What do your organs look like? Navigate your way through human anatomy (internal and external) with a computer dissection of a real cadaver.
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The following links have been reviewed by our staff and should lead to
further learning resources about the scientific principles demonstrated in
this exhibit. If you know of a website that would be useful to include,
please let us know.
Gunther von Hagens' Body Worlds
Edheads - Virtual Knee Surgery
Virtual Open Heart Surgery
NOVA Online - Heart Transplant
Human Anatomy Online
MEDtropolis - Virtual Body
Do you like this exhibit? If so, then you might like to become a doctor, physical therapist or massage therapist.
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What are the odds? Probability is a measurement of the likelihood of a given result. more »
What does it feel like to make electricity? Use the Generator Bike to convert the muscle energy of your legs into electrical energy. How much electricity can your leg muscles make? more »
Using the lenses and mirrors on this exhibit, you can bend light! The light can be focused onto a single point, spread out widely over a large area, or reflected to different locations on the table. more »
Energy in all forms is transmitted in waves. Waves have certain characteristics and properties such as how often they occur (frequency) and how strong they are (amplitude). There are rules that direct how waves interact and move. Discover some of them by experimenting. more »
Something familiar can look very foreign when viewed under a microscope. You may notice that big things are made up of lots of smaller things. You may even see things you never saw before or knew existed. more »
Seeing is believing? Think again. Optical illusions easily outwit the way your brain interprets visual stimuli causing you to 'see' something that really isn't. more »
Everyone is different. See how your height and weight compare to other students at your school. The bars on the graph create a distribution curve. more »
What do your organs look like? Navigate your way through human anatomy (internal and external) with a computer dissection of a real cadaver. more »
Rubbing dissimilar objects against each other can build up a static charge, like your shoes (rubber) on some shag carpet (wool). If the charge is great enough, it will get released (discharged) in a spark. more»
Mountain ranges and valleys of Utah create daily breezes and interact with large air masses that travel from the Pacific Ocean and Canada. In certain situations, the terrain can channel air and create tornadoes and land spouts. more »
Three balls start at the same height. All three have the same destination but take different paths and have different weights. How do these variables (path and weight) influence the time it takes for the balls to get to the bottom? more »
Your voice is a complex blend of sounds. The graph allows you to visualize those sounds, your personal voice print. more»
Two large, plastic dishes are placed opposite each other. By speaking and listening at the center of the dishes, you and a friend can talk across the room without raising your voices. more »