The following results have been found with labaratoar
Duration: 2:21 min
beytepe
Added on January 24, 2007, 2:33 pm
Views: 1158
Duration: 2:00 min
beyetepe , hacettepe , enstruman
beyetepe , hacettepe , enstruman
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Added on March 10, 2007, 3:47 pm
Views: 1553
Duration: 2:02 min
http://www.FreeScienceLectures.com
Building on the success of the two rover geologists that arrived at Mars in January, 2004, NASA's next rover mission is...
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http://www.FreeScienceLectures.com
Building on the success of the two rover geologists that arrived at Mars in January, 2004, NASA's next rover mission is being planned for travel to Mars before the end of the decade. Twice as long and three times as heavy as the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity, the Mars Science Laboratory will collect Martian soil and rock samples and analyze them for organic compounds and environmental conditions that could have supported microbial life now or in the past. The mission is anticipated to have a truly international flavor, with a neutron-based hydrogen detector for locating water provided by the Russian Federal Space Agency, a meteorological package provided by the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science, and a spectrometer provided by the Canadian Space Agency.
Mars Science Laboratory is intended to be the first planetary mission to use precision landing techniques, steering itself toward the Martian surface similar to the way the space shuttle controls its entry through the Earth's upper atmosphere. In this way, the spacecraft will fly to a desired location above the surface of Mars before deploying its parachute for the final landing. As currently envisioned, in the final minutes before touchdown, the spacecraft will activate its parachute and retro rockets before lowering the rover package to the surface on a tether (similar to the way a skycrane helicopter moves a large object). This landing method will enable the rover to land in an area 20 to 40 kilometers (12 to 24 miles) long, about the size of a small crater or wide canyon and three to five times smaller than previous landing zones on Mars.
Like the twin rovers now on the surface of Mars, Mars Science Laboratory will have six wheels and cameras mounted on a mast. Unlike the twin rovers, it will carry a laser for vaporizing a thin layer from the surface of a rock and analyzing the elemental composition of the underlying materials. It will be able to collect rock and soil samples and distribute them to on-board test chambers for chemical analysis. Its design includes a suite of scientific instruments for identifying organic compounds such as proteins, amino acids, and other acids and bases that attach themselves to carbon backbones and are essential to life as we know it. It can also identify features such as atmospheric gases that may be associated with biological activity.
Using these tools, Mars Science Laboratory will examine Martian rocks and soils in greater detail than ever before to determine the geologic processes that formed them; study the martian atmosphere; and determine the distribution and circulation of water and carbon dioxide, whether frozen, liquid, or gaseous.
NASA plans to select a landing site on the basis of highly detailed images sent to Earth by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, in addition to data from earlier missions. The rover will carry a radioisotope power system that generates electricity from the heat of plutonium's radioactive decay. This power source gives the mission an operating lifespan on Mars' surface of a full martian year (687 Earth days) or more while also providing significantly greater mobility and operational flexibility, enhanced science payload capability, and exploration of a much larger range of latitudes and altitudes than was possible on previous missions to Mars.
Planned Launch: Fall, 2009
Arrival: October, 2010
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It's Never too Late to Study:
http://www.FreeScienceLectures.com
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Added on May 11, 2007, 5:18 am
Views: 21711
Duration: 0:12 min
A old/new CN Bumper where all the toons live in a town. In this bumper Dexter tries and takes a photo.
A old/new CN Bumper where all the toons live in a town. In this bumper Dexter tries and takes a photo.
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Added on August 8, 2006, 5:18 am
Views: 82741
Duration: 0:30 min
Opening theme of Dexter's Laboratory.
Opening theme of Dexter's Laboratory.
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Added on March 9, 2008, 7:14 pm
Views: 54691
Duration: 7:27 min
http://www.ohgizmo.com/
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/
http://www.ohgizmo.com/
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/
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Added on June 2, 2007, 10:06 pm
Views: 18569
Duration: 2:06 min
The Women of ELECTRONIC MUSIC! From the 30's to the 70's!
Before synthesizers, electronic music was honed the hard way in universities, by splicing tape...
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The Women of ELECTRONIC MUSIC! From the 30's to the 70's!
Before synthesizers, electronic music was honed the hard way in universities, by splicing tape loops, distorting sounds, endless dubbing, and blind instinct. Here are the timeless women of future music who created our present...
Since the 1930's, CLARA ROCKMORE was the master of the notoriously difficult Theremin, and later championed by synthesizer-creator Bob Moog; LOUIS & BEBE BARRON created the first all-electronic score for the film "FORBIDDEN PLANET" (1957), using oscillated sounds and tape loops; //STUDIO d'ASSAI (Paris): Danish ELSE MARIE PADE studied under musique concrete founder Pierre Schaeffer, becoming a noted composer; ELAINE RADIGUE used the Buchla and Arp synthesizers in her work, heavily influenced by Buddhist meditation, and records now with laptop improv group The Lappetites; MICHELE BOKANOWSKI has composed for film, televison, and theatre; //BBC RADIOPHONIC WORKSHOP (London): ...was created and directed by DAPHNE ORAM, inventor and sonic pioneer; she was followed by DELIA DERBYSHIRE, who brought Ron Grainer's "DR. WHO" theme to brilliant, eerie life with her studio wizardry; MADDALENA FAGANDINI co-created the proto-Techno single "Time Beat/ Waltz In Space" (1962) with young producer George Martin under the alias 'Ray Cathode'; GLYNIS JONES produced some of the Workshop's classic albums like "Out Of This World" (1976); ELIZABETH PARKER scored many BBC shows including "BLAKE'S 7", and was the person to see the Workshop out in its 1998 finale; //Fluxus performance artist YOKO ONO expanded John Lennon's mind and range with electronic music, musique concrete, and 'happening' experiments; //COLUMBIA-PRINCETON ELECTRONIC MUSIC CENTER (New York): A premiere focal point for international composers since the 50's, including composer and Associate Director PRIL SMILEY; ALICE SHIELDS combined her operatic voice and poetry with the revolutionary synthesizers of the late 60's and early 70's; teacher DARIA SEMEGEN wrote traditional classical music as well as electronic; WENDY CARLOS had massive mainstream success with the all-synth "Switched On Bach", before writing groundbreaking film scores for "A CLOCKWORK ORANGE," "THE SHINING" and 'TRON"; nearby at Bell Labs, LAURIE SPIEGEL spearheaded computer graphics and software design as well as new music; maverick ANNETTE PEACOCK went from Free Jazz piano to the first synthesizers, threading her early 70's raps and rock with freeform electronics; //Argentinian BEATRIZ FERREYRA, who also studied with Schaeffer, is an esteemed composer and teacher; //SAN FRANCISCO TAPE MUSIC CENTER: The crucial West Coast electronic center, including Morton Subotnick, Terry Riley, Steve Reich and PAULINE OLIVEROS in 1962; it moved across the Bay to become the... //CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY MUSIC (Mills College, Oakland, CA): Oliveros was the first Director, perfecting her signal processing system for live performance; student and now Co-Director MAGGI PAYNE trailblazed video imagery and record engineering along with her music; alum CYNTHIA WEBSTER played in the early synth band Triode, founded electro mag SYNAPSE, and now runs Cyndustries designing software for electronic music, such as the Zeroscillator.
Their innovations led to Progressiv Rock, Krautrock, New Wave, Coldwave, Darkwave, Electro Funk, Industrial, Techno, and Electroclash. Their fringe future music is now the soundtrack of today.
DELIA DERBYSHIRE: This song is from a 1972 LP called "Electrosonic", collecting music library pieces Delia scored for use in TV shows. It was recently issued on CD, as was "Oramics" by Daphne Oram:
http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=89395
http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=35793
See also:
ALICE SHIELDS -"STUDY FOR VOICE AND TAPE" (1968)
http://youtube.com/watch?v=4vTRZPLyKX0
MALARIA! -"Your Turn To Run" (1982)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUTS9r8DGPw
http://www.cyndustries.com/woman.cfm
http://www.newyorkwomencomposers.org/index.php4?v=n
http://www.aliceshields.com/
http://www.imtheone.net/annettepeacock/intro.html
http://whitefiles.org/rwg/index.htm
(All rights reserved by the copyright owners. Fan-made nonprofit video solely to promote the artists.)
tym stevens
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Added on April 27, 2008, 1:30 am
Views: 4385
Duration: 3:28 min
Professor Tina Overton of the University of Hull's Chemistry Department outlines the main aspects of a Laboratory Report. These include: the Abstract, Planning, Methodology, Tables, Discussion, Results, Conclusion and some pointers about style.
Professor Tina Overton of the University of Hull's Chemistry Department outlines the main aspects of a Laboratory Report. These include: the Abstract, Planning, Methodology, Tables, Discussion, Results, Conclusion and some pointers about style.
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Added on February 7, 2008, 8:43 am
Views: 509
Duration: 4:25 min
VIDEO BY RUSSIAN GM TEAM ON KOREAN TEST SERVER
EPISODE 2 PART 1 UPDATE 5
ENJOY!
VIDEO BY RUSSIAN GM TEAM ON KOREAN TEST SERVER
EPISODE 2 PART 1 UPDATE 5
ENJOY!
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Added on August 10, 2007, 5:17 am
Views: 19486
Duration: 3:24 min
Scientists in Europe are working on a giant underground laboratory that they hope will allow them to peer into the beginning of time.
Their aim is to simulate the Big Bang that created the universe.
Alan Fisher reports.
Scientists in Europe are working on a giant underground laboratory that they hope will allow them to peer into the beginning of time.
Their aim is to simulate the Big Bang that created the universe.
Alan Fisher reports.
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Added on April 20, 2008, 11:32 pm
Views: 8173
Duration: 5:42 min
Dave Ansell. Why is nose snot is good for your lungs, and how to make electricity from hairy legs! Dave Ansell is
also one of the Naked Scientists (see our...
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Dave Ansell. Why is nose snot is good for your lungs, and how to make electricity from hairy legs! Dave Ansell is
also one of the Naked Scientists (see our previous podcast), and he's always out and about at the Cambridge Science Festival with the CHaoS crowd, bringing exciting science to a young audience!
In case CHaoS doesn't mean anything to you - check out the CHaoS movie and other movies from the Cambridge Science Festival at
http://www.sciencelive.org/content/view/65/52/
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Added on March 18, 2007, 6:06 pm
Views: 26034
Duration: 9:37 min
Chemistry of the Baltic states
Chemistry of the Baltic states
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Added on April 21, 2008, 5:44 am
Views: 200