Svet Fit Music
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[ENGSUB] Rapper Kihyun feat Changkyun's sexy deep voice in the background [몬스타엑스] - Duration: 0:35.Even when you wake up, I'll be by your side, good morning
Because you're so beautiful, baby girl, you earned it
So baby, close your eyes Just trust and follow me
Gonna speed up now, so wrap your arms around my waist You can say anything when it's just us two
Save this moment for me: us reflected in the mirror, yeah
From breakfast, lunch, to dinner I want to be together all day
Until daybreak, I won't stop if I'm looking into your eyes
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The Map of Chemistry - Duration: 12:58.This video was sponsored by the great courses plus.
The Universe is made of matter.
98% of this matter (ignoring the dark matter) is pure Hydrogen and Helium, but thankfully
billions of years ago supergiant stars fused the hydrogen and helium into all the other
elements and then exploded them all over the Universe and that's where chemistry came
from.
These elements grouped together into a vast array of different molecules, and these molecules
combined with each other in a stupendous number of complicated ways.
Chemistry is the subject that studies this matter in all of its forms and how it all
interacts.
It goes from simple atoms right through to complex biological molecules like proteins
and DNA.
It is a huge, fascinating and complex subject, and this video is all of that condensed.
Humans have had an interest in Chemistry for a very long time, we wouldn't be what we
are today if it was not for the chemical reaction of fire.
We used this to develop other chemical techniques from cooking food, making metal from ores
or making glass amongst many others.
Since then many advances of human civilisation have been built on the back of advances in
chemistry like metal working, or manufacturing fertiliser or making new materials and drugs.
Lets look at what falls under the umbrella of chemistry.
First there is matter and all the different things matter is made of.
At the very smallest scale we start with atoms and the periodic table that organises all
the different types of atom, called chemical elements.
Elements in each column have similar chemical properties.
Atoms are made of protons and neutrons in the nucleus with electrons surrounding them
and most of chemistry is due to how these electrons behave.
By joining together atoms you get molecules and different kinds of molecule are called
chemical compounds.
Chemical compounds usually have very different chemical properties to the elements they are
made from.
Think about it, Hydrogen is very explody, oxygen is very burny, but combine them into
H2O you get water, the least explody burny thing around.
Compounds don't have to be made of singe molecules, many solids like metals or salts
have a crystal structure, made of repeating groups of atoms called unit cells.
If you have several substances together you have a mixture, like the air around you or
a cake.
Now lets move onto how atoms stick together with the very important subject of bonding.
Atoms bond together in several different ways where they reduce their combined energy by
stealing or sharing electrons, or moving them into different configurations.
A universal rule in science is everything is always trying to minimise their energy
and bonding is one way that atoms achieve that.
Understanding how energy moves around in chemical substances is vital to understand when reactions
will or will not happen.
For example wood won't react with oxygen to start burning spontaneously, but if you
give it enough energy to begin with it will.
Another example where energy is very important is where you can speed up a reaction between
two other compounds by introducing a catalyst, and the catalysts make it more energetically
favourable, and so speeds up the reaction.
Energy also determines when compounds will exist in the different forms, solid, liquid
or gas.
Which form they will be found in comes from the temperature that they are at and the pressure
that they are under.
The values vary for each material but in general things are solid at low temperature and/or
high pressure, and gas at high temperature and low pressure.
Another really interesting from of matter is a plasma which is a where you rip electrons
off atoms in a gas to make them into ions, this is what is used to make neon lights.
Chemical reactions form the core of chemistry: which compounds react with each other, why
they react, and what is left over after a reaction.
There are many different kinds of reaction which can be categorised in different ways.
All of these reactions are governed by a set of fundamental rules called chemical laws
the foundation of which is the conservation of mass and energy which means that no matter
or energy is created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, they just change to different forms.
Kinetics is the study of how fast reactions happen and the things that control what the
reaction rates are.
A reaction where electrons are transferred from one reactant to another is called a Oxidation-Reduction
reaction, or a redox reaction for short.
Oxidation means a loss of electrons from a substance and reduction means the gain of
electrons and they have to happen together.
An example is sodium and chlorine, chlorine is the reducing agent, and sodium is the oxidising
agent.
Another important property of substances is their pH, whether they are an acid or a base.
There are several theories to model acid-base reactions, but one way to think about it is
that acids are substances that have a hydrogen ion ready to give up in a chemical reaction
and a base is a substance that takes a hydrogen ion.
If there are a number of different chemical compounds which can react with each other
back and forth.
There can be swings between one substance and another.
Equilibrium is where the amount of each substance is constant, even though a reaction may still
be taking place.
This can also happen in phases changes like from solid to liquid or liquid to gas.
This is the study of equilibrium.
So those are the basics of chemistry.
Research in chemistry looks at how these rules apply in different chemical systems.
So now I'm going to move on to look at the different fields in chemistry.
Theoretical chemistry attempts to explain the structures of atoms and molecules and
how they interact using mathematical methods.
It is very closely related to theoretical physics and quantum chemistry, and often uses
techniques in computational chemistry where atoms, molecules and reactions are simulated
in a computer.
Now, simulating the proper quantum behaviour of anything more complicated than a hydrogen
atom is very difficult/impossible for multiple bodies.
So many cutting edge techniques in computer science are used to try and simulate molecules
and how they interact with each other.
In fact this is one of the most exciting applications of quantum computers because they would be
able to directly simulate chemical systems, and would help with things like discovering
novel materials and drugs and a whole lot more.
Physical Chemistry studies chemical systems in terms of their physics, so things like
energy, force, time, motion, thermodynamics, quantum properties amongst others.
There are many sub-fields, like looking at the electronic properties in Electrochemistry
which is important for developing better batteries or Materials Science which is trying to create
materials with new properties like extreme strength, durability or self-healing.
This is a critical problem with building Earth based nuclear fusion reactors which are reliant
on new materials.
Analytical chemistry is like detective work, you've got a sample of something and you
need to work out what it is made of, and the amount of the different components.
Chemists have developed a huge array of techniques to probe and measure different properties
of different materials.
Traditional techniques involve wet chemical techniques, like precipitation which separates
compounds depending on what temperature they evaporate.
There's also a huge array of modern techniques like chromatography where different compounds
move at different speeds through a solution and so separate.
Or the many different kinds of spectroscopy, that can detect materials by shining light
on them, or mass spectrometry where the materials are flung though electric or magnetic fields
to separate them according to their masses.
And finally we get to the huge fields of Inorganic, Organic and Biochemistry.
Organic and Biochemistry look at the chemistry of living things and Inorganic chemistry looks
at everything else, although there is still a large amount of crossover.
Most of the inorganic compounds that are studied are man-made and a lot of the motivation is
to find chemicals with new properties that can be used in the chemical industry and the
wider world.
In fact there are very few areas of human endeavour where inorganic chemistry has not
been used in some way.
There is medicine and agriculture, special fluids like detergents or emulsifiers, special
coatings, materials, pigments or fuels for many industrial purposes.
Within chemical production itself catalysts are very important as they speed up other
chemical reactions.
Inorganic chemistry also bleeds into materials science making solids with novel crystal structures
like high temperature superconductors for example.
The list is is endless.
Now between inorganic and organic chemistry sits organometallic chemistry.
This looks at organic compounds chemical which are bonded with a metal, and are typically
used in reactions in the chemical industry often as catalysts.
Organic chemistry looks at the structure and behaviour of the molecules of life which are
typically built from a small set of different atoms: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen,
plus a few others.
Organic chemists also look at making new organic compounds with useful properties.
Organic molecules all contain carbon and the carbon hydrogen bond is the most common structure
in organic chemistry.
There are a huge number of applications of organic chemistry in industry: fertilisers,
pesticides, lubricants, polymers and plastics.
In the consumer world there's fragrances, flavourings and preservatives, and of course
drugs in the pharmaceutical industry.
And finally, out of organic chemistry comes biochemistry which studies the chemistry of
living organisms.
Biochemistry studies components that can be inorganic, like water or minerals, but also
looks at the biggest and most complex molecules like proteins, fats and DNA.
At the other end this field also blends into molecular biology which looks in the finest
detail at how life arises out of the chemical processes inside cells.
Within biochemistry there are four main classes of molecules called biomolecules.
Carbohydrates are used for structures and storing energy.
Lipids which make up fats.
Proteins, which are very large molecules made from amino acids that have a huge array of
different functions in the body.
And nucleic acids that are used to convey genetic information.
Research in biochemistry has had a huge impact on medicine helping us understand infectious
and genetic diseases, improving organ and tissue transplantations, working our what
is wrong with you with clinical diagnostics and of course understanding nutrition: looking
at the functions of vitamins and minerals in our body.
Biochemistry has also important for agriculture studying soils, fertilisers and pest controls
and there's many other applications too.
So that is my attempt to summarise all of chemistry in about 12 minutes, no simple task
as it's so incredibly complicated.
It has always amazed me that something so complex as a human is built on a foundation
of a huge number of simple chemical reactions.
Your consciousness right now is a function of the chemistry going on in your braincells
oxygen being passed from your blood, and sugars being metabolised inside them.
Chemistry spans a huge mountain of complexity from a single atom to the cells that keep
you alive, and I find it endlessly fascinating.
Like with all my other videos there's a poster available and so if you want to get
hold of that check out the links in the description below.
Also if you enjoyed this video you might want to check out the video's sponsor The Great
Courses Plus.
The Great Courses Plus is an online video subscription service with thousands and thousands
of lectures on all sorts of different subjects all delivered by domain experts from top ivy
league colleges and other institutions and they have got a whole bunch specifically on
chemistry.
I have been watching one called chemistry 2nd edition by Professor Frank Cardulla, and
I've been enjoying his presentation style he's making it very fun and engaging so
I've been picking up some tips from that.
The best thing is you can get one month for free if you follow the link the great courses
plus dot com slash domain of science and I've also put that link in the description below
so click on the link to start your free trial today.
And the best thing is there's no tests or anything like that you can just learn for
the joy of learning, which is something I love to do, so that might be of interest.
Otherwise thanks again for watching, and for me, its back to the drawing board.
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Jacob Banks - Chainsmoking - Duration: 3:14.♪♪♪
♪ IT'S GETTING HARDER TO BREATH ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY SANITY ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY LUNGS ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪♪♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ I KNOW MY LEASE IS UP ♪
♪ AND THE BAILIFFS AT THE DOOR ♪
♪ AND STILL I'M HANGING ON ♪
♪ TO THE LIFE WE HAD BEFORE ♪
♪ I KNOW THIS CODEINE LOVE ♪
♪ WON'T LEAD ME TO THE LORD ♪
♪ ALL THOUGH I'M BLACK AND BLUE ♪
♪ I'M BEGGING YOU FOR MORE ♪
♪ IT'S GETTING HARDER TO BREATH ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY SANITY ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY LUNGS ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ WE WATCH THE WATER RISE ♪
♪ AND WAITING BY THE SHORE ♪
♪ TAKE ME ON TOP TO OF THE WORLD ♪
♪ AND LEAVE ME ON THE FLOOR ♪
♪ YOU SAY WE'RE MEANT TO BE BUT ♪
♪ I'VE SEEN YOUR ODYSSEY ♪
♪ I'LL BE YOUR CASUALTY ♪
♪ WHEN MORNING COMES ♪
♪♪♪
♪ IT'S GETTING HARDER TO BREATH ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY SANITY ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY LUNGS ♪
♪ IT'S GETTING HARDER TO BREATH ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY SANITY ♪
♪ CAN'T BE GOOD FOR MY LUNGS ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪ CHAIN SMOKING YOUR LOVE ♪
♪♪♪
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Cartoon about kids and care for them. Evening in the hospital for children. children's cartoon. - Duration: 4:59.-------------------------------------------
The Painstaking Art of Making a Luxury Watch - Duration: 6:30.Every new watch is like a new piece of art
It has a different story to tell
It's a very interesting thing about watches
on the one hand you have a high precision device
and the other thing is
they have to be hand finished
which is very related to arts and crafts
You have these two worlds in one watch
both the aesthetical aspect of it
and the mechanical aspect of it
Here we are at Arnold and Son
in our premises at La Chaux-de-Fonds
where we manufacture all of our watches
Arnold and Son refers to John Arnold
who was one of the biggest and most important
watchmaker who ever lived
he invented a lot of technical solutions
still in use today
The aim of the modern company
to innovate and to continue his legacy
but in a contemporary, new manner
The idea is really to continue the story more than to repeating it
First with the design team
we design how the watch should look like
The size it should have, the thickness
you have to have a kind of mechanical harmony
is it good looking or not
and when we are happy with the new complications
and we think the watch has something new
then we create basically the inner works which will make the aesthetic happen
The first thing you have to do is to order the right material
because we use a lot of different materials into mechanical movement
going from brass over steel up to titanium or gold
and you need a specific material for every different part of it
once you have the raw material
you start really making the components
We have different kinds of raw materials going to different workshops
for depending on the part you want to make
If you want to do watchmaking on super high level
you need extremely skilled and specifically trained people
we have more than thirty different job descriptions
purely different educations
and you find these educations, these training
only in this region
because nowhere else in the world you need such kind of know how
Working with tiny parts is a challenge because tiny parts makes very small tolerances
We are working in micron tolerances
so you cannot do anything without good tooling
We have in house a tool making department
which makes from the little screwdriver the watchmaker needs
up to a stamping tool which takes months of development
The reason why we do all our tooling in house
because if you're not mastering your tools, you're not mastering the part you want to produce
Once all the parts are cut with machinery, they go to be cleaned
They're submitted o quality control, who decides if the part is good enough
to continue to the decoration workshop
Different kind of traditional movement decorations are applied
from geneva stripes, satin finish. Depending on the component
Is a mechanical watch you buy today is not a leading technology anymore
It's really crafts and arts
You are not racing for technological breakthrough
you are more racing for making more spectacular watches
You build a very different relation to a mechanical watch than you do to an electronic device
because the day you buy it you know that the next one will come
and that you will swap it for getting the better one
With a mechanical watch it's really the object as a physical object
of all the hand work which make it special and unique
That's makes I think a big difference to something more on the electronic side
Once these parts have been decorated they are quality checked again
to see if the decoration hasn't affected the functional aspect of it
That's always a bit if a trick you have to decorate but not deteriorate the part
They go to be preassembled in a specific workshop before going to the watchmakers
set stones for instance into main plates. Put axis onto wheels
and once all these parts have been preassembled, they arrive to the watchmaker who does the final assembly
The watchmaker gets all the little parts in little boxes
starts taking the main plate which is the base on everything gets built on
adding the wheels which is all on axis
put different bridges holding all different wheels in place
You have to add all the winding mechanism because you want to be able to wind your watch
put a dial on it then you put hands
and one last thing which we add always at the end is the escapement
which is basically the heart of any mechanical watch, it's also
what you hear when your listening to a mechanical watch when you hear the tick tock
It's the very first time you will see and hear your watch moving
Starting from the simple beating, it's a long process going to a highly accurate mechanical watch
You cannot just put the parts together and expect the watch to tell perfect time
We are checking the watches for 600 hours on different vibration and other machines
to get really sure that everything is ok
can be just s little tiny dust, you don't see it when you put it together
but when you move the watch it can a fild of the movement
So this process is pretty pretty long but this is what the complexity of such a mechanical device requests
Once that you've seen that the accuracy of the movement is good, you put it into a watch case
which will protect the movement
you add the bracelet, and the buckle and you have a watch
Watches are most of the time perceived as a time capsule
It's really something which are still built today as it used to be for the last centuries
It's nice also for people to be able to buy something
which has always existed and probably will always exist as a form of art
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Indian Army's 'Exercise Thar Shakti' concludes on a high note - Duration: 1:26.-------------------------------------------
👠 💋 Ксения Ситник снялась в соблазнительной фотосессии #ValeryAliakseyeu - Duration: 2:41.-------------------------------------------
25 Facts About House Of Cards - Duration: 8:50.-------------------------------------------
WoW Legion PvP Gameplay Patch 7.2 - Arathi Blizzard action - Team, where are you? - Duration: 17:37.WoW Legion PvP Gameplay Patch 7.2 - Arathi Blizzard action - Team, where are you?
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pricing photography: Image use vs day rate - Duration: 4:10.-------------------------------------------
UC Santa Cruz Special Report: Cancer Research (Treehouse Childhood Cancer Initiative) - Duration: 3:46.- Treehouse Childhood Cancer Initiative
is an effort to identify new treatment options
for children with difficult to treat cancers.
I think UC Santa Cruz is really the only place
where we could have Treehouse
because our strength is big data
and big data bioinformatics.
And so we search for patterns that make
this particular child's tumor
similar to another tumor that already
has a treatment option.
So we're not discovering new drugs,
but we are what's called repositioning
an existing drug from another cancer patient
to this child.
Usually for difficult cases,
there is a group of physicians that get together
to discuss the case and decide
on the best course of treatment,
so the unique thing now is that we're invited
to these tumor boards to provide our view on the case,
to provide our analysis and our view
from the genomics side
that could be used by the clinicians
and could be further discussed in these tumor boards.
And that's a pretty unique thing.
We're very very excited and honored
to actually be invited.
When I came here to UC Santa Cruz,
I found out that there was a staff member at the time,
Katrina Learned, who was working
for the Genome Browser Group,
and Katrina's daughter Aurora just completed
treatment for a childhood cancer called neuroblastoma.
- When she was first diagnosed with cancer something
that we were waiting to hear with like baited breath
was whether she had intermediate risk neuroblastoma
or high risk neuroblastoma.
It was a huge thing to figure out and to find out.
And when we found out that she had intermediate risk
and that she was gonna be okay.
That if we went through everything,
she was gonna be okay.
I just knew that if I had gotten the other news
that she had high risk,
if that she had maybe 60 to 75%,
actually 60 to 65% survival rate after five years,
it would have been devastating.
My dream at that moment was that every person
whose child gets diagnosed with cancer
would be to have that hope and that expectation
that there will be a cure and their child will be cured.
- We started with no funding.
We were really a group of volunteers,
and then we gradually got support
from local advocacy groups including some gift money
from Unravel Pediatric Cancer and others.
And we got a grant from Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation.
We won the California Initiative to Advance
Precision Medicine, which is an initiative
by Governor Brown.
We're very honored to get selected
as one of the demonstration projects,
and then that really paved the way for us
to win the $2.5 million grant
from St. Baldrick's Foundation.
And that is one of the largest grants
that they actually have,
and we are really really honored to receive that
at UC Santa Cruz.
- After we got the St. Baldrick's grant,
we decided we wanted to give back.
So Treehouse decided to do our own head shaving event
in honor of St. Baldrick's.
And when I heard about the event,
I knew I wanted to participate.
So I set a goal for myself of raising $10,000
to shave my head,
and I surpassed that goal and ended up raising $14,000
for St. Baldrick's.
And our whole team, everybody combined,
raised over $28,000.
- I think it is pretty unique
that we don't have a medical center here on campus,
and yet we can provide insight that could be used
by clinicians to help patients.
And I think it is actually an advantage
to the type of work that we do
because what we're doing is we're doing analysis
and providing information that we learn
from these comparisons to the clinicians
that can make a treatment decision.
- I am so excited about what this group is doing.
I'm just so optimistic that this group
is gonna make a huge difference
in the space of pediatric cancer.
I just know it.
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Les 5 avantages de Figures stylées (Mathilde Levesque) / CSO - Duration: 1:23.-------------------------------------------
The Flash 3x22 Inside "Infantino Street" (HD) Season 3 Episode 22 Inside - Duration: 1:50.- So, we're building a cannon.
- Right.
- Bazooka.
It's a sort of trap.
- With Tracy Brand's help and H.R.'s help
they create this device called the Speed Force Bazooka.
- There is a tiny, little problem.
- We need, by my calculations, 3.86 terajoules of energy.
- That's more energy than in the sun.
- The only way to stop Savitar is with this bazooka
but if you can't power it they're kinda helpless.
There is a power source,
and the power source is in A.R.G.U.S. of all places.
- That's great.
- You can't have it, Barry.
- What?
Yeah, if Lyla won't let us have the Dominators' tech
they we're gonna break into A.R.G.U.S.
And we're gonna steal it.
- No you won't.
- Yeah we--
- What is that?
- They installed power dampeners throughout
this A.R.G.U.S. facility and so Barry can't use his powers.
- So you're saying this is the most fortified structure
in the history of fortified structures,
they can't use they're superpowers
and we have less than 14 hours to steal the thing.
- And none of us are master thieves.
- No we're not.
- So Barry realizes if I can't use my powers
then I need a master thief.
And that master thief is Leonard Snart,
a.k.a. Captain Cold.
- Hello, Flash.
- I need your help.
(ship whooshes)
- So Barry travels back to the Waverider in Legends
to get that version of Captain Cold
and to bring him back to the present day.
(H.R. burbling)
- Huh?
- Awkward.
- And there's a very large defender of the power source
and that is none other than King Shark.
(King Shark growling)
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