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Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Manhattan Project uranium reduction

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Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 8 Jul 2011 at 04:00:59 (UTC)

Reason
EV and composition
This is how uranium was refined into metal during World War 2, with the Ames process breakthrough technology, still used today. The 3-step visual is a more pleasant way to show the non-chemist, history-oriented, reader what was going down. Rather than describing all the reactions in text. Image is being used in an article, written by a Ph.D. historian, now at Featured Article Candidacy. Even for the science-strong, seeing what "things really look like" is an added insight.
I show the images from left to right in gallery to show steps in a process, culminating with final product). I have an ongoing interest to explore ways of showing information schematically and graphically. More than articles with text and interspersed photographic portraits, but flow diagrams and maps and charts and the like. This is why I brought you all that top/bottom, all four species gallery of painted turtles a few months ago.
Articles in which this image appears
Manhattan Project, Ames process
FP category for this image
Wikipedia:Featured pictures/History/World War II (or could be in science or engineering cat)
Creator
TCO, original uploads Tyklink, unknown photographer

Not promoted --J Milburn (talk) 23:09, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]