Not exact matches
And in June of 1959, we wrote, «The problems of eating and drinking under weightless conditions in
space, long a topic of speculation [
among] science fiction writers are now under investigation in a flying
laboratory.
Reaching a seamless synergy
among this holy trinity — high - performance coronagraph, deformable mirror and instrumental stability — is so formidable it has scarcely been achieved in
laboratories here on Earth, and has never even been attempted on a telescope in
space.
The Kanter - McCormick Gallery will become a curatorial
laboratory for five quick - and - dirty shows proposed by participants involved in the Art Center's Oakman Clinton School & Studios, engaging the traditional «white cube» gallery as a learning
space while highlighting connections
among Oakman Clinton School & Studios faculty, students, and the broader Chicago arts community.
The placement of the artwork
among the offices and
laboratories of the plant is a stroke of conceptual genius in and of itself — something akin to Michael Asher's coy deconstructions of gallery
spaces.
Interestingly and essential for us to note, it was the late Edward Teller, member of the Manhattan Project and father of the Hydrogen Bomb, co-founder and director of the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory, who proposed this geo - engineering technique together with Roderick Hyde and Lowell Wood and who designed a variety of mixtures according to the specific tasks they have to perform,
among which figure the deployment of «electrically - conducting sheets» or «metallic «nets» of ultra-fine mesh -
spacing» in the stratosphere.