Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Crystal structure

Crystal structure
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mineralogy and crystallography, crystal structure is a unique arrangement of atoms or molecules in a crystalline liquid or solid. A crystal structure is composed of a pattern, a set of atoms arranged in a particular way, and a lattice exhibiting long-range order and symmetry. Patterns are located upon the points of a lattice, which is an array of points repeating periodically in three dimensions. The points can be thought of as forming identical tiny boxes, called unit cells, that fill the space of the lattice. The lengths of the edges of a unit cell and the angles between them are called the lattice parameters. The symmetry properties of the crystal are embodied in its space group.
 
SEM micrograph of surface of a colloidal crystal. Structure and morphology consists of ordered crystallites, grains or domains of particles as well as interdomain lattice defects in the form of grain boundaries.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Kampuchea, Jan. 07


Player with playlist here

Recorded during CJM and AS's 3-week honeymoon in Cambodia, Jan.2007, using the Edirol R-09 with a mixture of internal mic and an AT822.



..::FILE NAME INFO::..
PP = Phnom Penh
SR = Siem Reap
AW = Angkor Wat (temple)
B = Bayon (temple)
TP = Ta Prohm (temple)
KS = Kbal Spean (carved river-bed)
mndlkiri = Mondulkiri region
kep = city of Kep


01_air1.MP3

02_air2.MP3

03_PP_brkfst.MP3

04_PP_Bali.MP3

05_PP_Coke.MP3

06_PP_mrkt.MP3

07_bus.MP3

08_bus.MP3

09_SR_D.MP3

10_SR_trad-mus.MP3

11_AW.MP3

12_Bayon.MP3

13_B.MP3

14_TP1.MP3

15_TP2.MP3

16_TP3.MP3

17_TP4.MP3

18_TP5_whsl.MP3

19.MP3

20.MP3

21.MP3

22_KS_longdy-sing.MP3

23_KS_wtrfl.MP3

24_KS.MP3

25_KS.MP3

26_KS.MP3


27_KS.MP3

28_SR.MP3

29.MP3

30_bus-mndlkiri_hip-hop.MP3

31_mndlkiri_wtrfl.MP3

32_mndlkiri.MP3

33_mndlkiri_lunch.MP3

34_mndlkiri_elphnt1.MP3

35_mndlkiri_elphnt2.MP3

36_mndlkiri_elphnt3.MP3

37_mndlkiri_elphnt4.MP3

38_mndlkiri_elphnt5.MP3

39_mndlkiri_river1_talk.MP3

40_mndlkiri_river2.MP3

41_mndlkiri_river3_frog1.MP3

42_mndlkiri_river3_frog2.MP3

43_mndlkiri_river3_frog3.MP3

44_mndlkiri_river3_frog4.MP3

45_mndlkiri_river3_frog5.MP3

46_mndlkiri_river3_frog6.MP3

47_mndlkiri_river3_frog7.MP3

48_mndlkiri_river3_frog8.MP3

49_mndlkiri_river3_frog9.MP3

50_mndlkiri_river3_frog10.MP3

51_kep1.MP3

52_kep2.MP3

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Dialectic of Site and Nonsite

SiteNonsite
1. Open LimitsClosed Limits
2. A Series of PointsAn Array of Matter
3. Outer CoordinatesInner Coordinates
4. SubtractionAddition
5. Indeterminate CertaintyDeterminate Uncertainty
6. Scattered InformationContained Information
7. ReflectionMirror
8. EdgeCenter
9. Some Place (physical)No Place (abstract)
10. ManyOne

Footnote 1 from Robert Smithon's essay The Spiral Jetty (1972).

Originally published in Arts of the Environment, Gyorgy Kepes, ed. pp.222-232
Reprinted in Robert Smithson: The Collected Writings, Jack Flam, ed. pp.143-153

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Varkala flute

This recording is from an impromptu performance by a Hindustani flute player along the red rock cliff in Varkala, Kerala, India, January 2005. I no longer know the musician's name, but he hand made his own flutes, one of which I bought. Unfortunately it was badly damaged in transit. This recording popped up during an iTunes shuffle. A Proustian delight, South Indian style...