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Jacobs Journal of Earth Science; Jacobs Journal of Electronics and Communications; Jacobs Journal of Emergency Medicine; Jacobs Journal of Entomology and Zoological Studies; Jacobs Journal of Environmental Sciences; Jacobs Journal of Enzymology and Enzyme Engineering; Jacobs Journal of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine; Jacobs Journal of ...
Walter Abraham Jacobs (December 24, 1883 – July 12, 1967) was an American chemist who discovered the Gould-Jacobs reaction. Much of his career was spent at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research , New York City.
Dr. (Captain) George F. Bond, senior medical officer and principal investigator for the SEALAB I and II experiments. Preliminary research work was undertaken by George F. Bond, who named the project after the Book of Genesis, which prophesised humans would gain dominion over the oceans.
Jacobs Engineering Group Inc (NYSE: J) has been selected to provide design services for the remaining phases of the Eastern New Mexico Water Utility Authority's (ENMWUA) rural water supply system.
The water thread experiment is a phenomenon that occurs when two containers of deionized water, placed on an insulator, are connected by a thread, then a high-voltage positive electric charge is applied to one container, and a negative charge to the other. At a critical voltage, an unsupported water liquid bridge is formed between the ...
March 2021 in science; Science Summary for this section 1 March: A review classifies SETI technosignatures. [1] 1 March A scientific review produced by the i.a. NASA-sponsored online workshop TechnoClimes 2020 about mission concepts for the search of technosignatures is published. They classify signatures based on a metric about the distance of ...
Jacobs was born to a Jewish family in New Bedford, Massachusetts. [1] [2] [3] He earned his Bachelor of Science in electrical engineering from Cornell University in 1956, and his Master of Science and Doctor of Science degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1957 and 1959, respectively.
In 1968, the Province of Ontario and the Government of Canada set aside an area in a sparsely inhabited region of central Canada, southeast of Kenora, Ontario, which is relatively unaffected by external human influences and industrial activities, for experimental studies of the causes and control of eutrophication and other types of water pollution.