Felnőtt tartalom!
Elmúltam 18 éves, belépek Még nem vagyok 18 évesA belépéssel elfogadod a felnőtt tartalmakat közvetítő blogok megtekintési szabályait is.
Remélem, a fesztivál háziasszonyától(Fenyő Miklós?:-) veheti át a toros tálakat a szerencsés.
February 11, 2015 marks five years in space for NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, which provides incredibly detailed images of the whole sun 24 hours a day. Capturing an image more than once per second, SDO has provided an unprecedentedly clear picture of how massive explosions on the sun grow and erupt ever since its launch on Feb. 11, 2010. The imagery is also captivating, allowing one to watch the constant ballet of solar material through the sun's atmosphere, the corona.
In honor of SDO's fifth anniversary, NASA has released a video showcasing highlights from the last five years of sun watching. Watch the movie to see giant clouds of solar material hurled out into space, the dance of giant loops hovering in the corona, and huge sunspots growing and shrinking on the sun's surface.
The imagery is an example of the kind of data that SDO provides to scientists. By watching the sun in different wavelengths – and therefore different temperatures – scientists can watch how material courses through the corona, which holds clues to what causes eruptions on the sun, what heats the sun's atmosphere up to 1,000 times hotter than its surface, and why the sun's magnetic fields are constantly on the move.
Five years into its mission, SDO continues to send back tantalizing imagery to incite scientists' curiosity. For example, in late 2014, SDO captured imagery of the largest sun spots seen since 1995 as well as a torrent of intense solar flares. Solar flares are bursts of light, energy and X-rays. They can occur by themselves or can be accompanied by what's called a coronal mass ejection, or CME, in which a giant cloud of solar material erupts off the sun, achieves escape velocity and heads off into space. In this case, the sun produced only flares and no CMEs, which, while not unheard of, is somewhat unusual for flares of that size. Scientists are looking at that data now to see if they can determine what circumstances might have led to flares eruptions alone.
Goddard built, operates and manages the SDO spacecraft for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington, D.C. SDO is the first mission of NASA's Living with a Star Program. The program's goal is to develop the scientific understanding necessary to address those aspects of the sun-Earth system that directly affect our lives and society.
We searched NYC for a variety of subway musicians to unite for a live experiment.
We stationed them at 9 different subway stops with wifi and had them simultaneously connect to composer Ljova. He led them in a performance of "Signal Strength," an original piece he wrote for them.
És amit tudni kell róla:
A Chairman Ting illustration production. My first stop motion animation of myself painting my studio apartment wall in Vancouver. Shot with my Nikon D90 and Nikkor 28-80mm AF lens on a tripod triggered with a remote. After well over 1,800 shots I assembled the final movie with Quicktime Pro and imovie.
Illustrator: Me, Carson Ting
Music: Metrorail thru space by Cut Chemist.
Paint: Amsterdam, Standard Series Acrylic
Camera: Nikon D90 / Nikkor 28-80mm AF
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Minden napra új kávéscsésze - Bernat Cuni ötlete alapján. A hagyományos módon és 3D-s nyomtatóval készített csészék egy része itt megvásárolható
A kamchatkai medvék után itt egy újabb nagyszerű fotósorozat a Mutnovskij vulkán mellett található hóbarlangok egyikéről.