Chemistry Experiment Simulation, Tutorials and Computer Animations for College Chemistry
After instructions on what computer programs will be needed, you can simulate chemical processes related to electrochemistry, acid-base chemistry and stoichiometry.
Introduction This unit is concerned with the very things that we, as ordinary people, talk about as a consequence of listening to radio, watching television or reading newspapers and magazines: the programmes and articles that constitute media output. We examine the everyday evidence of celebrity activity – what academic media analysts call ‘texts’. Texts are socially constructed assemblages of items such as spoken or written words, or pictures. This unit is subject to Author(s):
Acknowledgements The content acknowledged below is Proprietary (see terms and conditions).This content is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 Licence This extract is taken from D315: Crime, order and social control, produced by the BBC on behalf of the Open University. © 2
Entrevista con Sebastián Hiriart (Rencontres 2011)
Sebastián Hiriart, mexicain, a été acteur et directeur de la photographie, mais il est à Toulouse pour présenter son premier long métrage de fiction, A tiro de piedra, issu de Cinéma en Construction. C’est un film fait avec un budget minimum et beaucoup de temps, où l’acteur principal, Gabino Rodríguez, a eu aussi le rôle de co-scénariste, et qui suit une trajectoire qui a été celle du cinéaste lui-même. Il s’agit de représenter le voyage initiatique, celui qui o
Introduction This material is from our archive and is an adapted extract from Crime, order and social control (D315) which is no longer taught by The Open University. If you want to study formally with us, you may wish to explore other courses we offer in this subject area. Acknowledgements This chapter adapted for OpenLearn is from ‘Microeconomics by Susan Himmelweit, Roberto Simonetti and Andrew Trigg, published by Thomson Learning in association with The Open University, 2001 and ‘Markets’ one of the three core books from the D319 course Understanding Economic Behaviour: Households, Firms and Markets. The content acknowledged below is Proprietary (see terms and conditions) and is used under licence. Grateful acknowledgement is made to the follow Writing workshops with Microsoft Word Japan’s Nuclear Crisis Introduction This unit will give you a stimulating and insightful account of the ways in which economists have tried to understand what labour market discrimination is and what its sources are. Notice the reference to the ‘ways [plural] … economists have tried to understand’. The most basic message of this unit is that economics is not a subject in which there is one single correct answer. This unit will also assist you in developing your ability to use and evaluate economic theory, Graduation 2012 - Tuesday July 24: AET Faculty, 5pm Ceremony Scientific Measurement NSIPP cloud cover: Feb 2002 Sloan Fellows Community version 2 2012 Carl Smith Lecture: Jacinta Ruru: Undefined and Unresolved: Maori Legal Rights to Water CSAFE and CTPI: Public Square – Climate Change: Just Sit Back and Enjoy the Grapes? Fire goby Finger ligaments Fiddler crab burrows Fabric Everyday objects under the microscope
Microsoft Word's reviewing functions enhance communication as students revise drafts of their writing projects.
In spite of the “sickening human and social devastation on full display” in northern Japan, moderator
Richard Samuels wonders, “Is it possible to follow the train of cause and effect into the future…imagining what happens from here on?” In this session convened just days after the March 11th earthquake and tsunami, pan
Coverage of the School of Film, Music & Performing Arts graduation ceremony.
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Simulation of cloud cover over Antarctica and South America during February 2002.
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Jacinta Ruru of the Faculty of Law presents the 2012 Carl Smith Lecture on the topic “Undefined and Unresolved: Maori Legal Rights to Water”. 16 April 2012.
National business commentator Rod Oram, climate change scientist Dr Jim Salinger and Chief Executive of the Methodist Mission, Laura Black, discuss major ethical issues surrounding the climate change debate. Hosted jointly by the Centre for Theology and Public Issues and the Centre for Sustainability: Agriculture, Food, Energy, Environment. 11 October 2011.
One reason why gobies are considered to be a fish is because they are vertebrates. Vertebrate animals have a skeletal structure of bones to support their bodies.
Ligaments are flexible bands of fibrous tissue that connect the bones and bind the joints together. They connect bones to bones and they sometimes act as guides for tendons.
Fiddler crabs dig small burrow holes to live in. They are often found on the beach. Other animals that live in burrows or holes in the ground are groundhogs, ants, and earthworms.
Skin covers and protects the body. Your skin also has the ability to detect differences in texture. Each fabric in this image has a different texture, or feel. Receptors on your skin translate the texture into a message and relay the message to your brain so that you interpret the difference in textures from one fabric to another.
Objects underneath a microscope can reveal new views of the object that wouldn't be seen without a microscope's aid.













