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Images from the NASA Science Update where findings of a methane plume were reported.

 

www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/mars/news/marsmethane.html

 

Credit: NASA / Paul Alers

 

MULTIPLICITY ARRAY OF DETECTORS.

 

THE SUPERHILAC IS A LINEAR ACCELERATOR USED FOR LOW ENERGY NUCLEAR SCIENCE RESEARCH AND IS ALSO THE INJECTOR FOR BEVA- LAC. BEAMS OF TWO DIFFERENT IONS CAN BE PRODUCED ON ALTER- NATE PULSES AND DELIVERED TO ONE OR TWO SUPERHILAC EXPERIMENTERS AND TO BEVALAC. FIVE MAJOR BEAM LINES, WITH 13 TAR-GET AREAS DESIGNED FOR VARIOUS STUDIES, ARE CURRENTLY IN OPERATION AT THE SUPERHILAC. AT THE BEVATRON, RESEARCH IS CONDUCTED IN MEDIUM TO HIGH ENERGY HEAVY ION NUCLEAR PHYS- ICS, PLUS CLINICAL TRIALS FOR HEAVY ION RADIOTHERAPY. EIGHT BEAM LINES ARE AVAILABLE AT THE BEVATRON/ BEVALAC. THE POSKANZER-GUTBROD STOCK GROUP AT THE LBL BEVALAC HAS ASSEMBLED AN ARRAY OF DETECTORS TO PERMIT IMPACT PARAMETER SELECTION. BY TRIGGERING ON HIGH ASSOCIATED MULTIPLICITIES, CENTRAL COLLISIONS (NEAR ZERO IMPACT PARAMETER) OF RELATIVISTIC HEAVY IONS CAN BE STUDIED. HANS GUTBROD, A MEMBER OF THIS COLLABORATION BETWEEN GSI AND THE UNIVERSITY OF MARBURG BOTH IN GERMANY, AND LBL, SHOWS OFF THE EXPERIMENTAL SET-UP.

 

For more information or additional images, please contact 202-586-5251.

(cc) re:publica | Gregor Fischer

science fiction parody re alien assessment of earth

Roman Huszar ’17 (standing), Matt Jiang ’17, and Kate Herrington ’17 conduct research in the lab of David Bucci, a professor of psychological and brain sciences. (Photo by Joshua Renaud ’17)

 

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14mm | iso-100 | f/5.6 | 30"

 

Wettbewerb, KSP Engel und Zimmermann Architekten, Januar 2003

Realisierung, KSP Engel und Zimmermann Architekten, Mai 2005

BDA-Preis 2008

Paying a visit to California Science Center on Saturday, 13 October 2012, as I await its latest spacecraft arrival, Space Shuttle Endeavour, scheduled for the evening. (As it would turn out, the Space Shuttle would not arrive until midday the next day.)

 

California Science Center already has other key American manned spacecraft, and adding Endeavour would very nicely complement the existing collection.

 

In front is an Apollo command module; intended to be Apollo 18 and flown to the moon in 1973, it instead became a spare when Apollo was terminated after Apollo 17, and it was launched on a smaller Saturn 1B rocket in 1975 for docking with a Russian Soyuz spacecraft. At the termination of the Apollo program, there were three spare Saturn V rockets and Apollo spacecraft, that would've allowed three extra trips to the moon; one of the surplus Saturn Vs was used to launch the Skylab space station, and the other two Apollo - Saturn V combinations are preserved at Johnson Space Center in Houston and Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

 

Just behind the Apollo is the Gemini 11 capsule. Smaller than the Apollo, it had room for two astronauts, who lived aboard for two days; even the act of standing up would have required the opening of a hatch and a spacewalk.

 

Behind the Gemini, and not visible, is a single-passenger Mercury capsule. This museum's Mercury is the Mercury-Redstone 2, which made a 16-minute suborbital space flight in 1961 with a chimpanzee on board, in preparation for a human flight. While this was not the first spaceship to fly with a live animal on board (the Soviets had Sputnik II, with a dog on board, in 1958), it was the first spaceship to bring that animal back alive (Sputnik II had no provisions for returning the dog to Earth alive - the dog died in orbit).

I decided to do another one since I wasn't happy with the castle wall thing

Coast Guard Academy cadets conduct their daily academic routine in McAllister Hall on campus, Feb. 9, 2018.

 

Several students work in the mechanical engineering lab and others get advice from professors.

 

U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Lauren Laughlin

 

NPS | Margaret Barse

 

The Exploring Earth Science Teacher Workshop 2017 took place over August 2nd and 3rd. Participating teachers spent two days in Shenandoah National Park learning and participating in activities around the theme "Shenandoah Salamander: Climate Change Casualty or Survivor."

 

This program is supported by a generous donation from the Shenandoah National Park Association and the Shenandoah National Park Trust.

 

Just some fine art type images.

CSU, Stanislaus Sciences - February 5th 2010 4:10pm Thanks for looking

The Science Carnival is sponsored by the CSU Channel Islands science departments under the leadership of Dr. Phil Hampton, Professor of Chemistry. This annual event first started in Fall 2009 with approximately 250 preschool through eighth (PK-8) grade students attending the event. Over 2200 PK-8 students and their families attended the 2016 Science Carnival.

Our trip to the Science Centre

i love science. this dress has stars and planets and galaxies on it. i think it was made for me. i'm not sure if i like this though. i have a lot of different edits of this. i think i like this the best. idk. i might put a texture or something on it. what do you think?

Photos for work from the 7th annual Des Moines Public Schools Science Fair. More than 200 students in grades 6-12 presented their research for a chance to go on to the Iowa State Science Fair. A lot of smart, confident kids all in one place.

Mystery Science Theatre 3000 Desktop Wallpaper 1680x1050

Science Museum: Aeroplane

chapter 7 is heavily based on how discussion and the ways that teachers and students talk about scientific exploration affect how the students learn. This image has lots of examples of levels of blooms taxonomy to ensure that the learning is more than just the surface of the concept

Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.

We spent the morning at the Boston Museum of Science. He was mesmerized by this display on how tornadoes work.

 

We also walked out as members, so we'll be back soon. :)

A multi-purpose walking robot that is equipped with a telescope and a magnifying glass.

Class 442 EMU passes Berlin-Adlershof on the re-opened line from Ostkreuz to Adlershof. The former Academy of Science of the GDR was here, obviously many institutions kept on researching. A Hollywood type of sign was erected, during summer with leafs on the trees a few letters are missing.

 

Hamsterbacke der DB als RB Eberswalde - Senftenberg am S-Bhf. Berlin-Adlershof

Rentrée des Master of Science and Technology

© Ecole polytechnique / Institut Polytechnique de Paris / J.Barande

   

science data collected was good, & here's what telemetry data we recovered during the probe core's brief operation. Battery power should have lasted longer but one of the science experiments was hooked up wrong and sucked way too much power - almost fried

Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.

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