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NASA Center:Dryden Flight Research Center

Image # :ECN-2203

Date : 01/01/1969

 

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NASA research pilot Bill Dana takes a moment to watch NASA's NB-52B cruise overhead after a research flight in the HL-10. On the left, John Reeves can be seen at the cockpit of the lifting body.

 

The HL-10 was one of five lifting body designs flown at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, from July 1966 to November 1975 to study and validate the concept of safely maneuvering and landing a low lift-over-drag vehicle designed for reentry from space. Northrop Corporation built the HL-10 and M2-F2, the first two of the fleet of "heavy" lifting bodies flown by NASA. The contract for construction of the HL-10 and the M2-F2 was $1.8 million.

 

"HL" stands for horizontal landing, and "10" refers to the tenth design studied by engineers at NASA's Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. After delivery to NASA in January 1966, the HL-10 made its first flight on December 22, 1966, with research pilot Bruce Peterson in the cockpit. Although an XLR-11 vehicle, the first 11 drop flights from the B-52 launch aircraft were powerless glide flights to assess handling qualities, stability, and control. In the end, the HL-10 was judged to be the best handling of the three original heavy- weight lifting bodies (M2-F2/F3, HL-10, X-24A).

 

The HL-10 was flown 37 times during the lifting body research program and logged the highest altitude and fastest speed in the Lifting Body program. On February 18, 1970, Air Force test pilot Peter Hoag piloted the HL-10 to Mach 1.86 (1,228 mph). Nine days later, NASA pilot Bill Dana flew the vehicle to 90,030 feet, which became the highest altitude reached in the program. Some new and different lessons were learned through the successful flight testing of the HL-10.

 

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Center: DFRC

Center Number: ECN-2203

GRIN DataBase Number: GPN-2000-000201

 

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File: GPN-2000-000201

URL: grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2000-000201.html

  

Research volunteers Kristina and Shelby hike with crew leader Will along a ridge above the Frazer Flats, Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge. Credit: Lisa Hupp/USFWS

A National Eye Institute laboratory scientist documents research findings.

 

Credit: National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health

Animal Research Facility

The turtle, flats, and conch research teams headed up to Half Sound where they used a seine net to capture and tag seat turtles and bonefish

None biting Midge.

Researched this one, feel free to correct me if mistaken.

The lionfish team practices dissecting lionfish with CEI researchers.

Talks from Lee McIvor, Clive Grinyer, Poppy James and Rachel Jones.

 

This sketchnote is featured in Eva-Lotta's new book that gathers her sketchnotes from over 100 talks taken at design events and conferences in 2011.

 

In addition, Eva-Lotta invited 10 of her favourite sketchnoters from all over the world to contribute to the book. They all sketched the same TED talk and created some stunning sketches that show off the wide variety of styles and different ways of summarising content.

 

www.sketchnotesbook.com

Analyze a problem with a recurring daydream...

Dawn is a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wildlife biologist at the Pacific Regional Office in Portland. She first began working with sage-grouse in 1998 and has collaborated on projects in Nevada, California, and Oregon.

The turtle, flats, and conch research teams headed up to Half Sound where they used a seine net to capture and tag seat turtles and bonefish

The turtle, flats, and conch research teams headed up to Half Sound where they used a seine net to capture and tag seat turtles and bonefish

The flats and shark team join forces to capture and tag lemonsharks and bonefish. Students also took data on the abundance of other species that were caught in the seine net.

 

Research laboratory isolated vector illustration on a black background.

“If we knew what it was we were doing, it would not be called research, would it?”

A simple flow chart overview of the research paper process, with an understanding that the concept of information evaluation is infused into each step along the way.

The main Texaco research library and archives, left empty after the campus closed. Building B-1.

 

This room once housed all of the historical materials related to Texaco's testing of fossil fuels, and shortly after WWII - some nuclear materials as well.

 

Texaco Research Center / Beacon Labratories

 

*Demolished 2012

The turtle, flats, and conch research teams headed up to Half Sound where they used a seine net to capture and tag seat turtles and bonefish

Into the unknown .... or so it seems.

The Birmingham Qur'an Manuscript was exhibited in the Bramall Dome of the University of Birmingham in October 2015.

 

Reference: MINGANA Islamic Arabic 1572a

Mingana Collection of Middle Eastern Manuscripts,

Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham.

A postdoctoral lab mentor and her HISTEP student check on the results of their fruit fly genetics experiment.

 

URL for HISTEP: www.training.nih.gov/histep

 

Credit: Office of Intramural Training & Education, National Institutes of Health

The sustainable fisheries research group heads out with local fisherman, Nehemiah Taylor, to observe first-hand how conch, lobster, and grouper are harvested.

 

This book, along with the "Information is not knowledge" books are on display at Emory University in Atlanta, GA. The book used to display "Research" is a book about Albert Einstein.

The flats and shark team join forces to capture and tag lemonsharks and bonefish. Students also took data on the abundance of other species that were caught in the seine net.

 

Notes, pencil, and glasses. The sign of a weary researcher.

Inukshuk, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge, 13 Nov 2024

 

An inukshuk is a stone landmark or cairn built by the Inuit, Iñupiat, Kalaallit, Yupik, and other Arctic peoples. The word inukshuk comes from the Inuktitut words inuk, which means "person", and suk, which means "substitute". The literal meaning of the word is "that which acts in the capacity of a human".

 

Inuksuit are used for a variety of purposes, including:

* Directional guides: Inuksuit are often used as landmarks or directional guides on hillsides.

 

* Marking caches: Inuksuit can be used to mark the location of food caches.

* Herding caribou: Inuksuit can be used to help Inuit hunt caribou.

 

Inuksuit are found in northern Canada, Greenland, and Alaska.

Photos in the field with the Shark Stress Physiology research team. The research team uses a technique involving longlines with eight separate baited gangions. Each gangion is set up with a trigger, that once tripped, will start recording video via GoPro and record time-on-line and tension. Once a specimine is caught, the team spends approximately 10 minutes or less taking blood samples, tagging, and noting visual characteristics of each shark. On this particular outing off the Atlantic side of Cape Eleuthera the research group set their line parallel with the wall of the Exuma Sound. The caught and tagged two reef sharks - one juvinile and one adolescent.

How beauty is only skin deep by painting dissections over tissue paper, allowing it to be lifted to reveal how beauty is shown in magazines

Anatomy theme

 

A4 sketchbook

Acrylic

Research Lab D

If you listen very closely, you can hear the crickets chirp.

BARDO RESEARCH\@bardoresearch \ and \ ASANO\@sejongstudio collaboration

 

set# 2

 

Dark blue leggings in faux leather.

Dark blue balloon dress made of thin flowing viscose knitwear with textile necklace.

Dark chocolate color Bardo Research shoes, model Jeera

Bardo Research wig

 

Design and idea – ASANO\@sejongstudio

 

Posing Deepti in milky tan, face up by Olga @barbelo_o

Photo by Aleksei Geets @rchitectus

 

сет 2

 

Тёмно-синие лосины из искусственной кожи.

Тёмно-синее платье-баллон из тонкого текучего вискозного трикотажа с текстильным украшением.

Туфли цвета темного шоколада Bardo Research, модель Зира

Парик Bardo Research

 

Дизайн и идея коллекции — ASANO\@sejongstudio

 

Позирует Дипти в цвете milky tan, мейк от

Ольги @barbelo_o, фотограф Алексей Геец @rchitectus

RCAHMS staff Philip Graham and Neil Gregory researching 35mm slides in the archive store.

Nature morte à la tête de mouton

 

"We live together, we act on, and react to, one another; but always and in all circumstances we are by ourselves.

The martyrs go hand in hand into the arena; they are crucified alone. Embraced, the lovers desperately try to fuse their insulated ecstasies into a single self-transcendence; in vain. By its very nature every embodied spirit is doomed to suffer and enjoy in solitude. Sensations, feelings, insights, fancies - all these are private and, except through symbols and at second hand, incommunicable. We can pool information about experiences, but never the experiences themselves. From family to nation, every human group is a society of island universes.

Most island universes are sufficiently like one another to Permit of inferential understanding or even of mutual empathy or "feeling into." Thus, remembering our own bereavements and humiliations, we can condole with others in analogous circumstances, can put ourselves (always, of course, in a slightly Pickwickian sense) in their places. But in certain cases communication between universes is incomplete or even nonexistent. The mind is its own place, and the Places inhabited by the insane and the exceptionally gifted are so different from the places where ordinary men and women live, that there is little or no common ground of memory to serve as a basis for understanding or fellow feeling. Words are uttered, but fail to enlighten. The things and events to which the symbols refer belong to mutually exclusive realms of experience." A.H.

  

O mañana de domingo, tarde de jueves.

 

Louvre, 2010

An attempt at microscale buildings. Basically functions what the title says; used for many research capabilities including military and civilian purposes.

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