39 Results for : globular
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The Omega Point Trilogy , Hörbuch, Digital, ungekürzt, 702min
6599 A.D.: The war between the Earth Federation and the Herculean Empire had been over for more than three centuries. The planet in the Hercules Globular Cluster was a cinder; the few descendents of the surviving Herculeans lived on Myraa's World, half a galaxy away, in what seemed to be a religious commune. But on an unnamed planet, deep within the Hercules Cluster, two survivors, father and son, gather their resources and plan to enforce a reign of terror over the Federation worlds. But the woman Myraa has a different vision - one which excludes empires and warring armies. Subtly, she strives to shape events toward a different end. Rising to one of the most unusual climaxes in recent fantastic literature, this novel of chase and vengeance depicts a colorful, poetic future which is struggling to overcome its past. Filled with striking twists and vivid ideas, this is space opera at its most modern. ungekürzt. Language: English. Narrator: Oliver Wyman. Audio sample: https://samples.audible.de/bk/adbl/003694/bk_adbl_003694_sample.mp3. Digital audiobook in aax.- Shop: Audible
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The binding of linker histone H5 to DNA and chromatin
The binding of linker histone H5 to DNA and chromatin ab 67.99 € als Taschenbuch: Studies of the globular and amino terminal domains. Aus dem Bereich: Bücher, Wissenschaft, Biologie,- Shop: hugendubel
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Harlow Shapley - Biography of an Astronomer: The Man Who Measured the Universe , Hörbuch, Digital, ungekürzt, 115min
Harlow Shapley was an astronomer, humanitarian, and public figure in his day. Born in the hills of the Ozarks in Missouri, he went on to become the director of the Harvard College Observatory and discovered our place in the galaxy. Because of the painstaking work of this tireless American astronomer, we were given a clearer picture of our place in the universe. Shapley was a prodigious astronomer who completed significant work on globular clusters, Cepheid variables, as well as key aspects of cosmology and stellar astronomy, including nebular and stellar spectroscopy and photometry. Shapley also did important work on the Magellanic Clouds, which are neighbor galaxies to our own Milky Way. He made the deduction that the Sun is located at the central plane of the galaxy on a minor arm of the Milky Way about 30,000 light years from the galactic center. This was in direct conflict with the prevailing view of the galaxy and caused quite a stir in the astronomical community. At the peak of his career as an astronomer, he worked at the Mt. Wilson Observatory and afterward served at the helm of the Harvard College Observatory, eventually transforming it into an important training and observational facility. Shapley was to lead the development of the Harvard Astronomy program, which produced many prominent astronomers. Shapley's work on international issues in astronomy lead him to multiple visits to Russia. This was at the early stages of the Cold War between the United States and Russia. Harlow Shapley had caught the eye of the FBI and the famed communist hunter Joseph McCarthy, and he was investigated by the Committee of Un-American activities. Shapley was later cleared of any wrong doing, but it almost cost him the directorship of the Harvard College Observatory. Shapley became a prodigious writer for the general public so they could understand and appreciate the wonders of the universe. ungekürzt. Language: English. Narrator: Gregory Diehl. Audio sample: https://samples.audible.de/bk/acx0/043351/bk_acx0_043351_sample.mp3. Digital audiobook in aax.- Shop: Audible
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Dynamical Evolution of Globular Clusters
Dynamical Evolution of Globular Clusters: ab 29.99 €- Shop: ebook.de
- Price: 29.99 EUR excl. shipping
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The Globular Star Clusters of the Andromeda Galaxy
The Globular Star Clusters of the Andromeda Galaxy: ab 39.99 €- Shop: ebook.de
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Globular Clusters - Guides to Galaxies
Globular Clusters - Guides to Galaxies - Proceedings of the Joint ESO-FONDAP Workshop on Globular Clusters held in Concepción Chile 6-10 March 2006: ab 138.99 €- Shop: ebook.de
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Globular Cluster Binaries and Gravitational Wave Parameter Estimation
Globular Cluster Binaries and Gravitational Wave Parameter Estimation - Challenges and Efficient Solutions: ab 106.99 €- Shop: ebook.de
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The Fuzzy Dice Man Cometh
In the summer of '63, at the age of 11, Buck formed his first band, The Centuries . An April Fools 2012 epiphany urged Buck to pick up where he left off 38 years ago. That same year on August 16th, Buck purchased the Quantum Leap East-West Silver Orchestra On-A-Disc. In April 2013 he enrolled in school to continue his edification in composition, arranging and orchestration. The following collection was produced during the period of May 2012 to July 2013. The Breakfast in Bed Ballet (4:45) This piece is an adaptation of a ballad I had written called I Can Live with That. The lyrics open with awaking to the dawn with your loved one beside you. The bouncy melody in the chorus suggested a dance, ergo ballet. I was compelled to add additional cadences and an interlude before the final chorus. The chorus ends on a comically sour note denoting it's time get out of bed and face reality. Soundtrack for your Nightmares (1:34) Based on Thirteen Flutes a-Floating (read about it's conception below). In this version the X-axis denotes the musical pitch while the Y-axis represents time. I like listening to this before I go to bed. String Section One (4:13) This started out as an exercise in modulation and articulation for a string quartet, but it got of control. I did what I could to pull the reins in, but it needed that Contrabass. And it started out as a sweet melody with thoughtful chord changes but rock chord changes are a part of my psyche, so I couldn't resist using them in the "chorus." I consider them, "Neapolitans." Due to the forceful articulation, it is recommended that string players use their worst instrument. Temple Bells (3:04) An upbeat festive theme based on the Mongolian/Chinese pentatonic scale. It has a seasonal taste suitable for the Christmas holidays. The violas get the pluck pizzicato-ed out of them. A Hole-in-One (3:47) Based upon a song I had written using golf as a metaphor for hope and eventual triumph. Picture a fairway with a green flag in the distance, on it the number 1 flapping in the breeze. Experience the excitement, the exhilaration, that rush of adrenaline accompanying the heraldic victory of spotting your ball wedged between the side of the cup and the flag pole. I suck at golf, but I'm not bad at "putt-putt" (miniature golf). Even there, watching your ball bounce off the shallow brick wall bordering the green, ricocheting off a rock positioned in the middle of the path, and down across the lie from hell into the cup is pretty cool. Washboards are used to introduce the basic rhythm sequence at the beginning. Washboards were employed because they suggested a hand scrub cleaning and I understand that golfers scrub their balls before teeing off. Thirteen Flutes a-Floating (1:29) It's your freshman year in Music College and it's 1970 and you're eighteen and you got no gig and it's Saturday night and you're staring at a lava lamp on the dining table in a friend's apartment on the Northwest side of Chicago and there's a steno pad with a marking pen on the table and it's within reach and you decide to draw the globular activity in the lava lamp in phases and look at the lines on the paper and see a music staff and imagine a grid where the horizontal lines (X-axis)denote time moving from top to bottom and the vertical lines (Y-axis) and the space to the right of each line denote the pitch moving from right to left and wherever an image appears a musical note of predetermined pitch and duration is played by one or more of thirteen flutes you chose because you're Major is in Woodwind Performance and your friend has a flute. Please note: This composition was performed a year later at Triton College. There weren't enough flutists so clarinets were substituted. The title is derived from the Twelve Days of Christmas and the sound of water droplets echoing in a cave. I don't what prompted me to add the sound effect. But I like it. March of the Mouth Puppets (3:56) A 12-tone melody was derived from the roll of twelve musician's dice. (Twelve 12-sided die, each side notated with a note from our chromatic scale.) Artistic liberty intervened and two notes were switched. Four underlying chords were determined by the dice as well by rolling four sets consisting of three dice. Artistic liberty was again applied to determine the triads. In the beginning the 12-note theme is stretched over 16 bars and later presented in 1/4, 1/8 and 1/16 note patterns in a fugue-like form. Outside the serialism is the Tuba playing a melodic bass line based on the aforementioned triads and 12-tone theme. The Tuba is a sealed 55-gallon barrel holding back a chromatic beast wanting to free itself of the barrel's melodic restraints. Toward the end of the "fugue" I thought the piece was going to explode. The orchestration is designed to sound like a marching band, locked in step to the beat of an ominous bass drum, the instruments saying the same fearful thing, over and over, drumming it in, only with a different annoying tone of voice, especially that bitchy piccolo. Of course the marching band is a metaphor for the pundits that permeate our meta-media with their propaganda. Chance Constellation Observation 1930 (2:19) This a representation of "Constellation According to the Laws of Chance -1930" artist: Jean (Hans) Arp. A grid where both the X and Y- axis determine the pitch and the Z-axis representing note time/duration is a series of concentric rings. The scales used are whole tones starting on C and C#. At the center of the rings are C4 and C#4. C4 is plotted along the vertical axis going up to the C7s and going down to the C1s. C#4 is plotted along the horizontal axis going right to the C#7s and going left to the C#1s. Time begins in the center and moves outward through each ring in clockwise fashion. The rings are divided into quarters with each quarter segment being one beat in 4/4 time. Wherever the black and white images appear there is a note. On occasion artistic license was applied. From Inside the Zodiac Ride at the Cosmic Carnival (7:51) Imagine you're on a carnival ride on which the Astrocab you're in glides along rails in 7/8 time. From the rail on the left emanates the sound of intermittent twinkling stars provided by a harp playing a B7sus4 pad. And on the right, that rail carries an intermittent electrical hum produced from a low-end string section consisting of violas, cellos, and basses playing with the same B7sus4 pad. Entering the ride and following the Zodiac the composition opens with Aquarius (January) and ends with Capricorn (December). Two schools of thought start the zodiac with the key of C Major (Aquarius) stepping through a cycle of fifths and ending in F Major (Capricorn), or starting in Bb Major moving chromatically and ending on A Major. For this piece both keys were juxtaposed in poly-chordal fashion (IE: C Major over Bb Major, G Major over B Major, etc.). This limited the scales of each double-key to six notes, sometimes five. Artistic license was applied on a few occasions. Each sign of the Zodiac receives approximately 30 seconds of treatment. Aquarius the Water Carrier (Air) January Pisces the Fish (Water) February Aries the Ram (Fire) March Taurus the Bull (Earth) April Gemini the Twins (Air) May Cancer the Crab (Water) June Leo the Lion (Fire) July Virgo the Virgin (Earth) August Libra the Scales (Air) September Scorpio the Scorpion (Water) October Sagittarius the Centaur (Fire) November Capricorn the Goat (Earth) December Follow the Boson Ball (2:30) This is an adaptation of the Higgs Boson (ATLAS Preliminary data) sonification by Domenico Vicinanza. On July 4, 2012, the Higgs boson, an elementary particle, was possibly discovered at CERN. Domenico Vicinanza, a professional composer and particle physicist, took the preliminary Higgs data points from the CERN data and assigned notes to each of the numbers. At 60 beats per minute, the musical piece consists of fifty-eight 16th notes and centers on the key of C Major. This adaptat- Shop: odax
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Anterior Space (LP)
Eine Platte, die gerade den gereifteren Hörer an den Ohrensessel-Techno der 90er erinnern dürfte, als Black Dog, B12, Plastikman und Warp die Welt regierten.Deluxe 180g Vinyl, Reverse Board Sleeve, MP3 Download HOLOVR ist Jimmy Billingham, der schon als Tidal, Venn Rain, Journey of Mind & Holographic Mind Platten auf Firecracker Records, Opal Tapes und Hooker Visions und Indole Records veröffentlicht hat. Eine Platte, die gerade den gereifteren Hörer an den Ohrensessel-Techno der 90er erinnern dürfte, als Black Dog, B12, Platikman und Warp die Welt regierten Anterior Space may strike some listeners of a certain age as an echo of the gilded age of armchair techno exemplified by Warp Records' Artificial Intelligence comps. There's a similar convergence of the cerebral and the blissful in the four epic compositions HOLOVR (aka Jimmy Billingham) finesses from his analog and digital synths as that found on those early-'90s pieces by Black Dog, B12, and others. Discussing the creation of Anterior Space, which is the first HOLOVR release to feature no beats, Billingham reveals, Dropping drums gave me a bit more freedom in terms of tempo and rhythm, and it was actually really liberating. Having fewer elements in a track also meant it was possible to record live, which is my preferred way of working, as you can capture an actual snapshot of time and a natural, in-the-moment negotiation of the different elements of a track. I'd know a track was ready if I could sit there and listen to it looping round for long periods of time and really get lost in it, and then I'd try and capture a nice section of that in the space of 10 minutes or whatever. You can hear this on Anterior Space's opening 11-minute track, Into Light. Its subtle gradations of warped tones and implied rhythms teem with hyperactive elegance. The titular light glints off of several jeweled facets, like a disco ball made out of diamonds. The slow, mobile-like rotation of synth baubles over a foundation of yearning, icy drones on Apparent Motion creates the illusion of a shimmering stasis, but there's actually a great deal happening here. There's lots of subtle variation in the tracks, with pattern length differences and parameter tweaks, Billingham says. I'm really into the hypnotic effect that you can get from this, the feeling of constant change within something that is otherwise staying the same. Thankfully, all these elements on Apparent Motion coalesce into a celestial chillout zone and serve as an aural icepack for your overworked mind. On Temporary, Autonomous, the lightest of acidic squelches prod this track into a similar rarefied ether as the less propulsive cuts on Plastikman's Sheet One. Eleven-minute closer Involution is a gradual procession of globular ambience that seems always to be changing and yet also emitting a steady-state glow. It's an aural illusion that permeates all of Anterior Space, and it will freeze your perception of time to a blessed perpetual now. TRACKS: A1 Into Light (11:02) A2 Apparent Motion (9:41) B1 Temporary, Autonomous (8:36) B2 Involution (11:10)- Shop: odax
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