Academic literature on the topic 'Life on other planets – drama'

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Journal articles on the topic "Life on other planets – drama"

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Trzcionka, Joanna. "„Monologami są rozmowy” . Liryczność w Pierścieniu Wielkiej Damy Cypriana Norwida." Colloquia Litteraria 7, no. 2 (November 20, 2016): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.21697/cl.2009.2.01.

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“Dialogues are Monologues”. Lyricism in Cyprian Norwid’s The Ring of a Great Lady The article attempts to show how lyricism as an essential component of Cyprian Norwid’s The Ring of a Great Lady affects the artistic shape of the work. This issue is shown by the observation of selected structural elements of the drama, such as time, space and the construction of the main character. In the work the space of the drama and time of the action have been used as metaphors and moved into the sphere of the protagonists’ spiritual experiences. Both time and space planes undergo subjectivism which is the result of lyricism that pervades Norwid’s work. A window – the element of the theatre building plays a prominent role in shaping time and space of the drama. It is a point that links the outside world to a close space of the play which becomes simultaneously extended. The point performs the function of the prism through which this world penetrates the author’s life. In poetical expressions the window also becomes a place of the protagonists’ overcoming time-space limitations. The protagonists’ lyrical monologues, above all Mak-Yks’s monologues, show the evolution of the man’s personality. This character is externally passive, inactive though he exudes the unparalleled inner energy. The lyricism contained in dialogues and monologues, the shaping of a poetic language, its continual tension between expressing his personal experiences and a parallel general reflection initiate a multidimensional, symbolic significance of the drama. The analysis of lyrical fragments also shows that Mak-Yks, likewise Norwid’s other protagonists share a distinctive feature with the author, and the conclusions lead us to reflect that The Ring of a Great Lady is a lyrical drama.
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Skubnevsky, V. A. "Everyday Life of Barnaul during the Great Patriotic War." Bulletin of Irkutsk State University. Series History 44 (2023): 43–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.26516/2222-9124.2023.44.43.

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The article’s purpose is to analyze the everyday life of the administrative center of the Altai Territory Barnaul during the Great Patriotic War. The question is not yet explored in the literature. The city became one of the major centers for the location of evacuated industrial enterprises from Leningrad, Stalingrad, Kharkov, Lugansk and other cities of the European part of the USSR, as well as hospitals, cultural and educational institutions. On the arrived equipment basis, defense plants as Transmash, Machine-tool, Boiler, Mechanical presses and others were built and put into operation in a short time. The issues of the local authorities’ activities for the placement of new enterprises and institutions in the city, the solution of the housing problem, the formation of workers and employees collectives are considered. It is shown that the personnel were formed not only from the evacuated, but also the local urban and rural population. The changes in the higher and secondary special education spheres which were caused by the placement of evacuated educational institutions are concidered. Important changes have taken place in the culture, because of the location of two evacuated theaters (Moscow Chamber Theater and Dnepropetrovsk Drama Theater) and circus in Barnaul. Attention is drawn to the work of parks and cinemas in wartime conditions. Attention is drawn to the functioning of parks and cinemas in wartime conditions. The situation with the food supply of citizens and the role of subsistence farms is analyzed. The article uses archival and published sources, including ones of private origin. The author concluded that during the war years the city turned into a significant industrial, educational and cultural center of the south of Western Siberia.
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Angel, J. Roger P., and Neville J. Woolf. "Searching for Life on Other Planets." Scientific American 274, no. 4 (April 1996): 60–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/scientificamerican0496-60.

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Stern, Steve J. "Paradigms of Conquest: History, Historiography, and Politics." Journal of Latin American Studies 24, S1 (March 1992): 1–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00023750.

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The Quandary of 1492The year 1492 evokes a powerful symbolism.1The symbolism is most charged, of course, among peoples whose historical memory connects them directly to the forces unleashed in 1492. For indigenous Americans, Latin Americans, minorities of Latino or Hispanic descent, and Spaniards and Portuguese, the sense of connection is strong. The year 1492 symbolises a momentous turn in historical destiny: for Amerindians, the ruinous switch from independent to colonised history; for Iberians, the launching of a formative historical chapter of imperial fame and controversy; for Latin Americans and the Latino diaspora, the painful birth of distinctive cultures out of power-laden encounters among Iberian Europeans, indigenous Americans, Africans, and the diverse offspring who both maintained and blurred the main racial categories.But the symbolism extends beyond the Americas, and beyond the descendants of those most directly affected. The arrival of Columbus in America symbolises a historical reconfiguration of world magnitude. The fusion of native American and European histories into one history marked the beginning of the end of isolated stagings of human drama. Continental and subcontinental parameters of human action and struggle, accomplishment and failure, would expand into a world stage of power and witness. The expansion of scale revolutionised cultural and ecological geography. After 1492, the ethnography of the humanoid other proved an even more central fact of life, and the migrations of microbes, plants and animals, and cultural inventions would transform the history of disease, food consumption, land use, and production techniques.2In addition, the year 1492 symbolises the beginnings of the unique world ascendance of European civilisation.
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Jakosky, Bruce, and Andrew H. Knoll. "The Search for Life on Other Planets." Physics Today 53, no. 4 (April 2000): 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2405460.

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Anonymous. "The Search for Life on Other Planets." Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union 80, no. 21 (1999): 239. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/eo080i021p00239-01.

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Beichman, Ch. "The Search for Other Planets and Life." EAS Publications Series 41 (2010): 3–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/eas/1041001.

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Snellen, Ignas. "Planets orbiting other stars: the search for extraterrestrial life." Europhysics News 51, no. 1 (January 2020): 23–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epn/2020102.

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Since the Nobel-prize-winning discovery of a planet orbiting a sun-like star, the field of extrasolar planets is undergoing a true revolution. Thousands of planets have been found, of which some may be like Earth. Could there be biological activity on any of these, and how do we find out?
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Wackett, Lawrence P. "Microbial life on early earth (and other planets?)." Environmental Microbiology Reports 3, no. 6 (November 14, 2011): 807–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1758-2229.2011.00307.x.

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Wandel, Amri. "Bio-habitability and life on planets of M-G-type stars." Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 14, S345 (August 2018): 189–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743921319001984.

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AbstractThe recent detection of Earth-sized planets in the habitable zone of Proxima Centauri, Trappist-1, and many other nearby M-type stars (which consist some 75% of the stars) has led to speculations, whether liquid water and life actually exist on these planets. Defining the bio-habitable zone, where liquid water and complex organic molecules can survive on at least part of the planetary surface, we suggest that planets orbiting M-type stars may have life-supporting conditions for a wide range of atmospheric properties (Wandel2018). We extend this analysis to synchronously orbiting planets of K- and G-type stars and discuss the implications for the evolution and sustaining of life on planets of M- to G-type stars, in analogy to Earth.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Life on other planets – drama"

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Turse, Carol Louise. "Testing the hydrogen peroxide-water hypothesis of life on Mars using the differential scanning calorimeter as an analog for the TEGA instrument on the Mars Phoenix lander." Pullman, Wash. : Washington State University, 2009. http://www.dissertations.wsu.edu/Thesis/Summer2009/c_turse_072309.pdf.

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Thesis (M.S. in environmental science)--Washington State University, August 2009.
Title from PDF title page (viewed on Sept. 22, 2009). "School of Earth and Environmental Sciences." Includes bibliographical references (p. 92-97).
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Kotler, Julia Michelle. "Biosignature storage in sulfate minerals- synthetic and natural investigations of the jarosite group minerals." The University of Montana, 2009. http://etd.lib.umt.edu/theses/available/etd-08062009-143516/.

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The discovery of jarosite on Mars in 2004 generated increased interest in the properties of the mineral related to the search for life on other planets. Several studies indicate that the formation of jarosite can be linked to biological activity on Earth and biomolecules such as amino acids have been found associated with terrestrial jarosite samples. A series of natural and synthetic investigations using different jarosite end-members has been conducted and is presented in this dissertation to investigate the possibility that jarosite can store biosignatures. Natural samples were analyzed by x-ray diffraction, elemental carbon analysis and laser-desorption Fourier transform mass spectrometry (LD-FTMS) and were found to contain the amino acid glycine. Synthetic experiments were conducted in which the different end-members were synthesized in the presence of glycine as well as the amino acid alanine and the amino acid breakdown product methylamine. These samples were analyzed by x-ray diffraction, neutron diffraction, LD-FTMS and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) techniques. Results of these experiments show that the detection of the biosignature and the effect that biomolecule has on the jarosite minerals is dependent on the end-member and indicate that the jarosite minerals are an excellent target for detecting potential signs of past life on other planets.
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Huld, Sigrid. "Manganese-mineralized chemical gardens: an abiotic approach to the search for life on Earth and other planets." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för geovetenskaper, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-414525.

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Vance, Steven. "High pressure and low temperature equations of state for aqueous magnesium sulfate : applications to the search for life in extraterrestrial oceans, with particular reference to Europa /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/6825.

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Glavin, Daniel Patrick. "Survival of prebiotic compounds during exogenous delivery : implications for the origin of life on earth and potentially on mars /." Diss., Connect to a 24 p. preview or request complete full text in PDF format. Access restricted to UC campuses, 2001. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/ucsd/fullcit?p3025934.

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Thaler, Tracey Lyn. "Search for Extraterrestrial Life using Chiral Molecules: Mandelate Racemase as a Test Case." Diss., Available online, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2007, 2007. http://etd.gatech.edu/theses/available/etd-04052007-123229/.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Chemistry and Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2007.
Phillip Gibbs, Committee Member ; Rick Trebino, Committee Member ; Christoph Fahrni, Committee Member ; Donald Doyle, Committee Member ; Andreas Bommarius, Committee Chair.
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Hýl, Petr. "Slovinské národní divadlo v Lublani." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta architektury, 2009. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-215582.

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McTier, Moiya. "Why Are We Here?: Constraining the Milky Way's Galactic Habitable Zone." Thesis, 2021. https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-60np-j341.

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Our solar system is just one of billions in the Milky Way, situated about half way from the Galaxy's core to its edge, and nestled safely between a pair of spiral arms. Out of those billions of planets, ours is the only one that we know to support life. This begs two questions. First, is our location in the Galaxy especially suitable for life? Second, if we want to find other life out there, where should we focus our search? In this dissertation, I contribute answers to both questions by seeking to better understand the boundaries of the Milky Way's galactic habitable zone (GHZ), the place in the galaxy where habitable worlds are most likely to be found. We start in Chapter 2 by introducing a novel method for finding the average height of surface features on exoplanets, a characteristic that influences a planet's habitability but was heretofore unknowable. We use elevation data for the rocky bodies in our Solar System to simulate their transits in front of stars of different sizes. We provide a relationship between the scatter at the bottom of the resulting light curves and the so-called "bumpiness" of the transiting planet. In Chapter 3, we zoom out from planets to get a better understanding of the dynamical and chemical evolution of the Milky Way, which are both crucial for constraining the Galaxy's GHZ. We use the Extreme Deconvolution Gaussian Mixture Model to identify overdensities of stars in both velocity and action space, called moving groups and orbit groups, respectively. Velocities and actions are calculated using data from the early third data release of the Gaia mission. When we analyze the chemical abundance distributions of these moving and orbit groups with GALAH DR3 data, we find that using velocities alone to define moving groups, or even using velocities and actions together, yields an incomplete view of the underlying density distributions and their origins. Our chemical analysis also confirms expected chemical evolution trends in the Solar neighborhood. Next, we explore the effects of stellar motion and galactic dynamics on the habitability of planets in different regions of the Galaxy. In Chapter 4, we use Gaia DR2 data to calculate 3D galactocentric velocities for stars observed by the Kepler spacecraft. We compare the velocities of confirmed Kepler host stars to those of their non-host stellar twins and find that there's no relationship between stellar velocity and planet occurrence in the Solar neighborhood. In Chapter 5, we shift our attention to the Milky Way bulge, where stars are closer together and moving more quickly on more elliptical orbits than in the disk. We simulate the orbits of bulge stars and use a semi-analytical method to derive the rate of close stellar encounters. We find that roughly 8 in 10 bulge stars will come within 1000 AU of at least 1 other star every billion years. Half of these stars experience dozens of these encounters every gigayear. These encounters can have dramatic consequences for planets, and our findings strongly suggest that the Milky Way bulge is not the most suitable environment for life. In Chapter 6, I share an overview of the science communication and outreach work I've done while in graduate school and explain how it's so closely tied to my research on GHZs.
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Hills, Paul R. "Neural narratives and natives: cognitive attention schema theory and empathy in Avatar." Diss., 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26659.

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This study offers a fine-grained analysis of James Cameron’s film, Avatar (2009), on several theoretical fronts to provide a view of the film from a cognitive cultural studies perspective. The insights gained from cognitive theory are used to situate the debate by indicating the value cognitive theories have in cultural criticism. The critical discourse analysis of Avatar that results is a vehicle for the central concern of this study, which is to understand the diverse, often contradictory, meaning-making exhibited by Avatar audiences. A focus on the construction of empathic responses to the film’s messages investigates the success of this polysemy. Ihe central propositions of the study are that meanings and interpretations of the experience of viewing Avatar are made discursively; they are situated in definable traditions, mores and values; and this meaning-making takes place in a cognitive framework which allows for the technical reproduction and reception of the experience while providing powerful, emerging and cognitively plausible narratives. In an attempt to situate the film’s commercial success and its plethora of awards, including an Oscar for best art direction, the analysis takes a critical view of Cameron’s use of cultural stereotypes and the framing of the exotic other, and considers the continuing development of these elements over the whole series and product line or, as Henry Jenkins (2007) defines it, “transmedia”. In drawing the theoretical boundaries of the methodologies used in this study and in arguing for their complementarities, the study contributes to a renewal of Raymond Williams’ (1961) mostly forgotten claim of the cross-disciplinary cognitive dimension of cultural studies and demonstrates an affirmation of this formulation as cognitive cultural studies.
Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology
M.A. (Art History)
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Smith, David Samuel. "Astrophysical radiation environments of habitable worlds." Thesis, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/2931.

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Books on the topic "Life on other planets – drama"

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Madden, Dano. Drop. New York: S. French, 1998.

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Anderson, Gerry, Sylvia Anderson, and Reg Hill. UFO. United States]: A & E Home Video, 2003.

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MacFarlane, Seth, Rachel McFarlane, Mike Barker, and Matt Weitzman. American Dad! Beverly Hills, Calif: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment, 2006.

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Macek, Carl, and Robert Barron. Robotech, the masters saga: Second robotech war. [United States]: A&E Home Video, 2011.

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Coen, Franklin, William Alland, Edward G. O'Callaghan, and Joseph M. Newman. This island Earth. Universal City, CA: Universal Studios Home Entertainment, 2006.

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Spielberg, Steven. E.T., the extra-terrestrial. Universal City, CA: MCA Universal Home Video, 1996.

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A, Davis John, Steve Oedekerk, Megan Cavanagh, and Albie Hecht. Jimmy Neutron, boy genius. Hollywood, Calif: Paramount Home Video, 2002.

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Copeland, John. Babylon 5.: The coming of shadows. Burbank, CA: Distributed by Warner Home Video, 2008.

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1949-, Sammon Paul M., ed. Aliens. London: Orion, 2001.

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Thomas, Jim, Joel Silver, John Davis, Lawrence Gordon, Stephen Hopkins, Thomas John, and Robert Davi. Predator 2. Beverly Hills, Calif: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Life on other planets – drama"

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Adams, Josephine C., and Jürgen Engel. "Life on Other Planets." In Life and Its Future, 159–67. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59075-8_10.

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Gargaud, Muriel, Hervé Martin, Purificación López-García, Thierry Montmerle, and Robert Pascal. "Other Planets, Other Living Worlds?" In Young Sun, Early Earth and the Origins of Life, 241–61. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-22552-9_8.

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Rauer, Heike, Juan Cabrera, Stefanie Gebauer, and John Lee Grenfell. "Detection of Habitable Planets and the Search for Life." In Habitability of Other Planets and Satellites, 287–310. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-6546-7_16.

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Strasdeit, Henry, and Stefan Fox. "Experimental Simulations of Possible Origins of Life: Conceptual and Practical Issues." In Habitability of Other Planets and Satellites, 129–44. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-6546-7_8.

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Shaw, George H. "What Can We Learn from Other Planets?" In Earth's Early Atmosphere and Oceans, and The Origin of Life, 95–105. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-21972-1_12.

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Böttger, Ute, Jean-Pierre De Vera, Antje Hermelink, Jörg Fritz, Iris Weber, Dirk Schulze-Makuch, and Heinz-Wilhelm Hübers. "Application of Raman Spectroscopy as In Situ Technology for the Search for Life." In Habitability of Other Planets and Satellites, 331–45. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-6546-7_18.

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Schulze-Makuch, Dirk. "Organic Molecules in Lunar Ice: A Window to the Early Evolution of Life on Earth." In Habitability of Other Planets and Satellites, 115–25. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-6546-7_7.

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Northup, Diana E., Jennifer J. M. Hathaway, Jessica R. Snider, Monica Moya Balasch, Matthew G. Garcia, Maria L. N. Enes Dapkevicius, Cristina Riquelme Gabriel, Fred D. Stone, Michael N. Spilde, and Penelope J. Boston. "Life in Earth’s Lava Caves: Implications for Life Detection on Other Planets." In Cellular Origin, Life in Extreme Habitats and Astrobiology, 459–84. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-4966-5_26.

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Vago, Jorge L., Frances Westall, and Barbara Cavalazzi. "Searching for Signs of Life on Other Planets: Mars a Case Study." In Biosignatures for Astrobiology, 283–300. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96175-0_14.

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Knowles, Stephen H. "Eavesdropping Detection of Radio Signals from Other Planets, with One Bit-Implementation Techniques Using Existing Computers." In The Search for Extraterrestrial Life: Recent Developments, 335–39. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-5462-5_43.

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Conference papers on the topic "Life on other planets – drama"

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Beichman, Charles A. "Terrestrial Planet Finder: the search for life-bearing planets around other stars." In Astronomical Telescopes & Instrumentation, edited by Robert D. Reasenberg. SPIE, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.317137.

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Ryan, P. T., J. R. P. Angel, D. W. McCarthy, L. M. Close, S. Mohanty, R. Fugate, and D. G. Sandler. "Halo Properties and Their Influence on Companion Searches at the Starfire Optical Range." In Adaptive Optics. Washington, D.C.: Optica Publishing Group, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/adop.1996.atub.3.

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One of the questions which has endured for as long as man has looked at the heavens is ”Are we alone?”. Are there beings on other planets who are also looking into the heavens? The first requirement for alien life similar to our own is that there be planets orbiting other stars. The early stages of planet formation as dictated by theory appear to be robust and several large planets have recently been detected by indirect means[1][2]. Direct imaging is currently being used to search for less ambitious, yet still scientifically interesting faint objects called Brown Dwarfs. The most convincing evidence of a Brown Dwarf, a cross between a star and a planet, was discovered by direct imaging with the aid of a 7.7 arcsecond separation from a companion star[3].
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Prunariu, Dumitru-Dorin, and Ildiko Tulbure. "NEXT GEN TECH FOR MOVING TO SPACE." In 22nd SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference 2022. STEF92 Technology, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2022/6.1/s28.37.

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Current space activities are especially directed to explore the potential of Mars to have hosted life as well as directed to find future exploration odds of Mars by human beings. In this context scientific advance and newest technology infrastructure, NEXT GEN TECH, is nowadays used and applied on Mars. Current NASA mission can be mentioned, which represents a newly planned exploration of Mars having the goal to succeed in providing scientific information with the support of several rovers. Sent rovers to Mars must support exploring the Red Planet with the goal of succeeding in its possible Terraforming. Several NASA's Mars Rovers, as Perseverance, Curiosity, Ingenuity will try to deeply explore surface and structure of the Red Planet. On the other side, planned Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment, MOXIE has as a final goal trying to create Oxygen on the Red Planet from its available atmosphere. Onboard NASA's Mars rover Curiosity is a Navigation Camera for taking images from Mars, and Ingenuity Mars Helicopter has as a mission to successfully complete several flights on Mars. All collected information will for sure support the intended process of Terraforming other planets, and shaping till 2050 first city of space, named Nuewa by establishing Asgardia, first Space Nation. Chances and challenges are pointed out, debating by this intended Next Gen Tech for trying to succeed in Terraforming other planets and creating first Space Nation.
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Carulli, Marina, Monica Bordegoni, Francesca Bernecich, Elena Spadoni, and Patrizia Bolzan. "A Multisensory Virtual Reality System for Astronauts’ Entertainment and Relaxation." In ASME 2019 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2019-97836.

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Abstract A research area of interest is that one concerning the design of solutions for improving the life conditions of users in extreme environmental situations. An example is the spacecraft environment, where astronauts are subject to particular conditions, due to the extreme environment. The isolated and confined environment influences behaviors and perceptions. This situation can impact both on astronauts’ moods, cause states of depression, and impact on their performance in working activities. A spacecraft can be the Space Station orbiting the Earth, or future means of transportation used for travelling to other planets. In both cases the space should be designed so as to offer the best possible living and working conditions to the astronauts. The research presented in this paper aims at designing and developing a multisensory VR system for the entertainment and the relaxation of astronauts. The use of VR technology allows us to overcome physical and psychological boundaries of the confined space, which is typical in a spacecraft environment. The sense of smell, which is more linked to visceral emotions than the other senses and can affect various aspects of humans’ physiological and psychological conditions, is used to improve astronauts’ productivity and concentration, and also to relieve their stress and anxiety.
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Ngo Thi Thanh, Quy, and Minh Nguyen Thi Hong. "Vietnamese Proverbs: Values Preserved in Modern Society." In GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2020. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2020.4-4.

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Vietnamese proverbs has created long-lasting values which are being passed on to the modern society with numerous passions. These values include humanistic values confirming the human position in life. They also comprise social values and human philosophy as well as aesthetic values. Therefore, typical proverbs of the Viet people which have beem transferred to the younger generations via literary works such as Việt điện u linh (A collection of Vietnamese misteries) in the 14th century, Lĩnh Nam chích quái (A selection of the Viet extraordinary stories) in the 15th century are still being passed on until the present days. With the foundation of traditional Vietnamese proverbs, modern proverbs have undergone profound changes as seen in modern life through different forms of media including printed and audiovisual media as well as internet. It is obvious that traditional proverbs has regenerated in the new appearance. Proverbs are reproduced in modern literary works. Proverbs are also recreated and transformed in prose, poetry and drama. The movement and development of proverbs in our modern society confirm their deep values of the traditional culture. Writers, journalists and artists of other art forms have not only received the art tradition of word use of the ancestors but more importantly they have inherited the culural environment, humanistic values and life philosophies in order to transfer to the next generations. Henceforth, in the modern society Vietnamese proverbs are not obliterated but remain their vitality with different forms and have been of the Vietnamese people’s favourite.
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Vidulin, Sabina. "MUSIC TEACHING AND LISTENING TO ART MUSIC IN THE FUNCTION OF STUDENTS’ HOLISTIC DEVELOPMENT." In SCIENCE AND TEACHING IN EDUCATIONAL CONTEXT. FACULTY OF EDUCATION IN UŽICE, UNIVERSITY OF KRAGUJEVAC, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/stec20.391v.

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Music is a part of a child’s everyday life. In family and in preschool institutions, its function is different from the one in school. Music teaching influences the overall students’ development, which can be seen from a pedagogical and artistic perspective. It is aimed at acquiring knowledge and developing students’ skills in the field of art; it encourages aesthetic education, but also the preservation of historical and cultural heritage. The domain in which this is mostly realized is listening to music and music understanding. With the intention of bringing art music closer to children and young people, its more intense experiencing and understanding, the paper points to the necessity for an interdisciplinary and correlative relationship of music with other subjects, but also musical activities with each other. Since the author intends to indicate the importance of creating new didactical strategies for music teaching lessons, the Stage-English-Music concepts, the Listening to Music-Music Making model and the Cognitive-emotional approach to listening to music are briefly described. These strategies for the improvement of music listening are based on an interdisciplinary and intradisciplinary approach, depending on whether they include extracurricular activities in the work (e.g. English and drama education), or the work is carried out within musical activities such as singing, playing, or dancing with musicologically, but also humanistically oriented outcomes. Practice and research indicate that in addition to acquiring musical knowledge and developing musical skills, multimodal approaches affect students’ holistic development.
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7

URSACHI, Rodica. "Art as an end and means of education." In Ştiință și educație: noi abordări și perspective. "Ion Creanga" State Pedagogical University, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.46727/c.v3.24-25-03-2023.p172-177.

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One of contemporary society’s acute problem is moral state of its members, which needs a perfecting through permanent education of ethic standards. Art, as other domain, tackles this problem, but from its own view point. It reflects different moral ethic ideals during its development stages, which influence conscience of respective epoch people. In this way, art presents it self in double hypostasis – to reproduce the moral state of human society in a certain historical moment, and to help the speading of ethic ideas that will contribute to its spiritual education and development. The work of art becomes an object of study for the general viewer and requires him to mobilize his intellectual faculty to understand the proposed „message”. Art is the privileged way to remove man from the conflict zone of life, caused by various historical and social factors. Existential drama, expressed through moral suffering, is present in various genres of art with an emphasis on historical, religious composition, etc., but it is also avoided by artists who paint static natures, landscapes, nudes. Artists of the contemporary period, captivated by plastic and non-figurative technological effects, avoid analyzing the current social impact, rediscovering moral and ethical values and reflecting them in his work.
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Peixoto, Bruno Leonardo Carvalho. "Physiological changes in the human body in the microgravity environment." In III SEVEN INTERNATIONAL MULTIDISCIPLINARY CONGRESS. Seven Congress, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.56238/seveniiimulti2023-124.

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Introduction: Human beings have been evolving exponentially, however, the facets of this evolution occur in independent times despite being intrinsically linked, such as the technological evolution that evolved us in such a way that human biological evolution itself has become irrelevant to the standard of modern human life, the human being has been developing technologically very quickly, allowing us to idealize interplanetary travel, exploration of mineral resources from asteroids that pass close to Earth orbit, even the formation of other planets. Therefore, in this context, it is possible to identify a pattern that shows a greater need for human beings to undertake space travel more frequently and for longer, which also implies greater exposure to the risks and harm that this medium can offer. Objective: To show regulatory changes in the human body resulting from long exposure to the microgravity environment. Methods: The related study is a literature review of the systematic review type, where the following platforms were used as a search base: SciELO; LILACS; PubMED; Medline; ScienceDirect; Cochrane Controlled Trials Database; New England Journal of Medicine; ESSENTIAL; Circulation and Springer. Results: 18 relevant studies were found through the SciELO databases; LILACS; PubMED; Medline; ScienceDirect; Cochrane Controlled Trials Database; New England Journal of Medicine; ESSENTIAL; Circulation and Springer. Among these, 13 studies were eligible, since all studies addressed at least one of the inclusion criteria. Conclusion: It is concluded that there is a shortage of studies on this subject, due to a series of difficulties, from its applicability, collection, cost and control. However, the few studies found are unanimous regarding regulatory changes in the human body and how these directly impact their health.
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Coney, Shun, and Yasunobu Ito. "The production process of films from a relational perspective: A case study of independent films about Parkinson's disease in Japan." In 13th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2022). AHFE International, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002555.

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The purpose of this paper is to clarify how creativity is produced in filmmaking from a relational perspective. Creativity here refers to the fact that films that contain original ideas and evoke sympathy in the audience are not produced solely through the internal mechanisms of individuals, but rather as a result of the collective actions and activities of various people.In recent years, movies have moved beyond the confines of theaters, and infrastructures such as Amazon Prime and Netflix are rapidly expanding. Against this backdrop, independent Japanese films have been receiving high acclaim overseas. The so-called independent films are not films that come out with huge budgets and a fixed release destination like the major film systems, but films that are planned and produced by the filmmakers themselves without any financial resources. Independent films can have an impact on people despite the risk of completion and release, but their reputation is focused on the director and producer. For this reason, the relationship between actors other than the director and producer in filmmaking is not fully clarified.Filmmaking is a multi-layered and contingent creativity that is created through the long-term interaction of not only the director, producer, and cast, but also various other actors such as equipment, script, and location. While independent films allow for a greater degree of freedom in planning, they are also subject to complexities and volatility, such as difficulties in obtaining financing and differences in the image of the film among the staff, which can prevent the project from proceeding as planned at the outset.The subject of the study is Parkinson's disease (PD) patients and movies about it. PD is an intractable disease for which there is currently no curative treatment, and which causes progressive symptoms such as tremors in the limbs and stiffness in the muscles that interfere with daily life. In order to control the progression of the disease, it is said that regular exercise therapy and rehabilitation are essential, along with daily medication. The film will be produced with the cooperation of the PD Patients Association, which has 8,000 members, and will consist of two parts: a drama about the life of the main character who was diagnosed with PD in his 40s, and a documentary about several PD patients in their 30s to 60s. The research was conducted by one of the authors (a filmmaker) using ethnography: from December 2020 to November 2021, he conducted participant observation of the relationships between the actors involved in the project and the living conditions of the PD parties, and interviewed them. Based on these observations, we conducted a series of interviews. The PD parties who would become the informants and the filmmakers had numerous dialogues. As a result, their social and living environments were unraveled.
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Magiru, Anca, and Ionel Magiru. "SUGGESTOPEDIA, A SERIOUS COMPETITIVE GAME." In eLSE 2012. Editura Universitara, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.12753/2066-026x-12-146.

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The paper aims to show how suggestopedia, a dynamic, full of life class game, can become a way of delivering advanced conversational competence quickly. What makes this game interesting and attractive is that learning occurs through suggestion while the students are in a deeply relaxed state which is induced by music. The instructor should choose what kind of music he/she considers suitable for the topic which is introduced. Although the goal is understanding and not memorisation, the students are required to master prodigious vocabulary lists. This type of game implies initiatives, questions and answers, role play, listening exercises under deep relaxation. From the psychological point of view, and related to the ways of learning, the game matches perfectly with two of the four types of learners, namely: the Player and the Feeler. The Player is the student who likes being with people and enjoys variety and change, prefers listening and speaking to reading and writing, prefers playing games and working in groups to writing exercises, prefers competition and excitement to practice and homework, prefers trying lots of different activities to doing long projects, enjoys participating and performing, hates doing the same thing lesson after lesson, would like to do different things all the time. He/she enjoys vocabulary race. The Feeler is a good language learner who loves interacting and group and pair work and is interested in talking about emotions and personal topics. He/she enjoys being with people and learns through cooperation, prefers taking part in discussions to studying rules and doing exercises, like reading, role play and drama, is very sensitive to criticism and needs individual feedback and prefers speaking to writing. Suggestopedia must maintain a passive state among the students and also allow the materials to work on them rather than vice-versa. The instructor’s role is to create situations in which the students are most suggestible and present materials in a way most likely to encourage positive reception and retention. The instructor must emanate authority and confidence. The texts used should have force, literary quality and interesting characters. What we are going to do is to offer two sample lesson plans, one based on a literay text, the other one on a detective short story in order to prove how suggestopedia works like a way of learning.
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