Pythagorean Steampunk Machine1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00Pythagorean Steampunk Mathematical Machine. Pythagoras' Theorem relates the lengths of the sides of a right-angled triangle and says that the square of the length of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle) equals the sum of the squares of th...PT27Shttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/c308de85-7c86-412f-9280-fb86b81c5228/Pythagoras-Theorem-Steampunk-Animation-FHD_27sec_semi_sepia_xlarge.jpghttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/c308de85-7c86-412f-9280-fb86b81c5228/Pythagoras-Theorem-Steampunk-Animation-FHD_27sec_semi_sepia_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/c308de85-7c86-412f-9280-fb86b81c5228/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/c308de85-7c86-412f-9280-fb86b81c5228/price
Pulsar
Pulsars are very rapidly spinning neutron stars surrounded by fantastically powerful magnetic fields (magnetospheres). The magnetosphere is shown as a blue translucent donut sectioned across.Pulsars emit beams of radiation (purple light) from their magnetic poles (in radio, x-ray, & gamma ray wavelengths). Their magnetic poles do not align with their rotational axis, and so the beams of radiation sweep around as the star rotates, giving an observer within the viewing cone a pulsing of radiation.
Animation ID: PULSAR-FHD-Russell-Kightley
Duration: 00:09
copyright Russell Kightley
Animation resolution: 1920x1080 pixels @ 30.0 fps, ~42.1 Mbits/s
Pulsar2019-04-10T07:03:37ZPulsars are very rapidly spinning neutron stars surrounded by fantastically powerful magnetic fields (magnetospheres). The magnetosphere is shown as a blue translucent donut sectioned across.Pulsars emit beams of radiation (purple light) from their mag...PT9Shttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/b1b35f57-3c29-4e05-9bfc-d722cf0fb2d3/PULSAR-FHD-Russell-Kightley_xlarge.jpghttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/b1b35f57-3c29-4e05-9bfc-d722cf0fb2d3/PULSAR-FHD-Russell-Kightley_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/b1b35f57-3c29-4e05-9bfc-d722cf0fb2d3/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/b1b35f57-3c29-4e05-9bfc-d722cf0fb2d3/price
PROTEIN FOLDING: polypeptide coiling1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00PROTEIN FOLDING: polypeptide coiling into an alpha helix (α helix)
grey = carbon (C)
blue = nitrogen (N)
red = oxygen (O)
white = hydrogen (H)
yellow = generic side chain
Proteins consist of long chains (polymers) of amino...PT15Shttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/caac835f-b9c1-4325-a465-0ab5bbb96c82/PROTEIN-FOLDING-alpha-helix-Russell-Kightley_xlarge.jpghttps://d3e1m60ptf1oym.cloudfront.net/caac835f-b9c1-4325-a465-0ab5bbb96c82/PROTEIN-FOLDING-alpha-helix-Russell-Kightley_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/caac835f-b9c1-4325-a465-0ab5bbb96c82/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/caac835f-b9c1-4325-a465-0ab5bbb96c82/price