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The Day After Trinity: J. Robert Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb (1980) [5] Palace Of Delights: The Exploratorium (1982, aired on Nova), producer, director, cinematographer; Eyes On The Prize: America's Civil Rights Years (1987, covering 1954–1965), series producer for PBS and cinematographer
In 2001, he worked with the Exploratorium's Center for Media and Communications to extend the museum's interactive learning environment with multi-media, video and telecommunications. [5] The Exploratorium and Larry Shaw utilized STEAM (Science, Tech, Engineering, Art, Math) to help visitors understand the world, long before the STEAM (or STEM ...
The Exploratorium provided a form of "educational sightseeing" as well as the understanding of the underlying principles. [22] [23] The exhibits were arranged and structured to allow for free access to any part of the museum. Instead of tour guides, fifteen to twenty college students or secondary students, as well as some adults, were employed ...
Several pieces were purchased by the Exploratorium in 1971, some of which are on display to this day. [14] In 2014 the ICA held a retrospective exhibition Cybernetic Serendipity: A Documentation which included documents, installation photographs, press reviews and publications and a series of discussions in one of which Peter Zinovieff took ...
Explorabook: A Kid's Science Museum in a Book by John Cassidy, Pat Murphy, and Paul Doherty (1991) Murphy, Pat (1993). Bending light : an Exploratorium toolbook. By Nature's Design (1993) by Pat Murphy; The Science Explorer (1996) by Pat Murphy, Ellen Klages, and Linda Shore; The Color of Nature (1996) by Pat Murphy and Paul Doherty
The Exploratorium campus comprises 330,000 sq ft (31,000 m 2) of indoor and outdoor exhibit space and includes 1.5 acres (0.61 ha) of freely accessible public space. The exhibits are housed in and around Pier 15, which extends over 800 ft (240 m) over the Bay. [14] The Exploratorium at Pier 15 was designed by architectural firm EHDD. [15]
Cloud Rings at the Exploratorium. Some examples of Kahn's work to capture the invisible include building facades that move in waves in response to wind; [11] [12] indoor tornadoes and vortices made of fog, steam, or fire; [13] and a transparent sphere containing water and sand which, when spun, erodes a beach-like ripple pattern into the sand surface.
Title page of the digest's first volume, 1905. Book Review Digest is a reference work by H. W. Wilson Company that compiles recent book reviews. Printed monthly with annual compendia, it digests American and English periodicals from 1905 to the present day.