expose-the-light:

Original Periodic Table, by Dmitri Mendeleev (1869)


Just as Da Vinci’s anatomy drawings helped doctors visualize what they were working on, so too did Dmitri Mendeleev’s efforts to organize what we knew of the elements into a rational data table. Mendeleev established the periodic table in the mid-nineteenth century, organizing the known elements and predicting more that have since been discovered. This table first appeared in a form that doesn’t look much like a table - it comes from a manuscript draft. The Periodic Table, which all schoolchildren memorize today, is one of the earliest examples of an infographic helping people to understand a scientific discipline.

(via quantumpie)

via io9.com

nabokovsnotebook:

Great physicists and their blackboards. 

(via meiringens)

via ironspy

Mawaru Penguin Drum, episode 22.

Mawaru Penguin Drum, episode 17.

Mawaru Penguindrum

The 6dF Galaxy Survey has collected more than 120,000 redshifts over the southern sky over a 5 year period from 2001 to 2005. Its goal is to map our southern view of the local universe, and use the peculiar motions of one-tenth of the survey to measure galaxy mass. It covers more than eight times the sky area of the successful 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey.

Stills from the video can be found here: paulbourke.net/​exhibition/​astc2006/​
Data: Anglo-Australian Observatory, 6dF data date: June 2006.
Visuals and animation: Paul Bourke
Music: Peter Morse, Glenn Rogers

Pride & Prejudice (2005), directed by Joe Wright.

Pride & Prejudice (2005), directed by Joe Wright.