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Category Archives: Chemistry

Go Your Own Way || Neal/Emma – Video


Go Your Own Way || Neal/Emma
Please watch in 720p. ๐Ÿ™‚ I am so conflicted about my Emma ships right now. Honestly I don #39;t know what I want! Why does JMo have to have chemistry with everyone, it makes it so difficult to choose an Emma OTP. As of this moment I #39;m leaning for a Neal/Emma endgame. But I #39;m still holding out some hope for Gremma....gah! Never really liked her with August romantically. I #39;m intrigued by Hook but I also kinda ship Sleeping Hook (NO REGRETS. you can #39;t sink this ship writers!). In fact I probably ship Hook with every available female (Ruby, Regina, etc). So there #39;s that. And of course Jefferson. Sorry but the chemistry between Mad Swan is the BEST. PERIOD. No contest imho. And I #39;m sure that stems from them being cannon in real life. ๐Ÿ˜‰ So now that i #39;ve got out the feels, let #39;s discuss Neal/Emma. I am a hardcore believer in Neal=Bae (cause imagine the family gatherings. Charming, Snow, Regina, Rumple...it would just be too epic to pass up). And Swanfire is the best portmanteau ship name ever. I think their storyline was incredibly sweet and heartbreaking, especially since it was only one episode. I really want Neal to come to Storybrooke in the second half of this season. I can tell that their reunion will be epic. ๐Ÿ˜€ I adore this song and heard this version in the Safe Haven trailer and thought it was perfect for Neal/Emma. I didn #39;t have that much to work with footage wise so I apologize for the lack of variety haha. In this video I wanted to show that Neal not only left Emma but ...From:hurleybirdprodViews:3 0ratingsTime:02:17More inFilm Animation

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Romantic chemistry

We forget today, in these days of the two cultures, just how close the arts and sciences once were. The era of the romantic poets, for example, was also an incredibly exciting time for chemistry, as new elements started to be discovered and explored. Humphrey Davy, for example, was not only a scientist, but a poet and an editor of Lyrical Ballads and many of the romantics looked to the clear language of the sciences to help them in defining the language for their new style.

Portrait of Sir Humphry Davy (1778-1829) by Sir Thomas Lawrence. Davy was the first person to isolate potassium and sodium

It’s from this period that the new exhibition at the Royal Society originates and gets its name. Although the displays begin with the discovery of phosphorus by Hennig Brand in 1669 the real explosion came in the hundred years from the mid-1700s.

From the society’s archives have come manuscript after manuscript claiming discovery of a new element, perhaps from samples brought back from an expedition in the Americas and for a time forgotten in the British Museum (niobium), or closer to home, first described as magnetic sand from Cornwall (titanium).

For anyone interested in the history of our discipline, getting to view so many important manuscripts and the stories behind them is a rare treat. Not only are there handwritten submissions to the Proceedings of the Royal Society, but also laboratory manifests, still using alchemical symbols in the 19th century, letters and even a pamphlet campaigning against Davy’s candidacy for president of the Royal Society.

Charles Hatchett’s element colombium, now called niobium, was found in a mineral sample sent to the Royal Society from America by John Winthrop FRS (1681-1747)

Also in in each cabinet are a variety of other artefacts relating to the scientists or discovery featured. The highlight for me were the palladium ingots entrusted to the society by the metal’s discoverer, William Hyde Wollaston, and used to supply the societies members with samples of this element, which at the time was even scarcer and more valuable than it is today.

Ultimately, this small but carefully chosen collection of artefacts charts the growing interest and excitement surrounding chemistry as the world began to open up to European explorers and scientists. For anyone already nearby, or perhaps in London for another reason, I would certainly recommend you take an hour out to perhaps acquaint yourself with some more of the names and works of the romantic chemists.

The exhibition is opens its doors on Monday 03 December 2012 and runs until Friday 14 June 2013 at the Royal Society, Carlton Terrace, London. It is free to visit and is open on Tuesdays from 2pm to 4pm and on Thursdays from 10am to 12pm. No appointment is necessary during those times.

Laura Howes

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Source:
http://prospect.rsc.org/blogs/cw/2012/11/30/romantic-chemistry/

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ADME TOX TECHNOLOGIES Technology, BIOTECHNOLOGY – Video


ADME TOX TECHNOLOGIES Technology, BIOTECHNOLOGY
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ADME TOX TECHNOLOGIES Technology, BIOTECHNOLOGY - Video

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BIOTECHNOLOGY IN INDIA The Technology, BIOTECHNOLOGY – Video


BIOTECHNOLOGY IN INDIA The Technology, BIOTECHNOLOGY
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ANGIOGENESIS MODULATORS Technology, BIOTECHNOLOGY – Video


ANGIOGENESIS MODULATORS Technology, BIOTECHNOLOGY
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Revolutionizing the World with Biotechnology: Harsha Kuchampudi at TEDxIB@YorkSchool – Video


Revolutionizing the World with Biotechnology: Harsha Kuchampudi at TEDxIB@YorkSchool
Harsha Kuchampudi: Saint Petersburg High School The core of my talk conveys some of the experiences I #39;ve had in the past four years with biotechnology and how new and developing technologies could potentially change the way we view world problems. But more generally, my talk stresses some of the lessons I #39;ve learned and how anyone can take on the world (and its problems) by showing determination, dedication, and passion to what they are interested in. TEDxIB@YorkSchool is an event for International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma students from around the world and interested adults. It is hosted yearly at The York School in the heart of downtown Toronto. The York School #39;s mission is to develop inquiring, knowledgeable and caring young people who are engaged citizens of the world. It is the first school in Canada accredited to offer the International Baccalaureate programme for students from Junior Kindergarten to Grade 12. There are more than 900000 IB students in over 140 countries. TEDxIB@YorkSchool tries to bring those students and their ideas together.From:TEDxYouthViews:36 0ratingsTime:10:15More inScience Technology

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Revolutionizing the World with Biotechnology: Harsha Kuchampudi at TEDxIB@YorkSchool - Video

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