Oh man, I don't even know the extent. Just about everything you'd use in organic chem is probably possible to use for bio. I haven't taken my o-chem lab yet, but I'll find out more next term, I guess
It's amazing. A spectrophotometer uses UV light to see what's going on in small samples of stuff. We used it to see whether we had pure DNA in ours, or if we had contamination of RNA, proteins or just random particles of dust and debris.
The lab we are working on through the whole term is to isolate DNA from a particular bacteria that glows and inserting the gene that makes it glow into E. Coli to make the E. Coli glow too. So far all we've gotten to is taking the DNA out of the bacteria.
They do. My old school had long summer breaks, where I'd get depressed because I didn't have anywhere to go. I'd hike and catch up on my reading, but I wasn't learning anything that I really wanted to in school. Plus I wasn't in a lab. I love working in a lab. Now I go to school 20 weeks straight, and then work for 6 months. I won't get any free time until I graduate.
Very cool. I'm terrible with math, so Astrophysics is out of the question for me. But I do think it'sfascinating. If you go that route, just be prepared that your classes won' be about looking at the stars for a long while. All f your intro classes will be about math. It's a very math heavy course load.
I haven't gotten into my copy ofCosmosyet, but I really want to. My classes his semester are tough, so I don't have much time to read outside of studying for tests and quizes, or reading primary literature for my molecular bio lab reports.
I know Stanford has a lot of their lectures online. Most are probably on youtube
Welcome. You'll go to school. If it's what you want, there should be nothing stopping you. Maybe not right now, but whenever you're ready. Science is a beautiful course of study. I'm a bio major in my junior year right now. It's so much fun. I'm at a school that has co-op programs, so I can't wait to get started working in the field.
What's yourpassion in science?
What do you like to read? When you get situated in this site, I created a blog for people to recommend books to be. I just put up a shelf for my overflow of books, but t's already half full. I'm going to need to buy a new bookcase soon.
Yay happy to have finally found you babe.
Oh man, I don't even know the extent. Just about everything you'd use in organic chem is probably possible to use for bio. I haven't taken my o-chem lab yet, but I'll find out more next term, I guess
It's amazing. A spectrophotometer uses UV light to see what's going on in small samples of stuff. We used it to see whether we had pure DNA in ours, or if we had contamination of RNA, proteins or just random particles of dust and debris.
The lab we are working on through the whole term is to isolate DNA from a particular bacteria that glows and inserting the gene that makes it glow into E. Coli to make the E. Coli glow too. So far all we've gotten to is taking the DNA out of the bacteria.
Same. But we're working with stuff too small for normal microscopes now. We're working with DNA and proteins. So we are using spectrophotometers.
They do. My old school had long summer breaks, where I'd get depressed because I didn't have anywhere to go. I'd hike and catch up on my reading, but I wasn't learning anything that I really wanted to in school. Plus I wasn't in a lab. I love working in a lab. Now I go to school 20 weeks straight, and then work for 6 months. I won't get any free time until I graduate.
Very cool. I'm terrible with math, so Astrophysics is out of the question for me. But I do think it'sfascinating. If you go that route, just be prepared that your classes won' be about looking at the stars for a long while. All f your intro classes will be about math. It's a very math heavy course load.
I haven't gotten into my copy ofCosmosyet, but I really want to. My classes his semester are tough, so I don't have much time to read outside of studying for tests and quizes, or reading primary literature for my molecular bio lab reports.
I know Stanford has a lot of their lectures online. Most are probably on youtube
Welcome. You'll go to school. If it's what you want, there should be nothing stopping you. Maybe not right now, but whenever you're ready. Science is a beautiful course of study. I'm a bio major in my junior year right now. It's so much fun. I'm at a school that has co-op programs, so I can't wait to get started working in the field.
What's yourpassion in science?
What do you like to read? When you get situated in this site, I created a blog for people to recommend books to be. I just put up a shelf for my overflow of books, but t's already half full. I'm going to need to buy a new bookcase soon.
Welcome Adina!
braids to dreads are slower then going freeform
they have to unbraid 1st in order to dread
Welcome. How did you start?