code Related

Letter from Eli W. Blake, Jr. to Alexander Graham Bell, February 10, 1877

description

Summary

label_outline

Tags

poetry magnets correspondence letter eli eli w blake alexander graham bell alexander graham bell literature high resolution
date_range

Date

01/01/1877
person

Contributors

Bell, Alexander Graham
Blake, Eli W., Jr.
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Eli W, Magnets

A Magnet Stone - Google Art Project

Letter from Eli W. Blake, Jr. to Alexander Graham Bell, February 10, 1877

Letter from Eli W. Blake, Jr. to Alexander Graham Bell, July 10, 1877

A bunch of magnets that are on a wall. Poland warsaw tourism

A technician at the Naval Research Laboratory uses a "melt spinning" process to create alloys for use in powerful magnets that have applications in computers, aircraft and submarines

[Apparatus used to convert electrical energy into mechanical rotation, the basis of dynamos, using bar magnet, beaker of mercury, and current carrying wire] / A.A., del. ; J.B. Taylor, sc.

[Mariner's compass]. 19th century, Library of Congress collection

External proton beam set up. Q3B, Q3A, M-3 magnets. Photograph taken April 4, 1963. Bevatron-3368 – Photographer: George Kagawa

Various materials are ready for testing in the Kennedy Space Center's cryogenics test bed laboratory. The cryogenics laboratory is expanding to a larger test bed facility in order to offer research and development capabilities that will benefit projects originating from KSC, academia and private industry. Located in KSC's industrial area, the lab is equipped with a liquid nitrogen flow test area to test and evaluate cryogenic valves, flow-meters and other handling equipment in field conditions. A 6,000-gallon tank supplies liquid to low-flow and high-flow test sections. KSC engineers and scientists can also build system prototypes and then field test and analyze them with the center's unique equipment. Expanded cryogenic infrastructure will posture the Space Coast to support biological and medical researchers who use liquid nitrogen to preserve and store human and animal cells and to destroy cancer tissue using cryosurgery; hospitals that use superconductive magnets cooled in liquid helium for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); the food industry, which uses liquid nitrogen for freezing and long-term storage; as well as the next generation of reusable launch vehicles currently in development KSC-pa99dig02

Letter from Eli W. Blake, Jr. to Alexander Graham Bell, May 27, 1879

[Diagram of Gilbert's terella, or earth model, a spherical magnet used to show earth's magnetic qualities; with decorated initial C and surrounding text]

"Due process of law" / Will Crawford.

Topics

poetry magnets correspondence letter eli eli w blake alexander graham bell alexander graham bell literature high resolution