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Found 9 result(s)
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The interdisciplinary data platform INPTDAT provides easy access to research data and information from all fields of applied plasma physics and plasma medicine. It aims to support the findability, accessibility, interoperability and re-use of data for the low-temperature plasma physics community.
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Various information, such as xylarium data with wood specimens collected since 1944, atmospheric observation data using the MU radar and other instruments, space-plasma data observed with GEOTAIL satellite, are now combined as Database of Humanosphere and served for public use. Proposals for scientific and technological use are always welcome.
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>>> --- !!!! Attention: Obviously the institute does not exist any more. The links do not work anymore. !!!! --- <<< Our center is devoted to: Collection, compilation, evaluation, and dissemination of scientific information required for fusion research, and Investigation of problems arising in the course of development of fusion research. There are atomic and molecular (A & M) numerical databases and bibliographic databases on plasma physics and atomic physics.
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Welcome to our Atomic & Molecular Database in the Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics (IAPCM). The database is intended to collect, assess and compile atomic and molecular data for various elementary processes, and especially data needed in plasma simulation and diagnosis. Part data came from the old version of the SPECTR database(by A.Ya Faenov et al).
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The National Human Brain Tissue Bank for Health and Disease (the Brain Bank) was built to meet the needs of scientific research by integrating experts and forces from neuroscience, human anatomy, pathology and other related disciplines. The Brain Bank collects and stores post-mortem brain tissue donated by patients with various neuropsychiatric disorders and normal controls, as well as their life histories, in accordance with international standards, and provides a detailed and accurate neuropathological diagnosis of these brain tissue samples (also known as the "final diagnosis"). The aim is to discover and elucidate the causes of human neuropsychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, depression, schizophrenia and other human diseases, and to provide scientists with the most direct and effective means of finding the relevant pathogenesis and establishing effective treatments. The National Brain Tissue Resource for Health and Disease The goal of the National Human Brain Tissue Repository for Health and Disease is to integrate collection, diagnosis, storage and utilisation, and to build a first-class human resource preservation infrastructure in China that is in line with international standards and provides support for neuroscience research. In 2020, the National Brain Bank has established three branches of the National Brain Bank in Hefei, Anhui, Nanjing, Jiangsu, and Shanghai. major cities.
This library is a public and easily accessible resource database of images, videos, and animations of cells, capturing a wide diversity of organisms, cell types, and cellular processes. The Cell Image Library has been merged with "Cell Centered Database" in 2017. The purpose of the database is to advance research on cellular activity, with the ultimate goal of improving human health.
The Space Physics Data Facility (SPDF) leads in the design and implementation of unique multi-mission and multi-disciplinary data services and software to strategically advance NASA's solar-terrestrial program, to extend our science understanding of the structure, physics and dynamics of the Heliosphere of our Sun and to support the science missions of NASA's Heliophysics Great Observatory. Major SPDF efforts include multi-mission data services such as Heliophysics Data Portal (formerly VSPO), CDAWeb and CDAWeb Inside IDL,and OMNIWeb Plus (including COHOWeb, ATMOWeb, HelioWeb and CGM) , science planning and orbit services such as SSCWeb, data tools such as the CDF software and tools, and a range of other science and technology research efforts. The staff supporting SPDF includes scientists and information technology experts.
The International Service of Geomagnetic Indices (ISGI) is in charge of the elaboration and dissemination of geomagnetic indices, and of tables of remarkable magnetic events, based on the report of magnetic observatories distributed all over the planet, with the help of ISGI Collaborating Institutes. The interaction between the solar wind, including plasma and interplanetary magnetic field, and the Earth's magnetosphere results in a transfer of energy and particles inside the magnetosphere. Solar wind characteristics are highly variable, and they have actually a direct influence on the shape and size of the magnetosphere, on the amount of transferred energy, and on the way this energy is dissipated. It is clear that the great diversity of sources of magnetic variations give rise to a great complexity in ground magnetic signatures. Geomagnetic indices aim at describing the geomagnetic activity or some of its components. Each geomagnetic index is related to different phenomena occurring in the magnetosphere, ionosphere and deep in the Earth in its own unique way. The location of a measurement, the timing of the measurement and the way the index is calculated all affect the type of phenomenon the index relates to. The IAGA endorsed geomagnetic indices and lists of remarkable geomagnetic events constitute unique temporal and spatial coverage data series homogeneous since middle of 19th century.