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The Future is Bright

A place for my students to catch up and get ahead

Welcome to Mr Rep's page
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Albert Einstein says NYAHHH! 

Look right for relevant or recent pages - CLICK!
or below for tags and recent pages


Education's purpose is to replace an empty mind with an open one.
-- Malcolm Forbes -

AIM
  • Need to know more about science?
  • Studying KS3, GCSE or A level sciences?
  • Interested in learning more about biology, chemistry, physics, psychology, geology, or astronomy?
  • Are you in the spirit of the International Year of Astronomy?
  • Want to know when the International Space Station is flying over Oxford? (Click here!)
  • Are you just after some slideshows?
If you said YES to any of these, you have come to the right place!

Not only will you uncover some great ideas about science within these pages, but you will also discover useful pages to stretch your understanding of education and career paths that involve science. 

HOW DOES IT WORK?
  • Most pages have HYPERLINKS - click on these to open up the webpage.
  • There are also TAGS on each page - if you click on the tags you will get ALL the pages associated with that topic.
  • NOTE: This page (and Albert Einstein's tongue!) appear with many of the tags, so scroll down to see the others or look at the topics/links on the side. 
  • If the tags are not your thing, you can also navigate by looking in the ARCHIVE sections.
    If you know when something was posted, you can look for the Subject Heading. Click on the month, (e.g. January 2009, February 2009, March 2009, April 2009, May 2009) and it will give you these headings for that month, and you can move back and forth.
  • The pages have been shortened so as not to take up bandwidth, using a "cut". If you click on READ MORE, you can see the whole page.
  • Read more... )
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P1a 1.4 Convection
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P1a 1.3 Conduction
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P1b 7.3 Looking Into Space
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P1a 1.6 Hot Issues (Heat and Energy)
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Lifting Off to Study the Sky
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NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, launched aboard a United Launch Alliance Delta II rocket at 9:09 a.m. EST from Space Launch Complex-2 at Vandenberg Air Force Base. WISE will scan the entire sky in infrared light, picking up the glow of hundreds of millions of objects and producing millions of images.

Image Credit: Bill Hartenstein/United Launch Alliance

Global Digital Elevation Model
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This Global Digital Elevation Model, or GDEM, is a product of the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER), a joint program of NASA and Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry. The image was released on June 29, 2009, and was created by processing and stereo-correlating the 1.3 million-scene ASTER archive of optical images, covering Earth's land surface between 83 degrees North and 83 degrees South latitudes. The GDEM is produced with 98-feet postings, and is formatted as 23,000 one-by-one-degree tiles. In this colorized version, low elevations are purple, medium elevations are greens and yellows, and high elevations are orange, red and white.

With its 14 spectral bands from the visible to the thermal infrared wavelength region and its high spatial resolution of 50 to 300 feet, ASTER images Earth to map and monitor the changing surface of our planet. ASTER is one of five Earth-observing instruments launched Dec. 18, 1999, on NASA's Terra satellite.

The broad spectral coverage and high spectral resolution of ASTER provides scientists in numerous disciplines with critical information for surface mapping and monitoring of dynamic conditions and temporal change.

Image Credit: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Mayon Volcano, The Phillipines
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Tens of thousands of people living within the danger zone of Mayon Volcano in the Philippines were forced to evacuate to emergency shelters in mid-December 2009 as small earthquakes, incandescent lava at the summit and minor ash falls suggested a major eruption was on the way. On the evening of Dec. 14, the local volcano observatory raised the alert level to Level 3, which means "magma is close to the crater and hazardous explosive eruption is imminent."

This natural-color image of Mayon was captured on Dec. 15, 2009, by the Advanced Land Imager on NASA's Earth Observing-1 (EO-1) satellite. A small plume of ash and steam is blowing west from the summit. Dark-colored lava or debris flows from previous eruptions streak the flanks of the mountain. A ravine on the southeast slope is occupied by a particularly prominent lava or debris flow.

The Phillipine Star said on Dec. 22 that "ashfall blanketed at least three towns in Albay, raising new health fears for thousands already bracing for an eruption that could come at any time ... Health officials warned the tiny particles could cause respiratory problems or skin diseases, and could affect the thousands of people crammed into evacuation centers.

Also on Dec. 22, CNN reported that "tens of thousands of people have already fled their homes. More than 9,000 families -- a total of 44,394 people -- are being housed in evacuation camps after authorities raised the alert status of the country's most active volcano" as "fountains of red-hot lava shot up from the intensifying Mayon volcano."

Image Credit: NASA/Jesse Allen

The Dark Side of Carbon
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As interest in Earth's changing climate heats up, a tiny dark particle is stepping into the limelight: black carbon. Commonly known as soot, black carbon enters the air when fossil fuels and biofuels, such as coal, wood, and diesel are burned. Black carbon is found worldwide, but its presence and impact are particularly strong in Asia.

Black carbon, a short-lived particle, is in perpetual motion across the globe. The Tibetan Plateau's high levels of black carbon likely impact the region's temperature, clouds and monsoon season.

Image Credit: NASA

To everything, turn, turn, turn!
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Terra Turns Ten: Snow, Clouds and Sunlight
NASA flies three large, multi-sensor satellites that monitor Earth’s land, atmosphere, oceans and energy balance. Because the instruments on each satellite take measurements at the same time from the same vantage point, scientists are able to compare observations and tease out connections between different parts of the Earth system. The first of the three satellites, Terra, launched ten years ago on Dec. 18, 1999. In the decade since Terra launched, scientists have gained insight into the intricate connections that shape our planet's climate. The relationship between snow, clouds, and sunlight is a good example.

In November, the chill and snow of a Northern Hemisphere winter is on the horizon. Snow covers the far north and high elevations, as shown in the map of percent snow cover in November 2009. White areas show where snow covers the ground completely, while blue points to areas with partial snow cover. At the peak of the northern winter, more than 40 percent of the Earth’s land will be covered in snow.

In addition to being an important, life-sustaining source of water, the snow also reflects sunlight, limiting the amount of heat the Earth absorbs from the sun.

Image Credit: NASA

P1a 1.5 Heat Transfer by Design
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P1a 2.1 Forms of Energy
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P1a 2.4 Energy and Efficiency
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P1a 2.2 Conservation of Energy
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P1a 3.1 Electrical Devices
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P1a 2.3 Useful Energy
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Electric Circuits Revision for P2 5
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AQA P1a Megacrossword!
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P1a 3.4 The National Grid
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P1a 3.2 Electrical Power
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