Sentences with phrase «shared laboratory space»

Not exact matches

Start - up companies share office space and laboratory facilities, as well as administrative resources and managerial / financial services, allowing them to focus their resources and energies on developing products and technologies.
The robot, in turn, shares that space with a free - roaming laboratory rat.
For life - science companies, it also provides configurable laboratory space, hundreds of thousands of dollars of shared laboratory equipment, and a unique «Innovation Lab» that even provides access to small equipment and reagents, helping early - stage companies bridge that critical gap between late - stage academic research and early - stage product development.
Here, sharing of communal facilities and laboratory space is an important aspect of breaking down barriers.
It's a new day in space aboard the International Space Station, and three Expedition 55 crew members are prepping for an upcoming spacewalk and cargo - transfer activities while also sharing the wonders of our orbiting laboraspace aboard the International Space Station, and three Expedition 55 crew members are prepping for an upcoming spacewalk and cargo - transfer activities while also sharing the wonders of our orbiting laboraSpace Station, and three Expedition 55 crew members are prepping for an upcoming spacewalk and cargo - transfer activities while also sharing the wonders of our orbiting laboratory.
The office of the Director of the Division of Research will attempt to find laboratory space, sharing arrangements if necessary, and adjacencies that meet the needs of each applicant but can not guarantee room assignments or sharing arrangements.
In this space Restek's renowned experts share their thoughts on analytical topics in the news along with tips and tricks to make laboratory life easier and more productive.
In this space Restek's renowned experts share their thoughts on analytical topics in the news along with tips and tricks to make laboratory life easier and more productive.
We thank Jesse Ausubel for encouragement and editorial comment, Sean Brady for advice on experimental design, Jeanne Garbarino and Anna Zeidman for laboratory space and assistance, Keith Dunton for contributing fish specimens and sharing Long River Survey report, Melissa Cohen for contributing fish specimens, Howard Rosenbaum for permission to sample at New York Aquarium, and Julie Nadel, Iman Nassef, and Alden Liang for trialing protocols.
We thank the following speakers who shared their knowledge with the committee: James Anderson, Harvard University; Theodore L. Anderson, University of Washington; Gordon Bonan, National Center for Atmospheric Research; Thomas Crowley, Duke University; Kea Duckenfield, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); Jerry Elwood, Department of Energy; David Fahey, NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory; Jay Fein, National Science Foundation; Peter Gent, National Center for Atmospheric Research; James Hansen, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Goddard Institute for Space Studies; Dennis Hartmann, University of Washington; Eugenia Kalnay, University of Maryland; Yoram Kaufman, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; James Mahoney, U.S. Climate Change Science Program; Kenneth Mooney, NOAA; Richard Moss, U.S. Climate Change Science Program; V. Ramaswamy, NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory; Daniel Rosenfeld, Hebrew University; Susan Solomon, NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory; Graeme Stephens, Colorado State University; Lucia Tsaoussi, NASA; and Josh Willis, Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
In this space Restek's renowned experts share their thoughts on analytical topics in the news along with tips and tricks to make laboratory life easier and more productive.
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