
PHOSPHINE Ball and Stick Model Rotating1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00A molecule of phosphine (ball and stick model), PH3, rotates illustrating its structure. The phosphorus is shown in orange and the three hydrogens in grey. The Van der Waals surface is luminous purple. Phosphine was just reported in the atmosphere of V...PT24Shttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/04330893-6eb9-4e41-bd2f-d90fc5747e93/PHOSPHINE_Ball_and_Stick_UHD_xlarge.jpghttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/04330893-6eb9-4e41-bd2f-d90fc5747e93/PHOSPHINE_Ball_and_Stick_UHD_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/04330893-6eb9-4e41-bd2f-d90fc5747e93/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/04330893-6eb9-4e41-bd2f-d90fc5747e93/price
UHD 4K Animation of Phosphine Molecule, PH3
A molecule of phosphine, PH3, rotates illustrating its structure. The phosphorus covalent radius is shown in orange and the three hydrogens in grey. The Van der Waals surface is luminous purple. Phosphine was just reported in the atmosphere of Venus and might be a signal of extraterrestrial life.
Animation ID: PHOSPHINE_UHD
Duration: 0:24
Animation resolution: 3840x2160 pixels @ 30.0 fps, ~12.0 Mbits/s
Animation keywords: animation, gas, hydrogen, molecular model, PH3, phosphine, phosphorus, rotation, Venus
UHD 4K Animation of Phosphine Molecule, PH32022-05-25T01:15:41ZA molecule of phosphine, PH3, rotates illustrating its structure. The phosphorus covalent radius is shown in orange and the three hydrogens in grey. The Van der Waals surface is luminous purple. Phosphine was just reported in the atmosphere of Venus an...PT24Shttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/9df0912e-4141-4f4d-955d-2acf67255901/PHOSPHINE_UHD_xlarge.jpghttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/9df0912e-4141-4f4d-955d-2acf67255901/PHOSPHINE_UHD_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/9df0912e-4141-4f4d-955d-2acf67255901/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/9df0912e-4141-4f4d-955d-2acf67255901/price

Alcohol Molecule Tumbling.1970-01-01T00:00:00+00:00Ethanol molecule: carbon black, oxygen red, hydrogen green; those coloured balls represent the covalent radii, the bubbly surround is the Van der Waals surface, the "outer edge" of the molecule.PT24Shttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/b4e02482-8499-4709-a7fb-dc2a86040a3b/ETHANOL_Molecule_Tumbling_on_White_265_xlarge.jpghttps://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/b4e02482-8499-4709-a7fb-dc2a86040a3b/ETHANOL_Molecule_Tumbling_on_White_265_mp4_hd_video.mp4https://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/b4e02482-8499-4709-a7fb-dc2a86040a3b/pricehttps://www.scientific.pictures/-/galleries/animations/-/medias/b4e02482-8499-4709-a7fb-dc2a86040a3b/price