Tuesday, July 29, 2008

I'm supposed to be writing a six page review, but instead I'm updating my blog. Just add it to another list of ever-expanding ways to distract myself from my actual, pertinent duties.


HAPPY BIRTHDAY JESSICA!!!
If you have nothing better to do, check out her photography website - she takes stunning pictures of children. And she turned 21 today!!

We (Sonda, Kristin, Court, and myself) returned from Dresden yesterday. I studied for MCAT almost the entire time on the train (except for that small break I took when our coach was detached from the rest of the train and we almost got stranded in Zittau)! Germany was fun... every city is starting to look the same... lots of old buildings, similar cobblestone patterns in the streets, and a winding metro system that I almost get on going in the wrong direction once a journey... so instead of seeing more grand buildings whose troubled history escaped us and whose names we would surely forget in the next 24 hours (German is quite complicated, after all), we decided to spend some time in the glorious green park in front of the Zwinger palace. 

Lots of laughs and silliness ensued. 



The dappled pathway...



Ta da!



You Tarzan, Courtney Jane.



Tree climbing is the best way to stay young at heart.




We are quite the pair... and we love old buildings and cute, old people very much.



It was more fun upside down!! Plus, we needed the laughter.



Tumble break to catch our breath and nurse our handstand wounds.. :)

After kindergarden recess in front of the palace, we walked down a winding path that brought us to an exquisite fountain... which immediately and simultaneously invoked the thought (in both Courtney's and my mind) to CLIMB IN! 



Pretty water, cold water.



The one shower she took all week long.



The fountain was formed entirely out of tiny mosaic tiles. 



... and the colors were gorgeous in the sunshine.

After the park and eating 





















Sunday, July 27, 2008

Why am I always running late?

Check out the amazing car factory we are going to tomorrow.... it's in Dresden, Germany.

The four girls just needed to escape so we are going to Dresden (for the second time this week) to shop for dresses (fun!) and check out the fully automated Volkswagen factory. 

It looks incredible...


Ahhhh must pack.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

I want that Camel.

ONLY 11 DAYS UNTIL I RETURN HOME!!

I'm getting really exciting about sorority recruitment and having a piano again and being able to fall asleep with my doggy cuddled into my stomach... there are some things that just can't be replaced.

While I wait to return, we've been traveling places after work (since we usually get off around 10 a.m.) since we've maxed out all the places of entertainment in Liberec.
Thus, I present to you our trip to Praha... and the delights and adventures we found there (besides FINALLY being able to see "Wanted" in a cinema in ENGLISH.)

Courtney and I jumped on a bus to Prague sometime in the morning and made the one hour trip to Prague. There's a shuttle bus straight to IKEA from the bus station, and although I was tempting to spend half the day sauntering down the aisles of my favorite store for the greater part of my lifetime (after K.B. Toys in my infancy, of course; and PacSun in that awkward middle school stage), I took Courtney's feelings into account and we caught the subway swiftly into town.

With no Wikipedia research to guide our footsteps, and no maps to help us make our way, we checked a small information booth in the subway terminal and confidently went in the direction of the astronomical clock. (A clock from the medieval times located in Old Town Prague that shows astronomical things such as the relative positions of the sun, moon, zodiacal constellations, and sometimes major planets. - Wikipedia).

We got lost once on the way there, tried to sit down for breakfast only to end up eating a hard pretzel and come Subway cookies, and were entranced by a toy shop filled with marionettes (famous in Prague), wooden toys, 3 person chess sets, and endless baby nursery decorations. I even found the PERFECT gift for a friend's 21st birthday (and no Ash, it isn't you, sorry), and HARRY POTTER PUPPETS! It was pretty cool.





For you, Dad.


The biggest nose I've ever seen on a tiny wooden creature. Also for you, Dad.


Courtney in awe.


But we finally did find the clock, complete with at least 1000 people anxiously looking up at it's ancient faces - an action which left Courtney and I perplexed and led me to actually, for once (gasp), tap on a person's shoulder and ask for help. Everyone knows I hate to do that. But I found this cute old guy in the crowd who looked pretty harmless and asked him what was going on, and although he didn't speak English (he was from France), his lovely wife explained to us that at noon something special was going to happen and that's what everyone was waiting for. So, just liked animate puppets, we followed everyone elses' lead and stared up at the clock, camera zoomed in and ready for whatever wonderful thing was sure to take place.



The astronomical clock tower... and clouds.


I still cannot...


... comprehend the sheer...


... volume of people that were there to see the clock strike noon.


It turns out it was just like a giant Cuckoo clock, with doors that opened and a random moving skeleton on the outside... which quite frankly was lame. But we saw it; we experienced; mark the astronomical clock off of our "To Do Before We Die" lists.



We somehow pushed through that insane crowd and got front row, dead center seats to the show.



There is the funniest story behind this picture. We had to ask four different people to take our picture in front of the clock, and finally... the man who took this one... was an old guy who didn't speak a word of english and clearly did not know how to operate a digital camera. He looked down at the LSD screen/view finder and saw us through it, then tried to hold it half an inch from his face and LOOK THROUGH the screen. It was really quite amusing to watch, although I stifled my laugh and tried to use sign language to show him which button to press. He was... adorable.

After that we spent the rest of the day ambling around... getting lost once on the tram (thanks to my wonderful intuition), checking out a retro/vintage party, and getting well acquainted with every street in Prague that includes the letter "K." Which is nearly every single one. 



She said the Lion was doing the Heisman Trophy pose so I made her show me.



Random dancing festival we happened upon.


The most adorable show in Prague. I want that camel.


AND.. even cooler, all of the toys and stuffed animals are safe for our asthmatic and highly allergic to EVERYTHING friends (i.e. Miss Courtney Meghan Styres).

I would have to say the most remarkable thing all day long were the clouds. After the constant rain in Liberec for the past three weeks, it was wonderful to see blue skies and gorgeous puffy white clouds again.


Clouds.



Pretty flowers at a subway stop.




Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Listen to my french accent...

In Germany there is a song and it goes like this:


"Ein leben lang, die selbe unterhose an, die selbe unterhose an, die selbe unterhose an"

which means:

"I live my whole life in the same underpants... the same underpants... the same underpants."

Voila. My new favorite song!

Saturday, July 19, 2008

What's the Game Plan Stan?

I'm downloading "Yoga for Dummies" so that Courtney and I can make fools of ourselves to an empty kitchen. 



At least the skillet and the wooden mixing spoons will be entertained.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Test Prep and Admissions

THIS is what happens when you stick me in a foreign country with no work, and forbid me from traveling.



I start nesting.



In other news, I started studying for the MCAT today because I was that bored.

Is it terrible that I now cannot wait to get out of here? I'm not being spoiled, I just have nothing to occupy my time.

Look! It's Mr. Coleslaw!!!

Oh the things that we do in lab....





A sample in the chamber, with a plasma cloud of methane glowing around it. Cool, eh?



Polishing a sample before depositing it into the chamber. I'm the supervisor... I make Courtney work.
(Kidding, of course. =)



This is what Kristin and Zibi do when I leave my camera laying around.
And sometimes we employ them as a human timer for the etching process. 



A regular steel screw that became a pretty purple and blue screw because Courtney is so good at controlling the microwave frequency chemical vapor deposition parameters. That's a mouth full.



The equipment. 200,000 Euro.



A wood-cutting tool in a blue plasma cloud.



Us, initially, trying to understand the equipment, the method, and the science behind the entire apparatus. It took us exactly one day and one clearly defined set of directions.

See? We learn quickly. All we need is someone taking the time to explain it to us once.


Zibi with our freshly coated nanofiber paper. We analyzed it by SEM and the fibers were to small to be clearly defined at 5000x magnification.... which is excellent news!


And just for kicks, a photograph of Courtney and I with an infrared camera.
Dr. Dudek, from Poland, was trying to determine the surface temperature of a screw that he as coating, so he brought in the camera for a demonstration. While waiting for them to set up, we convinced the two (male) technicians to let us play around with the camera and take pictures of ourselves! And I think the professor who owned the camera was also quite impressed when I started spouting off on a tangent about black body radiation and the Wien Distribution. 

Thank you PH352 and Dr. Camata for helping me on that one.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

"Will You also bother me when you go back to the USA?"



The Czech is definitely prettier than Lodz, Poland.

The last couple of days have been a flurry of factory tours and deciphering english accents: on Monday we visited a high school in Jablonec, Czech to take SEM (scanning electron microscopy) pictures of the samples we made in Liberec. Although our samples turned out horrible (I believe one lady working the machine even called them "idiotic").. the fact remains that we actually did get to make samples (yay!), and we made friends of the two ladies who worked there.



The microscope in the high school.



Entertainment through cheesy photography?

One was 20, in school for biomedical engineering, and had the wonderful job of escorting our small bladders to the restroom any number of times during the day, and trying to find means of entertaining us on our five hour "sit against the wall and watch someone take pictures of your samples with a 4 million dollar machine that you aren't allowed to touch" extravaganza. She resorted to 360 degree photographs of Prague taken from 100 towers in that far-too-steeple-y city, and pictures of her dog AND her dog's Dad. The other lady was getting married in 11 days, and after many exclaimations from the four of us, we convinced her to show us pictures of her fiancee, dress, and the church where she'll be getting married. We even got pictures of the mother-in-law, brother-in-law, and father-in-law in a silly wig.
I even found the time to use Courtney's arm as a canvas, creating a brilliant tattoo (!) of our experiences together in Europe. The two ladies handed over some colored pencils and computer paper and I ended up making a "Thank You!" sign that all of us added a small message and a signature too.



Checking out a gold plasma inside a coating device. In a sick turn of events, someone had coated a cockroach in gold. I freaked out a little bit when I saw it.



My awesome tattoo. It had nutella, a witch's broom, the pyramids, us running in front of the pyramids, a butterfly, a heart, "Audrey loves you!", us jumping in puddles in the rain, a "Big and Little" pillow, a rainbow, a purple pony, a cannon firing a cannon ball (because I couldn't draw the Sphinx without his nose because I'm simply not that talented.), and... a fried egg.

They were sweet though, and I'm glad to have met them.



From left to right: Courtney, Vladena, Kristin, me, Clara, and Sonda.


Wednesday found us traveling in a car through Czech, Poland, and Germany in a five minute time span. There are open borders because of the European Union (and they've even started calling the countries "states")... so we easily went between countries, ending up in a small town in Germany with a name that escapes me. Dr. Louda (our new professor here) had to mail some stuff via DHL, and the office wasn't open yet, so.. being the teenage girl that I am... wanted to go shopping. We found ourselves in a quaint little market in the center of town, and wasted 15 minutes looking at huge granny panties with lots of lace and silly suspenders. They have fake purses in large quantities and more socks than I'd know what to do with.



The market in Germany, and Courtney's enormous cranium.



Sneaker Socken. I have nothing to add!


I even brought my Euro, but no matter how many tiny shops I asked, nobody sold Coca-Light. It seems the Germans do not drink Diet Coke. =)

Our primary destination was a titanium/aluminum alloy coating factory named Techno-Coat that Courtney and Kristin quickly renamed "Technicolor Dream Coat," that specialized in coating medical tools and Kohler sinks. It's kind of funny, actually, because we recently renovated most of the bathrooms in my Florida house and all of our sinks are Kohler. It makes me wonder if any of our hardware parts came through this tiny factory in an obscure town in Germany.
The man who ran the factory, Burkhard Scholz, was completely sweet. He explained everything to us about his machines and the techniques, and answered all of the questions we fired back at him. He gave us business cards, brochures in english, and most excitingly.. let us play with medical instruments after they had been coated.



Skin retractors. 



Mr. Scholz explaining a 1.2 million Euro machine to Kristin and Sonda.



A new part of the factory... it will soon be filled with equipment.



The nice man who showed us how professionals do layer thickness tests. He put in the sample, had a spinning ball rubbing against it, and added some synthetic diamond liquid in a line. Then he let it come into contact with the layer for about a minute and measured the diameter of the scratch on the sample with a computer program and an optical microscope. I was actually completely impressed with the technique.


I picked Tuesday to die, though. We were standing in a small group, listening to Mr. Scholz speak, and I suddenly felt light headed and couldn't hold myself up. Try as I might, I was sure I was going to fall on the floor, or faint, and I the feeling of all of the blood draining from my upper extremities was in full swing when Courtney suddenly rushed over, with Dr. Louda on her heels, and asked if I was okay. I guess that there wasn't even oxygen in the factory, or that I just didn't have enough sugar in my blood that morning, but two more seconds and I would have been sprawled out all over the factory floor.

Again, Mr. Scholz was really sweet... pushing me to get outside and breath some fresh air, grabbing me a chair, and even running to get a cold bottle of water right away. It had gas, which I hate bless his heart, but he was definitely trying really hard. And Courtney and Dr. Louda didn't so bad either. =) I hate being the sick kid. I think I apologized about nine times.



Pre-Audrey episode. The four of us in Germany with medical tools in the background, and a giant PVD device.


Wednesday (today) we woke up early and drove to another town, Turnov, to visit a ceramics factory. It was pretty cool to see all of the assembly lines in production. (Who am I kidding, I sat there in awe and was mesmerized by the constant perfect motion).

From what I understood, the factory took very fine aluminum composite powders (tiny nanospheres with diameters in the range of 12 nanometers) and compressed them into different molds, then sintered them to melt everything together and shrink the product, then coated them if necessary. They made these tiny rings that were used in oil field machines that were ever-lasting. They were super light weight - it was insane - and it was a world wide effort to make them, including different stages of production in Germany, the United States, the Czech Republic, and Austria I do believe. And they literally never had to be replaced. It was over 800 Euro per tiny ring, which seems like a crazy amount considering it weighed about 2 ounces, but Dr. Louda explained to us that if a worker had to stop the oil machine to change the ring it could cost 1000 barrels of oil instead of just the 800 Euro to buy the piece that won't ever break. Good point.

Our guide at the factory was very nice too, although he really only spoke German. It still pretty cool to see the entire ordeal, and he let us each have a sink gasket (thing) and tiny random pieces that they made at the factory. I shall tape them in my journal and keep them forever. They can't be broken! Not even with a hammer and all the force I possess...



The Saint-Gobain Ceramics factory.



Court and the factory. It was pretty cool.



Assembly lines amaze me.



One of the various products that they let us keep. These are in almost every person's sink. They control the amount of water that comes out of the faucet. And they cost 10 cents a piece to make, although the mark-up is a couple hundred percent for the consumer.




And just for fun, because it's cute and she's cute...