems in the sciences, engineering, and medicine, as well as in economics, finance, management, law, and public policy. With so many advantages to be gained from mastering this subject, Extramarks provides online tutorials for class 11 Physics that help the students excel in their studies.