Examples of black body in the following topics:
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- A black body emits radiation called black body radiation.
- A black body in thermal equilibrium (i.e. at a constant temperature) emits electromagnetic radiation called black body radiation.
- This equation explains the black body spectra shown below.
- Typical spectrum from a black body at different temperatures (shown in blue, green and red curves).
- Identify assumption made by Max Planck to describe the electromagnetic radiation emitted by a black body
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- Archaic black- and red-figure painting began to depict more naturalistic bodies by conveying form and movement.
- The black slip could also be diluted with water to create shades for modeling bodies or clothing.
- Overall, the technique allowed vase painters to create compositions that rendered the body more naturally.
- While the figures do not overlap, the bodies are in shown in profile, three-quarter view, and from behind.
- Athenian Black-figure amphora.
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- Over 6,000 blacks did leave; others organized boycotts of white-owned businesses.
- She wrote an article that suggested that, unlike the myth that white women were sexually at risk of attacks by black men, most liaisons between black men and white women were consensual.
- Wells talks about slavery, saying the black man's body and soul were owned by the white man.
- The soul was dwarfed by the white man, and the body was preserved because of its value.
- The third excuse was: Blacks had "to be killed to avenge their assaults upon women. " Wells explains that any relationship between a white woman and a black man was considered rape during that time period.
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- After it is fired, its surface becomes black and glossy.
- It was created from a fine clay fired to produce a glossy black surface and burnished to shine.
- The black-figure style ended about 480 BCE.
- As on some early Attic vases, this was achieved by covering the whole vase body in black shiny slip, then adding figures on top, using paints that would oxidize into red or white during firing.
- Instead, the vase bodies were now mostly covered with ornamental and floral motifs.
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- Many of them belonged to
would be known as the Black Cabinet - a group of black experts and professionals who, analogically to Roosevelt's white advisers who formed his Brain Trust, gathered to advise the president on matters relevant to black communities.
- The Black Cabinet as a body segregated from their white counterparts demonstrates a tragic ambiguity in Roosevelt's approach to African Americans: he did make some effort to improve their situation but the effort was hardly radical and always curbed by racism existing in the American society.
- Around 10% of the youth program beneficiaries were black.
- Despite Roosevelt's refusal to support the black civil rights struggle and the mixed results that the New Deal programs produced for black Americans, many black voters changed their political loyalty and shifted towards Democrats.
- The latter were mostly women, both black and white.
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- Most states did this in a very gradual process, but by 1840, virtually all blacks in the North were free.
- The principal organized bodies to advocate these reforms in the North were the Pennsylvania Abolition Society and the New York Manumission Society.
- Free blacks, however, were still subject to racial segregation in the North.
- While slaveholders opposed freedom for blacks, they saw "repatriation" as a way of avoiding rebellions.
- "Conductors" on the railroad came from various backgrounds and included free-born blacks, white abolitionists, former slaves, and Native Americans.
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- Because blacks living in London and Nova Scotia were faring no better than before the Revolution, a movement to relocate the blacks to Sierra Leone began.
- On January 15, 1792, 1,193 blacks left Halifax for West Africa and a new life.
- In 1792, the United States Congress formally excluded African Americans from military service, allowing only "free able-bodied white male citizens" to serve.
- The principal organized bodies to advocate this reform were the Pennsylvania Antislavery Society and the New York Manumission Society.
- A black soldier (left) engages in battle.
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- This oriental black figure style originated in the city of Corinth, spread to Athens, and was exported throughout Greece.
- The Corinthians developed the technique of black figure painting during this period.
- Black figure pottery was carefully constructed and fired three different times to produce the unique red and black colors on each vase.
- The bodies of men and animals were depicted in silhouette, though their heads were drawn in outline.
- This detail from Proto-Attic amphora shows the outline- and silhouette-based forms in which the human body was depicted at the time, as well as the orange clay available to Attic ceramicists.
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- Medieval doctors thought the plague was created by air corrupted by humid weather, decaying unburied bodies, and fumes produced by poor sanitation.
- Giovanni Boccaccio, an Italian writer and poet of the 14th century questioned whether it was sent by God for their correction, or that it came through the influence of the heavenly bodies.
- The peak of the activity was during the Black Death.
- The Black Death had a profound impact on art and literature.
- Evaluate the impact of the Black Death on European society in the Middle Ages
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- Blacks who were economically successful faced reprisals or sanctions.
- Many blacks voted with their feet and left the South to seek better conditions.
- The Harlem Renaissance and the popularity of jazz music during the early part of the 20th century made many Americans more aware of black culture and more accepting of black celebrities.
- A postcard showing the burned body of Jesse Washington, Waco, Texas, 1916.
- A postcard showing the burned body of Jesse Washington, Waco, Texas, 1916.