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151.www.wiwi-treff.de323000
152.hispagua.cedex.es323000
153.www.meteoclimatic.com323000
154.www.research.att.com322000
155.www.nyteknik.se321000
156.www.szote.u-szeged.hu318000
157.www.boku.ac.at317000
158.www.bom.gov.au310000
159.nobelprize.org304000
160.www.eetimes.com304000
161.inauka.ru304000
162.www.atmel.com303000
163.www.inf.tu-dresden.de302000
164.www.ipp.mpg.de300000
165.nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov298000
166.science.slashdot.org298000
167.www.eere.energy.gov297000
168.www.cancer.org296000
169.www.sztaki.hu293000
170.www.eia.doe.gov292000
171.www.psychomedia.qc.ca291000
172.www.nsf.gov290000
173.www.aist.go.jp289000
174.www.mathematik.uni-ulm.de289000
175.www.mpa-garching.mpg.de283000
176.www.inf.ethz.ch282000
177.www.redensarten-index.de280000
178.www.math.ethz.ch276000
179.www.chemie.de274000
180.www.comunitazione.it274000
181.www.zamg.ac.at273000
182.www.jamstec.go.jp272000
183.www.informatik.uni-ulm.de271000
184.www.rle.mit.edu270000
185.www.wetenschapsforum.nl267000
186.www.ilemaths.net265000
187.www.infomine.com264000
188.www.astro.uni-bonn.de263000
189.www.esa.int260000
190.www.forskning.no260000
191.www.biology-online.org255000
192.www.competence-site.de255000
193.www.bioportal.jp255000
194.www.astrosurf.com254000
195.www.altera.com252000
196.www.research.ibm.com250000
197.bifi.unizar.es250000
198.www.behindthename.com249000
199.www.wissenschaft-im-dialog.de249000
200.www.math.jussieu.fr246000
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174. www.mathematik.uni-ulm.de

Rating: 289000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.mathematik.uni-ulm.de' on the other websites

www.mathematik.uni-ulm.de

Die Fakultät

Description: Fakultät für Mathematik und Wirtschaftswissenschaften

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Council warns against rain-wakened snakes
The Horsham Rural City Council is urging people to watch out for snakes, after several sightings in local waterways.
abc.net.au
Study: To save tigers, protect key breeding areas
By ROBIN McDOWELL 2010-09-15T06:01:52ZJAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- Conservationists must protect tiger populations in a few concentrated breeding grounds in Asia instead of trying to safeguard vast, surrounding landscapes, if they want to save the big cats from extinction, scientists said....
hosted.ap.org
Florida panthers bound back thanks to Texas mates
By LAURAN NEERGAARD 2010-09-23T19:34:37ZWASHINGTON (AP) -- In the quest to save the endangered Florida panther, their Texas cousins were the cat's meow. Wildlife biologists moved eight female panthers from Texas - close relatives yet genetically distinct - into south Florida 15 years ago in hopes of boosting reproduction, and the immigration paid off....
hosted.ap.org
Rocket with US-Russian crew blasts off
By NATALIYA VASILYEVA 2010-10-08T16:51:55ZBAIKONUR, Kazakhstan (AP) -- A Russian rocket with a U.S. astronaut and two Russian cosmonauts onboard blasted off successfully early Friday for the International Space Station, with flame-haired Russian spy Anna Chapman making an unexpected appearance at the cosmodrome to wave them goodbye....
hosted.ap.org
X-ray visions – from diagnosing disease to detecting forgeries | Alok Jha
Alok Jha introduces a short film about the momentous discovery of X-rays and the huge range of applications that have followedA while back, the Science Museum in London held a public vote to celebrate its centenary. It wanted to know which object in its vast collections people thought had done most to shape the future.From a list that included the Model T Ford, the V2 rocket engine and penicillin, voters plumped for the X-ray machine.From the moment the iconic image of Anna Bertha Röntgen's hand was taken by her husband, Wilhelm Röntgen, in 1895, it was clear that X-rays would be useful in medicine, allowing doctors to see into bodies without having to cut people open.In the century since their discovery, X-rays (Röntgen's working name for what he had found) have been a mainstay of medical diagnostics and research, used in everything from crystallography, to quality control in manufacturing, to detecting forgeries in art.X-rays are not entirely benign, of course – the high-energy beams can damage living tissue. Having said that, this very property is used every day in radiotherapy, to treat cancers.In 1901, Röntgen was awarded the first ever Nobel prize in physics and, possibly realising the enormous potential benefit of his discoveries to mankind, never took out any patents related to his work.In today's video from Newton TV, Katie Maggs, associate curator of medicine at the Science Museum, and Liz Parvin of the Open University discuss the discovery and subsequent history of X-rays.PhysicsResearch and developmentguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk