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Home > All Images > 2005 > January > 24 Jan 2005

Images Dated 24th January 2005 (page 2)

137 items

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Carpet beetle larva hairs, SEM

Carpet beetle larva hairs, SEM
Beetle larva hairs. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of hairs from a carpet beetle larva (family Dermestidae). These spear-headed hairs can cause irritation when they come into contact

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Female anatomy

Female anatomy. Computer artwork of a woman seen from the side and the front

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Mechanical brain

Mechanical brain. Conceptual computer artwork of cogs inside a human head. This may be representing thought processes in the brain as the mechanical movement of cogs

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Cybernetic evolution

Cybernetic evolution. Conceptual computer artwork of the evolution of a cybernetic human. From left to right, the sequence shows the stages that led, over more than a billion years

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Dismantled loudspeaker

Dismantled loudspeaker. This is a device that is designed to convert electrical signals into sound waves. The two fixed components are the permanent magnet (black)

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Lightning rod

Lightning rod protecting a building from damage by a lightning strike. The lightning rod is the strip of metal (green) to the left of the drainpipe (black)

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Reed switch

Reed switch with coil. The reed switch, inside the coil of wire, is an electrical component that is placed in a circuit to allow the circuit to be switched

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Simple electrical circuit

Simple electrical circuit as part of a classroom demonstration. The circuit consists of three cells (batteries, across top), which are powering the electric motor (bottom right)

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Reed switch

Reed switch without coil. This is an electrical component that is placed in a circuit to allow the circuit to be switched on and off by completing or breaking the circuit

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Slow computer

Slow computer. Conceptual computer artwork of the hourglass symbol displayed by computers when they are busy processing a command. This may represent slow computers with insufficient processing power

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Dismantled capacitor

Dismantled capacitor. This is a device designed to store and release electric charge. The charge is stored in a rolled up cylinder of material seen at centre (brown)

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Capacitor

Capacitor. This device is designed to store and release electric charge. It can release its charge faster than a battery, but unlike a battery it cannot produce electricity but can only store it

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Static electricity

Static electricity. Strips of paper that have been electrically charged by a Van de Graaff generator, a device that generates static electricity

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Electrical fuses

Electrical fuses. Collection of electrical fuses and fuse wires. Fuses are designed to protect an electrical circuit from overload

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Power supply experiment

Power supply experiment. Power pack (left) and oscilloscope (right) being used in an experiment to demonstrate rectification

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Toy robot

Toy robot. Computer artwork of a humanoid toy robot. Several brands of robotic toys have been developed since the late 1990s

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Electrical batteries

Electrical batteries. Collection of electrical batteries. Batteries are chemical systems designed to store and slowly release electrical energy

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Robot scorpion

Robot scorpion. Computer artwork of a robot design based on that of a scorpion. Future robot designs will cover a wide range of sizes and uses

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Robot army

Robot army. Computer artwork of units in a robot army. Robots are being designed in a wide range of sizes for a wide range of military uses, working both with and without military personnel

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Toy robots

Toy robots. Computer artwork of three humanoid toy robots. Several brands of robotic toys have been developed since the late 1990s

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: AC and DC power supplies

AC and DC power supplies displayed on the screen of an oscilloscope (centre). Direct current (DC, the straight line) is produced by the equipment at left, while alternating current (AC)

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Skull and crossbones

Skull and crossbones
Skull-and-crossbones, computer artwork. The skull- and-crossbones is a symbol to warn people of hazards that can kill. Here, it is placed on a background representing computers

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Robot army

Robot army. Computer artwork of units in a robot army in a desert. Robots are being designed in a wide range of sizes for a wide range of military uses

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Global crime

Global crime. Conceptual computer artwork of guns against a background of an Earth map, representing worldwide use of guns

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Global security

Global security. Conceptual computer artwork of Earth wrapped in barbed wire, representing global security issues. These include the prevention of terrorism

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Global warfare

Global warfare. Conceptual computer artwork of the Earth as a grenade, representing global warfare. A grenade is an explosive device that is primed by pulling the pin (upper right)

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: View of a petri dish with bacterial cultures

View of a petri dish with bacterial cultures

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Sinus pain

Sinus pain. Conceptual computer artwork of a man with paranasal sinus pain (represented as the red area). This is usually due to sinusitis

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Chest pain

Chest pain
Headache. Conceptual computer artwork of a woman who has a headache (represented by the red area in her head). Headaches are generally caused by blood vessels expanding

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Influenza viruses, TEM

Influenza viruses, TEM
Influenza viruses. Coloured transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of influenza (flu) viruses (brown) budding from a host cell. This is the final stage in the viral replication

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Photoelastic stress

Photoelastic stress patterns seen under polarised light, in a circular protractor. The plastic that the protractor is made from is displaying coloured interference fringe patterns

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Ethical dilemma

Ethical dilemma. Conceptual computer artwork of a man questioning whether he has the right to bring two wires together. This can represent many of the ethical and moral dilemmas in science

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Genetically modified food

Genetically modified food. Conceptual computer artwork of a tangle of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) on a fork. This represents genetic modification of food crops

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Designer embryos

Designer embryos. Conceptual computer artwork of designer human embryos for sale. Human embryos are an early stage of the development of a human from a fertilised egg cell

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Human cloning

Human cloning. Conceptual computer artwork of men and women paired up on a production line. This may represent human cloning, plastic surgery, designer humans, human relationships, and business

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Lunar DNA library

Lunar DNA library, conceptual computer artwork. The surface of the Moon is across bottom, with the Earth in the background

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Tyrannosaurus rex

Tyrannosaurus rex. Computer artwork of one of the largest carnivorous dinosaurs Tyrannosaurus rex. It was about 6 metres tall and weighed about 7 tonnes. T

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Sun bakes dead Earth

Sun bakes dead Earth
Dying Earth. Image 5 of 9. Artwork of the bloated Sun baking the remains of the Sphinx statue hundreds of millions of years from the present time

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Crystalline structure

Crystalline structure demonstrated using a bubble raft. The bubble raft (or Bragg Raft) consists of a 2-dimensional array of bubbles of uniform size

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Magnetic field of a wire around a nail

Magnetic field of a wire around a nail
Magnetic field of wire around a nail. Iron filings on a sheet of paper after the removal of a nail and the wire wrapped around it

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Magnetic field of a bar magnet

Magnetic field of a bar magnet. Iron filings on a sheet of paper after the removal of a bar magnet. The filings mark the lines of the bar magnets magnetic field

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Hens and chicks succulents

Hens and chicks succulents

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Diffraction experiment equipment

Diffraction experiment equipment. This is a set of narrow, closely spaced slits called Youngs Double Slits (YDS). The YDS experiment involves passing monochromatic light through these slits

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Longitudinal wave

Longitudinal wave in a spring. The wave motion is parallel to the direction of travel, with regions alternating between compression (lower centre) and expansion (upper centre) as the wave passes

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Resonance experiment

Resonance experiment. Bartons pendulums, used to demonstrate coupling and resonance. At far left is a heavy pendulum, called the driver pendulum

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: Friction demonstration materials

Friction demonstration materials. Collection of different materials that will be used as part of a classroom demonstration of friction

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: ©EyeUbiquitous_20092724

©EyeUbiquitous_20092724
SWITZERLAND, Canton de Vaud, Chateau d Oex, Three Hot Air Balloons in line ascending into a blue sky

Background imageImages Dated 24th January 2005: ©EyeUbiquitous_20092723

©EyeUbiquitous_20092723
SWITZERLAND, Canton de Vaud, Chateau d Oex, Section of Hot Air Balloon on ground as another balloon ascends



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