Sentences with phrase «top left -rcb-»

This composite shows the alignment of the satellite galaxies of Andromeda, in relation to the view that we see from Earth (the top left panel shows a true - color image of the center of the Andromeda galaxy taken with the Canada France Hawaii Telescope).
The image sequence below starting from from top left and moving clockwise: Messier 32 (E2 satellite of Andromeda Galaxy), Messier 87 (a huge elliptical at the center of the Virgo cluster), Leo I (= UGC 5470, E3 dwarf elliptical in Local Group), Messier 110 (another satellite of Andromeda Galaxy, E6 type)
The Challenger Colles seen on the top left of the image below shows are area of where these hills have gathered together.
(See Akira Fujii's color photo of Capella — at the top left of photo.)
To access your account, log - in to the SNMMI website by clicking on the «log - in» button in the top left hand corner of the page.
The vesicles are represented by blue and white circles at the top left.
Top image: Illustration how a Gardiner's frog can hear with its mouth: Top left: The skin of the animal reflects 99.9 % of an incoming sound wave hitting the body close to the inner ear.
A, comparison of E-selectin expression in control colon (top left panel) to TNF - α - stimulated expression in colon (center panel) and ovarian (right panel) microvascular endothelial cells.
This figure shows the characteristic «horseshoe» pattern of Atlantic climate variability (top left panel), along with the time history of this pattern (bottom left).
K3 - 35, seen as a radio image (top left), also has precessing gas jets.
Image - manipulation software morphs the face of a woman (top left) into one (bottom) who looks like one of the young male volunteers (top right).
When you open an issue from the issue library, tap the Contents list icon in the top left - hand corner of the screen to open a navigation menu.
This image shows the Totten Glacier ice shelf in East Antarctica (the wrinkled white area at top left) on Sept. 25, 2013.
Recent radar mapping of Antarctica's Larsen C ice shelf (top left) reveal that a new crack (right in both inset and white section of diagram) has forked from a long fissure that cuts across the ice shelf.
The interiors of Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto (clockwise from top left): While three of the moons have metallic cores similar to Earth's, Callisto has a mixture of ice and rock at its heart.
The theory was verified in 2009 when Cecily Wolfe, a University of Hawaii seismologist and a principal investigator of the PLUME (Plume - Lithosphere Undersea Melt Experiment) project, captured the deep plume in a 3 - D worm's - eye view (top left) of the Hawaiian Islands (outlined in yellow).
At top left is an image of oxygen concentrations in opal and surrounding minerals.
MACHINE METAMORPHOSIS This small robot puts on different origami exoskeletons (from top left, clockwise) so it can walk, glide, roll or sail.
The Lasker Foundation honored John Gurdon (top right) and Shinya Yamanaka (bottom right) for work on cell reprogramming and Brian Druker (top left), Nicholas Lydon (bottom left), and Charles
In the team's experimental setup, electricity was supplied to a tiny piece of tungsten selenide (small rectangle at center) through two gold wires (from top left and right), causing it to emit light (bright area at center), demonstrating its potential as an LED material.
The star's real position the top left, while its observed position is the top right.
This is a frame from an animation that shows the expansion of the universe in the standard «Lambda Cold Dark Matter» cosmology, which includes dark energy (top left panel red), the new Avera model, that considers the structure of the universe and eliminates the need for dark energy (top middle panel, blue), and the Einstein - de Sitter cosmology, the original model without dark energy (top right, green).
A composite image shows a scanning transmission electron microscope view of an antenna - reactor catalyst particle (top left) along with electron energy loss spectroscopy maps that depict the spatial distribution of individual plasmon modes around the palladium islands.
Top left: normal germinal center in a mouse tonsil.
Top left: two polished stone axes from the late Neolithic period were found in Normandy.
(top left) University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy; (top right): A. Dupree (CfA) / NASA / ESA; (bottom) NASA / JPL - Caltech / S.
From top left to to lower left these planets are WASP - 12b, WASP - 6b, WASP - 31b, WASP - 39b, HD 189733b, HAT - P - 12b, WASP - 17b, WASP - 19b, HAT - P - 1b and HD 209458b.
For reference, the top left image is about 6,000 light - yearsacross.
You may use the same square twice, and the sequence matters: Starting at the bottom right R and traveling to the top left R is one path; going in the opposite direction constitutes a second path.
A small piece (lower left) of a larger drug molecule (top left) is enough to distract bacterial defenses and allow the larger molecule to remain inside the bacterium.
1989 (left): For more than 24 years, endocrinologists Jaime Guevara - Aguirre (top left) and Arlan Rosenbloom (top right) have tracked a population of Ecuadorians with a rare genetic defect affecting the body's response to growth hormone.
From top left are Professor Soojin Park, Dr. Sinho Choi, researcher Jieun Kim (KRICT) and from bottom left are Professor Sang Kyu Kwak and researcher Dae Yeon Hwang.
The highlighted region (top left) shows the tool's feature that links all charts by spatial location.
Due to the voltage applied, a beam of light (top left) is modulated by the digital bits (bottom right) of the converter (yellow).
Chernoff has compiled a staggering collection so far, including, at top left, collection jars used to maintain specimens in alcohol; facing right and up, two red - eyed piranhas; far right, a fish head and the skin of an Arapaima gigas, South America's largest freshwater fish; across the bottom, cichlid, tetra, and aruanã skeletons.
Clockwise from top left i) Plastic bag recorded by an OFOS at the HAUSGARTEN observatory (Arctic) at 2500 m; ii = Litter recovered within the net of a trawl in Blanes open slope at 1500 m during the PROMETO 5 cruise on board the R / V «García del Cid»; iii) Cargo net entangled in a cold - water coral colony at 950 m in Darwin Mound with the ROV «Lynx» (National Oceanography Centre, UK).
The images above, from the top left moving clockwise, shows an electronic circuit being increasingly stretched.
Pull a bucket of water from anywhere in any ocean and several million specimens of Emiliania huxleyi (top left) could very well be floating inside.
Cassini's cameras show four sides of Saturn and its rings: in ultraviolet (top left), blue (top right), far - red (bottom left), and near - infrared (bottom right) light.
(Clockwise from top left): Processed collagen made into a patch, foam, hydrated gel, and unstructured form.
Clockwise from top left: Bettman / Corbis (3); AP photo / CP; AP Photo / CP, Toronto Sun, Greig Reekie; Florida Department of Corrections
ramidus (bottom; reconstruction based on computed tomography rendering shown) lacked many features that have evolved for advanced vertical climbing and suspension in extant chimpanzees (pan, top left).
This is an illustration how a Gardiner's frog can hear with its mouth: Top left: The skin of the animal reflects 99.9 % of an incoming sound wave hiting the body close to the inner ear.
Clockwise from top left: Ittipon / Shutterstock; Gyvafoto / Shutterstock; BILLION PHOTOS / SHUTTERSTOCK; ZURIJETA / SHUTTERSTOCK
In a sequence of images of a bubble logic device (starting at top left), a bubble travels around a ring and joins a caravan of other bubbles.
A pair of males engage in a full fighting display over a female, faintly visible in the top left of the photo.
With corvids — represented here by the American crow in the top left — that's hardly even a controversial thing to say.
FEELIN» FINE The coarse skull bones of the newly identified Daspletosaurus horneri (top left) hint that the tyrannosaur had sensory organs in its skin, seen as black dots on the snout scales in this illustration.
The Tadpole galaxy (top left) sports a long tail of stars and gas pulled out by the gravity of a galactic interloper, visible as a small blue clump in the upper part of the Tadpole's disk.
Clockwise from top left: Rafael Lozano - Hemmer; CERN; Ernie Mastroianni; US Geological Survey / NASA; Victor Hugo King / Library of Congress; Discovery Park of America
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