wow i actuallly know this one its a slide hope it helped
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Plastic is made from petroleum which is a flammable material, most glass is made from sand or other non-flammable materials.
The glass slide has allowed a closer, more in-depth look into the world around us, from pond water to pap smears. Skin scrapings, blood smears, hair, parasites, tissue samples and the like have all found their way between a glass slide and a cover slip at one time or other. ~Karl
An andosol is a kind of soil formed in volcanic ash and containing a high proportion of glass and other materials including allophane, imogolite, and ferrihydrite.
A microscope slide is the commonest instrument in any Biology laboratory. It is a transparent rectangular glass apparatus and it fits underneath the lens piece of the microscope. It is used for mounting smears of body secretions, microscopic specimen of bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites. One can stain the specimen they want to observe and focus the microscope on it. A cover slip is placed on top of the slide in order to keep the specimen in place. One can use a microscope slide in order to draw blood films as well.
In a DNA microarray, thousands of DNA fragments are spotted onto a glass slide. Usually, it is a fragment of each gene (or cDNA) that is spotted onto these glass slides. Each of these fragments will be used for a hybridization reaction with mRNA that is collected from tissue samples. To determine the expression of these tissues, mRNA is collected and turned into cDNA. Fluorescent labeled nucleotides are added to the sample so that they will be detectable under a colored laser. Two samples are usually compared to each other. The labeled cDNAs are allowed to hybridize with the genomic fragments that were spotted onto the glass slides. The cDNAs from each sample will be able to simultaneously hybridize with the target sequences.
If it is not contaminated with other materials, glass waste can be salvaged. Glass is readily recyclable, saving on energy and raw materials.
R. B. Marinenko has written: 'Micro-homogeneity studies of NBS standard reference materials, NBS research materials, and other related samples' -- subject(s): Glass, Materials, Metals, Microprobe analysis, Standards, Testing 'Glasses for microanalysis: SRM's 1871-1875'
yes, other materials can make the same things as glass can, such as plastic, paper, or wax.
Glass is resistant to acids whereas other materials can be corroded.
glass and other solid like materials
decalcomania
this is a rock .
Glass flooring or any other material does not "have gravity". Gravity is a force that affects all materials in exactly the same way. Our experience of gravity is that it pulls object and materials towards the ground. A glass floor will be pulled downward in the same way that any other flooring will be.
Plastic is made from petroleum which is a flammable material, most glass is made from sand or other non-flammable materials.
Insulators. This group consists of rubber, glass, plastic & many other materials.
Podiums can be made of a multitude of different materials. Glass podiums would more easily break than other types of materials and thus could be more dangerous.
Concrete, brick, wood, steel, other metals, composites, glass, scrap and many other materials.