Force Users Information Site. Ajunta Pall's Blade (Click For Picture) Held by the Dark Jedi even before he fell to the dark side, this may be one of the few truly personal items owned by Ajunta Pall, and remains as thoroughly as corrupted as he. Alchemy Equipment Sith alchemy equipment is an array of complex, specialized machinery. Presumably, it should include a bank of machines, with a control station for the user, and a chamber for the object on which the alchemical alteration is performed (which may be living or nonliving). While the devices are capable of otherwise impossible alterations to both living and nonliving things, it can only be properly controlled by a Force-user with the Alchemy power.
Alchemy equipment costs approximately 10,000 credits. Book of Sith Lore (Click For Picture) Originally kept in the Great Galactic Museum on Coruscant, this book was stolen by Aleema and Satal Keto who used the Sith Magic detailed in the book to overthrow the Tetan Monarchy in the Empress Teta System. Dark Combat Jump Suit. Force (Star Wars) Fictional energy source in Star Wars Concept and development[edit] Creation for the original films[edit] Lucas used the term the Force to "echo" its use by cinematographer Roman Kroitor in Arthur Lipsett's 21-87 (1963), in which Kroitor says, "Many people feel that in the contemplation of nature and in communication with other living things, they become aware of some kind of force, or something, behind this apparent mask which we see in front of us, and they call it God".[2] Although Lucas had Kroitor's line in mind specifically, Lucas said the underlying sentiment is universal and that "similar phrases have been used extensively by many different people for the last 13,000 years".[5] "The act of living generates a force field, an energy.
That energy surrounds us; when we die, that energy joins with all the other energy. —George Lucas during a production meeting for The Empire Strikes Back[15] Prequel films and midi-chlorians[edit] Sequel films and other productions[edit] Depiction[edit] Mitochondrion. Two mitochondria from mammalian lung tissue displaying their matrix and membranes as shown by electron microscopy History[edit] The first observations of intracellular structures that probably represent mitochondria were published in the 1840s.[13] Richard Altmann, in 1894, established them as cell organelles and called them "bioblasts".[13] The term "mitochondria" itself was coined by Carl Benda in 1898.[13] Leonor Michaelis discovered that Janus green can be used as a supravital stain for mitochondria in 1900. Friedrich Meves, in 1904, made the first recorded observation of mitochondria in plants (Nymphaea alba)[13][14] and in 1908, along with Claudius Regaud, suggested that they contain proteins and lipids.
Benjamin F. Kingsbury, in 1912, first related them with cell respiration, but almost exclusively based on morphological observations.[13] In 1913 particles from extracts of guinea-pig liver were linked to respiration by Otto Heinrich Warburg, which he called "grana". Cristae[edit]