Sentences with phrase «working in a chemistry»

Just days before I had been working in a chemistry lab, conducting research that I could take in seemingly infinite directions, but now there was just one: north.
By the end of my second year, however, I realized that studying a chemical process or molecule in a lab was not for me, so graduate work in chemistry was out of the question.
BES funds work in chemistry, materials sciences, and related fields and runs DOE's x-ray synchrotrons and neutron sources.
Basic energy sciences, which funds work in chemistry, material science, and condensed matter physics and runs most of DOE's large user facilities, gets a bump up of 1.2 % to $ 1.872 billion.
I grew up in rural Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA and did my undergraduate work in chemistry at Messiah College, a small school (~ 2800 undergraduates only) in Grantham, Pennsylvania, USA.
Austin Bailey ’18 (T5) works in a chemistry lab to develop a special polymer that can attach other molecules to nanotubes.
He did his undergraduate work in chemistry at the University of Oklahoma in Norman.
Only a few of these researchers knew in middle school or high school or even college that they would end up working in chemistry.
I love the excitement in a class when we get to work in the chemistry lab and students see the concepts in action.

Not exact matches

«In a future mission, we could fly through those plumes and tell a lot about the chemistry and nature of the surface» and possibly a liquid ocean below, Bob Pappalardo, a planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who wasn't involved in the work, told Business Insider — all without having to drill through the moon's miles - thick ice shelIn a future mission, we could fly through those plumes and tell a lot about the chemistry and nature of the surface» and possibly a liquid ocean below, Bob Pappalardo, a planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who wasn't involved in the work, told Business Insider — all without having to drill through the moon's miles - thick ice shelin the work, told Business Insider — all without having to drill through the moon's miles - thick ice shell.
In 2010, as the dust from the financial crisis settled, three women working in disparate parts of the economy noticed that startups in «hard science» (think biology or chemistry rather than tech) weren't getting the attention they deserved from big investorIn 2010, as the dust from the financial crisis settled, three women working in disparate parts of the economy noticed that startups in «hard science» (think biology or chemistry rather than tech) weren't getting the attention they deserved from big investorin disparate parts of the economy noticed that startups in «hard science» (think biology or chemistry rather than tech) weren't getting the attention they deserved from big investorin «hard science» (think biology or chemistry rather than tech) weren't getting the attention they deserved from big investors.
Often, it's a college - aged kid in my area, maybe someone who is working on a degree in theoretical physics or chemistry.
Working on his PhD in polymer chemistry at Brown, he had been developing activation coatings for drugs, which would enable a pill to behave differently depending on the bodily fluid that it comes into contact with.
«They want to know that the people coming in are real people and have some chemistry with each other and can see working them,» says Fred Cook.
But after moving to Canada, completing a master's degree in polymer chemistry at the University of Montreal and starting a PhD program — which allowed her to work on a «dream project» creating a biological muscle from smart materials — Rajagopalan grew restless.
When women routinely win Nobel Prizes in physics, chemistry or medicine, when a woman becomes a world chess champion, when a woman conceives and develops a brand new computer chip that represents a significant advancement over quad cores, when a woman invents warp drive or phasers, when a woman solves an «insolvable» math problem, when a woman, while working with the Large Hadron Collider, discovers the now - hypothetical Higgs Boson to be an actual scalar subatomic particle, when a woman figures out how to pinpoint the exact location of an electron at any point in time, when a woman working for Merck or Pfizer develops a remedy for Alzheimer's disease, when a woman's baseball team can defeat the New York Yankees, when a woman can bench press six hundred pounds, run the 100 meter dash in under nine seconds or set a world record in the high jump, then the fairer sex will have made an advance or contribution unlike any it has made before.
Religious people have faith in the miracle stories recorded thousands of years ago by people that had no idea what the universe (large and small) is composed of (earth wind and fire), or how it works (physics, chemistry, biology, etc).
This inquiry is limited to work in the physical sciences (physics, chemistry, geology, astronomy) and the biological sciences (zoology, botany, agriculture).
Polanyi, as we have seen, assumes that all molecules work according to natural laws, but concludes that, since no one has accounted for hierarchical organization by these laws, there must be principles of organization which will in due course be found not to be reducible to the laws of physics and chemistry.
Ilya Prigogine is a chemist, born in Russia and naturalized as Belgian, who obtained the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1973 for his work on «dissipative structures.»
He has pointed out some of the philosophical implications of his work in a book for persons literate in physical chemistry: From Being To Becoming (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1980).
It seems to me that if a god wanted all of humanity to worship him he'd just make himself as obvious as gravity, math, or chemistry — all believers USE those facts because they work, but they believe in disparate gods because none work better than any other god..
The detailed sequence of elementary steps (about twenty) which must be involved in the B - Z reaction has been worked out by Richard Noyes.11 This mechanism (called «the Oregonator» in honor of the location of Noyes's laboratory) is well understood and involves nothing but ordinary chemistry, but it is too involved to discuss here.
In a few thousand years of recorded history, we went from dwelling in caves and mud huts and tee - pees, not understanding the natural world around us, or the broader universe, to being able to travel through space, using reason to ferret out the hidden secrets of how the world works, from physics to chemistry to biology, we worked out the tools and rules underpinning it all, mathematics, and now we can see objects that are almost impossibly small, the very tiniest building blocks of matter, (or at least we can examine them, even if you can't «see» them because you're using something other than your eyes and photons to view them) to the very farthest objects, the planets circling other, distant stars, that are in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THERIn a few thousand years of recorded history, we went from dwelling in caves and mud huts and tee - pees, not understanding the natural world around us, or the broader universe, to being able to travel through space, using reason to ferret out the hidden secrets of how the world works, from physics to chemistry to biology, we worked out the tools and rules underpinning it all, mathematics, and now we can see objects that are almost impossibly small, the very tiniest building blocks of matter, (or at least we can examine them, even if you can't «see» them because you're using something other than your eyes and photons to view them) to the very farthest objects, the planets circling other, distant stars, that are in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THERin caves and mud huts and tee - pees, not understanding the natural world around us, or the broader universe, to being able to travel through space, using reason to ferret out the hidden secrets of how the world works, from physics to chemistry to biology, we worked out the tools and rules underpinning it all, mathematics, and now we can see objects that are almost impossibly small, the very tiniest building blocks of matter, (or at least we can examine them, even if you can't «see» them because you're using something other than your eyes and photons to view them) to the very farthest objects, the planets circling other, distant stars, that are in their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THERin their own way, too small to see from here, like the atoms and parts of atoms themselves, detected indirectly, but indisputably THERE.
The phenomenon of growing consciousness on earth, in short, is directly due to the increasingly advanced organisation of more and more complicated elements, successively created by the working of chemistry and of Life.
However, there's a lot more chemistry to it than meets the eye; here we delve into the science to work out what's going on in your loaf.
Our product development team, with backgrounds in food science, chemistry, microbiology, nutrition, sensory, culinary and engineering, can work confidentially with you to create a vast array of food and beverage products.
I think put the starters in to work out the team chemistry but resting as much as possible and preventing any more injuries to key players.
But all of that's out of the way, and now they have the breathing room to build chemistry and work on what they need to in order to make leaps and bounds before the Playoffs.
Miracles do happen sometimes — the chemistry clicks, the new coach's culture sets in, desperation leads to tactical experimentation that actually works, etc. — but you can't plan on a miracle, and on paper, this ECU team doesn't appear to have any answers that the last two didn't.
But among the factors working in the Mountaineers» favor are a starting lineup of five seniors, good chemistry, an effective 40 - minute press and that reliably potent motivator: a snub by the NCAA tournament selection committee.
Original Gangster tricks from dubious sources; a sin - avoidance plan from Calipari; a corps of giants swatting shots on one possession and flummoxing guards on another; a 10 - man platoon with rout - fueling energy rather than chemistry problems: Almost everything is working in this, the season of the Big Blue Nuisance.
I said experiment because I am not sure how their chemistry would work out on the pitch as we do not see them everyday in training... for example I am not sure if Neny can play the defensive role as effectively as Coq, but since Coq is not performing at the level we usually expect of him anyway, I would pun for Neny there for now... Based on what I have seen so far, I would say Neny defensive game would be based on covering and interceptions rather than going in strongly for tackles like Coq but the plus is he runs and covers more ground than Flamini, and his movement and ball distribution is definitely better than both Flamini and Coq.
Ozil has better chemistry working off of Aaron in the wing than he does with Alexis.
add coquelin to them then considering the midfield chemistry between them this is simply one of the best midfield trio in europe they are working hard for the team at other end they are creating lots of chances which our attackers are now finishing.Long it may continue.
Mr. Dein definitely deserves a mention because of his hard work in bringing in players like Ian Wright, Dennis Bergkamp and the great chemistry he had with Arsene Wenger.
His work as a chemistry professor permits him the freedom to be at home with the girls when they are not in school.
My kids especially love that each year contains work in each of the science disciplines (many classical - approach history programs do biology one year, chemistry the next, etc.) The format is not step - by - step, so this curriculum requires a bit more planning than some others, but it's well worth the effort.
The average teacher has a 2.5 million dollar retirement plan - only works 180 days a year — took the easiest level of courses in college (even in math physics or chemistry most only took the first two years) and they are still whining.
(like you said, i.e. organic chemistry,...) I am finishing up my jr. yr and am an English major with a concentration in writing and rhetoric also working on a technical writing certificate, who desperately wishes she had majored in biomedicine.
His previous work showed that the element californium had unique properties and represented a break in the periodic table to a new kind of chemistry that had not been observed before.
As they talked, Eroy - Reveles scribbled with a marker on the mirrored closet door, like she did on fume hoods in the chemistry lab where she worked as a postdoc at the University of California (UC), San Francisco.
Instead, she majored in chemistry and pursued a Ph.D. «Five years into my graduate work, the relentless effort of building and characterizing molecules had left me neglecting my love of words and language.»
«I don't do a lot of pure chemistry anymore, but the kind of thinking I learned in getting my Ph.D. and doing my postdoc work, I use all the time,» McHale says.
He worked on the organic synthesis of molecules able to recognize and bind with other, smaller molecules, a phenomenon called molecular recognition, which had won Donald J. Cram, Jean - Marie Lehn, and Charles J. Pedersen the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1987.
Curriculum developers also worked to present these chemistry and biology lessons in a way that would be clear and intuitive for teachers incorporating the unit in their classrooms.
The monograph, considered one of the most important works in the history of chemistry, won him the 1954 Nobel Prize in chemistry.
This work was inspired by previous cross-coupling chemistry developed in the Baran lab, and catalyzed by discussions with pharmaceutical industry partners who view this as an area of major unmet need.
The work earned Libby the 1960 Nobel Prize in chemistry «for determinations in archaeology, geology, geophysics and other branches of science.»
She holds a bachelor's degree in chemistry from St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, Indiana, and has done graduate work in management at the University of Maryland.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z