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Topic: Talk:Microscope


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


  
 M01L06 - Cells and Cell Theory
With a good microscope, we can see a cell is surrounded by a cell membrane and has something on the inside, called cytoplasm.
When we look at cells through the microscope we can see that many of them are made of smaller parts.
The first glimpse scientists had of cells came with the invention of the microscope.
www.npc.edu /Bio105/Content/module01/m1_l06.htm   (582 words)

  
 News
His talk, Automated Interpretation of Fluorescence Microscope Images for Location Proteomics, was featured in the spotlight session "Cellular Real Estate" on Thursday, October 6.
Associate Professor Javier López presented his talk, New Approaches for Analysis of the Spliceome, as part of the "Whole Genome Analysis" session.
Lastly, Assistant Professor Eric Ahrens spoke on the second day of the conference.
www.cmu.edu /bio/news/2005/science2005.shtml   (128 words)

  
 The Fourth World War by Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos / Autonomy: Chiapas - California / In Motion Magazine
The outline for the talk was published in Letters 5.1 and 5.2 in November of the same year, with the titles "Chiapas: the War: 1, Between the Satellite and the Microscope, the Other's Gaze," and 2, "The Machinery of Ethnocide." Any similarity to the conditions of the current war is purely coincidental.
The following text is an excerpt from a talk given by Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos to the International Civil Commission of Human Rights Observation in La Realidad, Chiapas on November 20, 1999.
The Fourth World War by Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos / Autonomy: Chiapas - California / In Motion Magazine
www.inmotionmagazine.com /auto/fourth.html   (6077 words)

  
 The Fourth World War by Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos / Autonomy: Chiapas - California / In Motion Magazine
The outline for the talk was published in Letters 5.1 and 5.2 in November of the same year, with the titles "Chiapas: the War: 1, Between the Satellite and the Microscope, the Other's Gaze," and 2, "The Machinery of Ethnocide." Any similarity to the conditions of the current war is purely coincidental.
The following text is an excerpt from a talk given by Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos to the International Civil Commission of Human Rights Observation in La Realidad, Chiapas on November 20, 1999.
The Fourth World War by Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos / Autonomy: Chiapas - California / In Motion Magazine
www.inmotionmagazine.com /auto/fourth.html   (6077 words)

  
 Nobel Laureate presents the magic and power of nano-science and technology : Media Releases : News : The University of Melbourne
Professor Rohrer was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1986 along with Gerd Binnig for the development of the scanning tunnelling microscope— the first microscope that allowed scientists to see, manipulate, move and rearrange single atoms.
In his talk, Professor Rohrer will give his insights into why nanoscience now carries the promise for science and technology on the nanometre scale and why it is likely to become a most important cornerstone of science and technology in this century.
Professor Rohrer is visiting Australia at the invitation of the Nanostructural Analysis Network Organization (NANO) of which the University of Melbourne is a core member.
uninews.unimelb.edu.au /articleid_1982.html   (377 words)

  
 Feynman's Talk
The electron microscope is not quite good enough, with the greatest care and effort, it can only resolve about 10 angstroms.
These electrons are focused down in size by the electron microscope lenses to impinge directly upon the surface of the metal.
Suppose that, instead of trying to reproduce the pictures and all the information directly in its present form, we write only the information content in a code of dots and dashes, or something like that, to represent the various letters.
www.zyvex.com /nanotech/feynman.html   (377 words)

  
 Part 5
“Jean,” Scott greeted his former fiancée who was bent over a microscope.
“I can’t talk to Kitty, she’s avoiding me!” Scott exclaimed.
“Jean, we need to talk,” Scott pressured gently.
members.aol.com /h20babie6/FtM5.html   (167 words)

  
 Apostolic Succession
Science article by John Platt, enthusiastically endorsed Feynman’s point that “recent advances in physics and chemistry” make it possible to build better electron microscopes for biology.
Even though Feynman’s 1959 talk preceded many important developments, it was irrelevant to them.
We can also ask about Feynman’s follow-up talk, “Infinitesimal Machinery,” published posthumously in the Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems in 1993.
pr.caltech.edu /periodicals/EandS/articles/LXVIII1_2/apostolic.html   (4638 words)

  
 major_label
The first installment was titled Major Label Microscope, but since then it has occured to the editors to broaden the series title, as there...
The Problem With Music by Steve Albini Whenever I talk to a band who are about to sign with a major label, I always end up thinking of them in a particular context.
Major label Warner Music Group is planning to roll out an e-label in which the only method of distribution will be online — there will be no corresponding CD physical product manufactured.
major_label.networklive.org   (4638 words)

  
 PLENARY TALK: Scanning Electron Microscope Induced Electrical Breakdown of Tungsten Windows in Integrated Circuit Processing
PLENARY TALK: Scanning Electron Microscope Induced Electrical Breakdown of Tungsten Windows in Integrated Circuit Processing
Back to "Session 13: Metrology and Materials Analysis 1" Search
asm.confex.com /asm/istfa04/techprogram/paper_4457.htm   (4638 words)

  
 Infinite Jeaun
Like, self-aware, aware of the literary scene, aware of all of his intellectual precursors and the specifics of their influence, etc. The scariest thing about the interviews is that apparently he can talk in real-time the same way he writes, which for some reason makes me want to run and hide under the couch.
Also for those of us who have read it more than once and want to hold a microscope up to certain sections.
That last bit is true, of course (the bit about infinities between any two numbers), but it's actually sort of obvious and certainly didn't require the genius of Cantor, the power of diagonalization, or the accrued expertise of history-up-to-1905 to prove.
infinitejeaun.blogspot.com   (8595 words)

  
 Vaginal Infections
The mainstay of diagnosis is looking at the discharge under the microscope to discover the tell tale "clue cells." The fishy odor may also be reproduced by adding a non acidic solution, ten percent hydrogen peroxide to a drop of the discharge on a glass slide.
I often overheard my sister Mary and her friends talk among themselves in hush tones about "discharge" many times.
Vaginal infections are some of the commonest reasons for a woman to visit her gynecologist and yet only a few women know about it.
www.gsu.edu /~finjws/vagina.htm   (998 words)

  
 Observer A question of character
Usually that adds to the reader's enjoyment but in Jolie Blon's Bounce, I was impatient every time Robicheaux took time off to hose down the dock outside his bait shop, eat a po' boy sandwich, or drive for a couple of pages to talk to a witness only to be turned away at the door.
James Lee Burke puts detective Dave Robicheaux under the microscope once more in Jolie Blon's Bounce
Burke is an admirer of Ron Hansen's metaphysical mystery story Mariette in Ecstasy in which it is unclear whether the title character is a fantasist or in league with the devil.
observer.guardian.co.uk /print/0,3858,4483736-99932,00.html   (671 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Tina and Harry Come to America: Tina Brown, Harry Evans, and the Uses of Power: Explore similar items
The rise and downward slide of magazine editor Tina Brown (Vanity Fair, New Yorker, Talk) and husband, Harry Evans (former editor of the London Sunday Times and, later, president of Random House), goes under the microscope in Tina and Harry Come to America: Tina Brown, Harry Evans and the Uses of...
Amazon.com: Tina and Harry Come to America: Tina Brown, Harry Evans, and the Uses of Power: Explore similar items
You may also be interested in these items...
pdxbooks.com /send/s1/0684837633   (104 words)

  
 HEPATITIS C INFO CENTER - With Daily Hepatitis C Updates
HCV Genotypes: It is much easier to talk of the Hepatitis C virus as if it is a single organism but in fact it is a range of viruses, similar enough to be called Hepatitis C virus, yet different enough to be classified into subgroups.
Indeed, Hepatitis C is so small that there's been no confirmed actual sighting of it using any type of microscope yet developed.
Infection due to Hepatitis C accounts for 20% of all cases of acute hepatitis, an estimated 30,000 new acute infections, and 8,000-10,000 deaths each year in the United States.
www.hepatitis-central.com   (2344 words)

  
 Feynman's Talk
Unfortunately, the present microscope sees at a scale which is just a bit too crude.
You will see the order of bases in the chain; you will see the structure of the microsome.
It is very easy to answer many of these fundamental biological questions; you just look at the thing!
www.zyvex.com /nanotech/feynman.html   (6158 words)

  
 Streaker 5.02m Cuddy Boat Test
Over the next few months, this little grey Streaker 5.02 cuddy is going to see a lot of Australia and be the subject of hundreds of photographs as it goes under the TBF microscope as one of the 1993 Project boats.
Everyone can talk sensibly and be heard, no-one has white knuckles hanging on, the boat is as dry as a bone—and the ride is soft and well dampened.
Streaker have very nice, padded bolsters along the front of these two cockpit shelves, but unfortunately, they don't do anything much except get dirty and torn (already), and provide a modicum of cushioning for one's lower shins.
www.marinews.com /fibreglass/btf_2streak5.html   (3253 words)

  
 Pollen Count - Talk Medical
The pollen grains that stick to the rod are specially stained and examined through the microscope.
The count is taken by a spinning rod that moves through the air at certain intervals.
Pollen count: The number of pollen grains landing on a given area during a specified time.
www.talkmd.com /medical-dictionary/11321/Pollen-Count   (3253 words)

  
 Lateline - 20/04/2005: Popes election under the microscope
Now, I think it's unquestionably true that Pope Benedict XVI will pursue the trajectories which began in the pontificate of John Paul II, and I think he is magnificently equipped to pursue that very difficult path, but it's the crucial path, it seems to me, when you talk about Christian ecumenism.
The other thing about Ratzinger is that he is superbly equipped to pursue the dialogue with Islam and Judaism, and these are the great ecumenisms, and in many ways the fate of the world depends upon this kind of dialogue, because as we have seen, religion and war are so often intertwined.
John Paul II was completely seminal in that regard - first Pope ever to enter the synagogue in Rome; the first Pope to recognise the state of Israel.
www.abc.net.au /lateline/content/2005/s1349994.htm   (3253 words)

  
 UNL Dinosaurs & Disasters
Shane Tucker and his wife (a museum volunteer), Keely, worked at prepping a plesiosaur from Nebraska, while undergraduate Brandi Jo Harkins let kids look at the removed matrix in a microscope to see its calcareous nannofossils at her station, "Chalk Talk".
Bruce Bailey of the Museum explains how John Bell Hatcher found dinosaur teeth from the Lance Creek Formation using anthills.
Nan Lindsley-Griffin and Dr. John Griffin show off volcanoes in a variety of ways in the "Rhino Room", next to the Ashfall Fossil Beds display.
www.geosciences.unl.edu /DandDDay.htm   (750 words)

  
 Leo Szilard Online
Leo Szilard the Inventor -- full text of a talk delivered at the Budapest Centenary.
Szilard's ideas included the linear accelerator, cyclotron, electron microscope, and nuclear chain reaction.
Leo Szilard's unpublished papers and correspondence are held by the Mandeville Special Collections Library, University of California, San Diego.
www.dannen.com /szilard.html   (655 words)

  
 Talk CSI: CSI: Dark Motives Computer game...
Rather than handing genetic samples off to an analyst, players will be able to compare DNA sequences through the lab computer, or use the microscope to estimate time of death using an insect and comparative samples.
Based on the hit CBS television series, CSI: Dark Motives is a first-person adventure game that will challenge players to solve five cases by examining crime scenes, interrogating witnesses, and analyzing evidence using the latest forensic equipment.
That's one of the things I loved about the last game, was going to the lab just to see what Greg would say.
talk.csifiles.com /showflat.php?Cat=&Number=6509&page=0&view=collapsed&sb=5&o=&fpart=1   (968 words)

  
 April Ottawa Centre Meeting
Next on the podium was Chuck O'Dale with a talk entitled "Really Big Holes in the Ground — Part Two." A little while after overflying the Algonquin Radio Observatory with his Cessna, he had a great bird's-eye view of his intended target: the Brent Crater near North Bay, Ontario.
Chuck also owns an electron microscope, which he used to make the microphotographs of rock samples from the crater he presented to the audience.
Paul Comision was our first speaker, with the latest edition of "The Cutting edge of Astronomy." The serendipitous discovery of a distant supernova has confirmed that the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate.
www.ottawa.rasc.ca /observers/2001/an0105pb.html   (968 words)

  
 CHAPTER #11: VIRUSES
Viruses, however were not "seen" until the electron microscope was developed in the late 1930s.
Physicians are beginning to cautiously talk of a "CURE" for HIV through the use of combinations of the above treatments.
Viruses may consist of circles, ovals, long thick or thin rods, flexible or stiff rods and ones with distinctive heads and tail components.
www.slic2.wsu.edu:82 /hurlbert/micro101/pages/Chap11.html   (968 words)

  
 Kidney Biopsy
A biopsy is a diagnostic test that involves collecting small pieces of tissue, usually through a needle, for examination under a microscope.
After the biopsy, the doctor will inspect the tissue samples in the laboratory under one or more microscopes, perhaps using dyes to identify different substances that may be deposited in the tissue.
Talk with your doctor about what information might be obtained from the biopsy and the risks involved so that you can help make a decision about whether a biopsy is worthwhile in your case.
kidney.niddk.nih.gov /kudiseases/pubs/biopsy   (968 words)

  
 COLPOSCOPY
Colposcopy is a procedure that uses a special microscope (called a colposcope) to look into the vagina and to look very closely at the
Talk to your health care provider about how to take care of yourself after the procedure and when you need to return for a checkup.
Colposcopy is usually done when a woman has an abnormal Pap test.
www.4woman.gov /faq/colposcopy.htm   (667 words)

  
 Metastatic Cancer: Questions and Answers, Cancer Facts 6.20
To determine whether a tumor is primary or metastatic, a pathologist examines a sample of the tumor under a microscope.
Patients interested in taking part in a clinical trial should talk with their doctor.
Doctors refer to the primary tumor as unknown or occult (hidden), and the patient is said to have cancer of unknown primary origin (CUP).
cis.nci.nih.gov /fact/6_20.htm   (667 words)

  
 Sequential Tart: Article — X2: Under a Microscope (vol VI/iss 6/June 2003)
After he tries and fails to scare them off by bamfing around to talk like a ghost from many directions, Jean informs Storm with a smile that their host is a teleporter.
Wolvie prevents Bobby from foolishly going after her (a nice bit of foreshadowing there), and Nightcrawler saves her by bamfing out, grabbing her in midair, and bamfing back into the ship.
Storm and Nightcrawler are almost crushed under a falling beam, but Kurt bamfs them out in time.
www.sequentialtart.com /archive/june03/cv_0603_5.shtml   (7341 words)

  
 Feynman's Talk
It is my intention to offer a prize of $1,000 to the first guy who can take the information on the page of a book and put it on an area 1/25,000 smaller in linear scale in such manner that it can be read by an electron microscope.
First, it requires too much material; there may not be enough germanium in the world for all the transistors which would have to be put into this enormous thing.
We could first make, perhaps by some photo process, a screen which has holes in it in the form of the letters.
www.zyvex.com /nanotech/feynman.html   (7341 words)

  
 Feynman's Talk
It is my intention to offer a prize of $1,000 to the first guy who can take the information on the page of a book and put it on an area 1/25,000 smaller in linear scale in such manner that it can be read by an electron microscope.
This transcript of the classic talk that Richard Feynman gave on December 29th 1959 at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) was first published in the February 1960 issue of Caltech's Engineering and Science, which owns the copyright.
First, it requires too much material; there may not be enough germanium in the world for all the transistors which would have to be put into this enormous thing.
www.zyvex.com /nanotech/feynman.html   (7341 words)

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