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New!! Challenge #7.0 ~VIVID COLOR! ~

www.flickr.com/groups/2817915@N22/discuss/72157677578411858/

 

New!! ~ Challenge 179.0 ~ 2019 New Year Art ~ The Award Tree ~

www.flickr.com/groups/awardtree/discuss/72157677335358748/

GX7MK3

LUMIX G VARIO

ƒ/8.0 7.0 mm 1/400 iso200

BLOG

 

Credit @ FANATIK ARCHITECTURE ( Demo area Fanatik products )

"LR & FANATIK - Ice Plates"

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateA 0

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateA 25

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateA 50

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateA 75

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateA 100

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateB 0

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateB 25

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateB 50

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateB 75

LR & FANATIK - IcePlateB 100

 

Credit @ Little branch

LB_RedAppleTree.v1{Animated}4Seasons

 

Landscape items by FANATIK ARCHITECTURE

:FANATIK: LAND SHAPES Island 02

:FANATIK: LAND SHAPES Island 03

:FANATIK: LAND SHAPES Island 04

:FANATIK: LAND SHAPES Island 01

:Fanatik Architecture: BEACH ROCKS Barrier Linear

:Fanatik Architecture: BEACH ROCKS Barrier Convex

 

sim surround : Mount Fuji [1] Full Mega Surround 7.0 [NO TREES] by Landscapes Unlimited

GX7MK3

LUMIX G VARIO 7-14/F4.0

ƒ/5.6 7.0 mm 1/160 iso200 Flash (on, fired)

www.flickr.com/photos/pandx1/

DC-GX7MK3

LUMIX G VARIO

ƒ/7.1 7.0 mm 1/400 iso200

Moored on the Fraser River

British Columbia,

Canada

 

FRPD CENTENNIAL BUDDY CRANE BARGE TUG

Width:7.0 m

Length:12.0 m

 

The Mission Railway Bridge is a Canadian Pacific Railway bridge spanning the Fraser River between Mission, and Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada.

 

Replacing an earlier bridge built in 1891, which was the first and only bridge crossing of the Fraser below Siska in the Fraser Canyon until the construction of the New Westminster rail bridge in 1904, it was constructed in 1909 by the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR). The Mission Railway Bridge is supported by 13 concrete piers and is approximately 533 metres in length. Before completion of the Mission highway bridge, highway traffic to and from Matsqui and Abbotsford with Mission used the bridge as a one-way alternating route, with traffic lights at either end to control direction. Rail traffic often held up car crossings, causing long and often very lengthy waits, which were a part of daily life in the Central Valley until the new bridge was completed.

 

Beneath the bridge's north abutment is an important river-level gauge monitored during the annual Fraser freshet. The bridge is also the location of the end of the Fraser's tidal bore - downstream from the bridge the river is increasingly influenced by tidal influences from the Georgia Strait.

 

Swing span

The Mission Railway Bridge has a swing span which has a vertical clearance of 4.9 metres above the water when closed. The swing span is fitted atop a circular concrete pier, the 10th from the north bank of the river. The 10th pier is protected from shipping traffic by two 46 metre wood piers extending upstream and downstream respectively perpendicular to the bridge which are tapered at both ends. The navigation channel past the bridge is 30 metres in width. At night a fixed white light is displayed on piers 9 and 11 as well as at the up-river and down-river ends of the protection pier.

 

The majority of marine traffic consists of log tows and gravel barges, which are permitted to use the navigation channel beneath the fixed span between piers 5 and 6. The swing span is used for wood chip barges and other vessels which cannot navigate beneath the span between piers 5 and 6.

 

CPR maintains a bridge tender 24 hours per day at an office on the north bank of the bridge. Vessels requesting passage through the swing span contact the bridge tender on marine VHF radio, whereby the tender walks the bridge to a control booth situated on the swing span. Wikipedia

 

Stay healthy

Happy Clicks,

 

~Christie (happiest) by the River

  

** Images best experienced in full screen

GX7MK3

LUMIX G VARIO 7-14/F4.0

ƒ/11.0 7.0 mm 1/800 iso200

 

EVP:0230DSXT9760.XT

Bol con fresas y una mandarina - Fruit 25.2.18

=Serie Still Life = Naturalezas muertas .

Composición Naturalezas muertas .Una manzana y dos caquis sobre superficie con papel suave blanco.

Efecto luz - luz natural ventana - interior en fondo claro ..

 

Muchas gracias por vuestra visita .

Agradezco a todos su seguimiento, atención, favoritas y comentarios…. Espero que os guste esta fotografía.

 

Moltes gràcies a tots per les vostres visites, atencions, comentaris i favorites. Espere que vos agrade aquesta fotografia.

 

I thank you all for your kind attention and comments follow….

Thank you very much to all for your visits. I hope you like this photograph.

Thank, Merci , Gracias..........

 

Editing Tools - Apple Mac Fotos Versión 7.0 (421.0.100)

©Todos los derechos reservados.

 

Info photo:

• 4k • This shot above was taken with my own photo-suite [ ALPHA Photography Suite V6 Aug2020 ] • Otis Tool • ReShade 4.7.0

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Filter H alfa : Daystar Quark Cromosphere

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Focal lenght : 4116 mm.

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Sun Active Region NOAA 12954 (right) , 12955 (left)

 

Final Optimized version with Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

GX7MK2

LUMIX G VARIO 7-14/F4.0

ƒ/9.0 7.0 mm 1/500 iso200

Captured from a different perspective and back ground this HDR edit shows why the Sclumbergera truncata hybrids are sometimes called Crab Leg Cactus. Three images at -0.7, 0, +0.7 exposure stops were merged using Lightroom to bring up the darker leaves (overcast daylight in the shade, manual settings shown).

Photo walk -Shudhui Bangla july vromon - Nawab Gonj Jaminda Palace

 

,,,, Please don't use or alter this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

 

better view

 

Finally!! an almost cloudless event. After 3-4 more or less failed attempts with disappointing horizon clouds the latest week.

Moonsize 97 %, Altitude 1,7-0,5, Azimuth 232-235, Sun -12-11.

Distance 3,2 km

 

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Filter H alfa : Daystar Quark Cromosphere

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Focal lenght : 4116 mm.

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Sun Active Region NOAA 12898

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

DSCF6162 copy

 

The Gyermekvasút (English: Children's Railway) or Line 7 is a narrow gauge railway line in Budapest, which connects Széchenyihegy and Hűvösvölgy and is 11.2 kilometres (7.0 mi) long. The former name of the line was Úttörővasút (Pioneer Railway, in reference to the communist scouts), and now the official designation is MÁV Zrt. Széchenyi-hegy Gyermekvasút. Except the train driver, all of the posts are operated by children aged 10–14 under adult supervision. It is the world's largest Children's Railway.

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0) + TeleVue 2" Mirror Star Diagonal + Televue Powermate 2" 4x

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 3920 mm.

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Female: The female is larger than the male and in the upper range of the wingspan. The basic colour of the female is dark brown. There is a chain of white postdiscal spots on the forewings. There is a chain of larger white postdiscal spots with dark centres on the hindwing. The underside is very similar to the upper. Wingspan: 7.0 to 10.0 in.

www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/exhibits/butterflies/common-gre...

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornithoptera_priamus

The light on the bushes is from the moon, still low over the horizon. The city lighting the horizon is Lancaster, California.

Warframe

 

-SRWE Hotsampling

-Ingame Captura Mode

-Reshade 4.7.0

A living specimen (sleeping), that i brought to my studio in the early morning.

Stacking made of 52 images, assembled using Zerene Stacker (Pmax & Dmap). Post production using Adobe Lightroom5.6, Adobe Photoshop CC 2019. Canon 600D. SK Componon S 50mm reversed, ISO-200, F/4.7, 0,6sec. 4 daylight LED, DIY diffuser. Step size : 40µm.

Magnification is above 2:1.

Alpes de Haute Provence, South East of France.

Nikon F4s : 28-105mm Tamron Af f/4-5.6 : Arista EDU Ultra 100 : PMK Pyro

Bagan is located on a broad plain along the Irrawaddy River some 500 km (311 mi.) north-northwest of Yangon, in the Mandalay Region, Myanmar. It became the capital of the Pagan Kingdom, which grew to encompass nearly all of present day Myanmar from the 9th to the 13th centuries. During that period some 1,000 stupas, 10,000 small temples, and 3,000 monasteries were built on the Plain of Bagan. Mongol invasions caused the kingdom to collapse in 1287. Subject to more than 400 earthquakes since 1904, much of Bagan's architecture has been lost.

 

In 2019, Bagan was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Covering an area of 50 sq. km (12,369 acres), UNESCO notes that the site includes "3,595 surviving monuments" and includes the Gawdawpalin Temple seen here. Construction began in 1203 by King Narapatisithu (aka Sithu II, ruled 1174-1211) and was completed in 1227 by King Htilominlo (ruled 1211-1235). The temple was severely damaged by a magnitude 7.0 earthquake which struck on 08 July 1975 and has since been repaired.

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : Solar Spectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

 

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Am 18.05.2013 fährt 01 1533-7 bei Trebgast von Neumarkt-Wirsberg mit ihren Sonderzug Richtung Bayreuth.

Walkway by the harbor, downtown.

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Filter H alfa : Daystar Quark Cromosphere

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4116 mm.

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Ophrya apifera var. tilaventina

Canon EOS 60D + Tamron SP AF 90/2.8 macro @ 1/395 f/7.0

- Forza Horizon 5

- Reshade 5.7.0

- Lightroom

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : Solar Spectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

 

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

- Reshade 4.7.0

- Hotsample & Camera tools by Otis_Inf

Centaurus A, also known as NGC 5128, is a peculiar lenticular galaxy in the constellation Centaurus, which appears to be an elliptical galaxy with a huge superimposed dust lane. It is one of the closest radio galaxies, and its active galactic nucleus has been extensively studied.

 

Discovery and Identity

NGC 5128 was discovered by James Dunlop on August 4, 1826. John Herschel was next to see it, from South Africa in 1834; he cataloged it as h 3501, which became GC 3525 in his General Catalogue of 1864, and NGC 5128 in J. L. E. Dreyer's New General Catalog. Herschel was first to note this galaxy's peculiarity, in 1847.

Halton Arp included NGC 5128 in his 1966 Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies as one of the best examples of a "disturbed" galaxy with dust absorption.

 

Amateur Observation

Centaurus A appears approximately 4° north of the naked-eye globular cluster Omega Centauri. At magnitude 7.0, this galaxy is the fifth brightest in the sky, making it ideal for observation, although it is only visible from the southern hemisphere and low northern latitudes. Centaurus A has been spotted with the naked eye by expert observers under very good conditions. The bright central bulge and dark dust lane are visible in finderscopes and large binoculars, and additional structure may be seen in larger telescopes.

NGC 5128 is a "lenticular" galaxy, of intermediate type between elliptical and disk (spiral) galaxies. Its main body has all characteristics of a large elliptical, but a pronounced dust belt is superimposed over the center, forming a disk plane around this galaxy.

The only supernova discovered in Centaurus A so far is SN 1986G, a Type Ia event that reached mag 12.5 in May, 1986.

 

Properties and Evolution

Centaurus A is located about 11 million light-years away, at the center of one of two subgroups within the Centaurus A/M83 Group. Messier 83 (the Southern Pinwheel Galaxy) is at the center of the other subgroup. These two groups are sometimes identified as one, since the galaxies around Centaurus A and the galaxies around M 83 are physically close to each other, and both subgroups appear to be stationary relative to each other. The Centaurus A/M83 Group is part of the Virgo Supercluster.

NGC 5128's strange morphology is the result of a merger between two smaller galaxies. The bulge of Centaurus A is comprised mainly of evolved red stars. Its dusty disk, however, has been the site of more recent star formation; over 100 star formation regions have been identified in the disk. As observed in other such "starburst" galaxies, a collision is responsible for the intense star formation. Scientists using the Spitzer Space Telescope have confirmed that Centaurus A is an elliptical galaxy going through a collision, devouring a spiral.

In the radio part of the spectrum, Centaurus A exhibits two vast regions of radio emission, running along the polar axis of NGC 5128's disk and extending hundreds of light years in both directions. A relativistic jet from what is believed to be a supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy is responsible for emissions in the X-ray and radio wavelengths. Radio observations of the jet indicate that the inner parts of the jet are moving at about 1/2 the speed of light. X-rays are produced farther out, as the jet collides with surrounding gases, creating highly energetic particles.

Source: skysafari

 

RA: 13h 25m 27;8s

DEC: -43° 01’ 04"

Size: 28.9 x 28.9 arcmin

Orientation: Up is 0.397 degrees E of N

Location: Centaurus

Distance: 10-16 Mly

Magnitude: 6.8

 

Acquisition April 2021

Total acquisition time of 2.5 hours.

 

Technical Details

Data acquisition: Telescope.Live

Processing: Nicolas ROLLAND

Location: El Sauce Observatory, Rio Hurtado, Chile

L 6 x 600 sec

R 3 x 600 sec

G 3 x 600 sec

B 3 x 600 sec

Optics: Planewave 24“ CDK @ F6.8

Mount: Paramount ME

CCD: FLI PL 9000

Pre Processing: CCDstack, Pixinsight & Excalibrator

Post Processing: Photoshop CC

Nike Free 7.0 - Personal product shots.

After church today, my wife & I went to buy a pair of cross-trainers for my knee rehab for the next 6-8 months. All my other sneakers are either basketball or badminton specific.

The people in the mall and in the store wer amused to see me limping around with a cane. I think I overworked my knee as it is very swollen and painful all the way to my ankle =( Sigh....

 

Ephesians 6: 14-15

14 Stand therefore, having girded your waist with truth, having put on the breastplate of righteousness, 15 and having shod your feet with the preparation of the gospel of peace; 16 above all, taking the shield of faith with which you will be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one.

 

Nike is a trademark of Nike, Inc. All rights reserved.

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0)

Filter : Baader Planetarium D-ERF 160 mm

Beloptik Telecentric 5x

Filter H alfa : Coronado PST

Filter H alfa : Solar Spectrum S.O. 1.5 0.5A

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Equivalent Focal lenght : 4900 mm.

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

 

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, ImPPG, Adobe Photoshop

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

Death Stranding

1620x2160 via Death Stranding Resolution Tool

Ingame photomode

Reshade 4.7.0

Goldcrest - Regulus regulus

 

The goldcrest (Regulus regulus) is a very small passerine bird in the kinglet family. Its colourful golden crest feathers gives rise to its English and scientific names, and possibly to it being called the king of the birds in European folklore. Several subspecies are recognised across the very large distribution range that includes much of Eurasia and the islands of Macaronesia. Birds from the north and east of its breeding range migrate to winter further south.

The goldcrest is the smallest European bird, 8.5–9.5 cm (3.3–3.7 in) in length,[2] with a 13.5–15.5 cm (5.3–6.1 in) wingspan and a weight of 4.5–7.0 g (0.16–0.25 oz).

 

Several small passerine species survive freezing winter nights by inducing a lower metabolic rate and hypothermia, of a maximum of 10 °C (18 °F) below normal body temperature, in order to reduce energy consumption overnight. However, in freezing conditions, it may be that for very small birds, including the tiny goldcrest, the energy economies of induced hypothermia may be insufficient to counterbalance the negative effects of hypothermia including the energy required to raise body temperature back to normal at dawn. Observations of five well-fed birds suggest that they maintain normal body temperatures during cold nights by metabolising fat laid down during the day, and that they actually use behavioural thermoregulation strategies, such as collective roosting in dense foliage or snow holes to survive winter nights. Two birds roosting together reduce their heat loss by a quarter, and three birds by a third. During an 18‑hour winter night, with temperatures as low as −25 °C (−13 °F) in the north of its range, goldcrests huddled together can each burn off fat equivalent to 20% of body weight to keep warm.

 

Until the severe winter of 1916–17 the Goldcrest was abundant and widespread, nesting in all the wooded portions of our islands; in 1920 it could have little more than an obituary notice, for the nesting stock was practically wiped out. ... and for some years, even as a winter visitor, the Goldcrest remained rare, absent from most of its nesting haunts. It is, however, now fully re-established.

 

Conversely, populations can expand rapidly after a series of mild winters. In lowland Britain, there was an increase of 48% following the 1970/71 winter, with many pairs spreading into deciduous woodlands where they would not normally breed.

 

In culture

Aristotle (384–322 BC) and Pliny (23–79 AD) both wrote about the legend of a contest among the birds to see who should be their king, the title to be awarded to the one that could fly highest. Initially, it looked as though the eagle would win easily, but as he began to tire, a small bird that had hidden under the eagle's tail feathers emerged to fly even higher and claimed the title. Following from this legend, in much European folklore the wren has been described as the king of the birds or as a flame bearer. However, these terms were also applied to the Regulus species, the fiery crowns of the goldcrest and firecrest making them more likely to be the original bearers of these titles, and, because of the legend's reference to the smallest of birds becoming king, the title was probably transferred to the equally tiny wren. The confusion was probably compounded by the similarity and consequent interchangeability of the Greek words for the wren (βασιλεύς basileus, and the crests (βασιλισκος basiliskos, In English, the association between the goldcrest and Eurasian wren may have been reinforced by the kinglet's old name of gold-crested wren.

 

This tiny woodland bird has had little other impact on literature, although it is the subject of Charles Tennyson Turner's short poem, The Gold-crested Wren first published in 1868. An old English name for the goldcrest is the woodcock pilot, since migrating birds preceded the arrival of Eurasian woodcocks by a couple of days. There are unfounded legends that the goldcrest would hitch a ride in the feathers of the larger bird, and similar stories claimed that owls provided the transport. Suffolk fishermen called this bird herring spink or tot o'er seas because migrating goldcrests often landed on the rigging of herring boats out in the North Sea.

Optics : TEC 140 APO (980 mm F 7.0) + TeleVue 2" Mirror Star Diagonal + Televue Powermate 2" 2x

Mount : Ioptron CEM70G & Ioptron TriPier;

Camera : ZWO ASI 174 MM;

Focal lenght : 1960 mm.

Software : FireCapture, AutoStakkert3, Adobe Photoshop

 

Moon 9 days, 2 photos mosaic

 

Casalecchio di Reno - Italia

44° 29’ 29” N

11° 14’ 58” E

A couple of virtual views of the Womba-Tank!

 

Render Date: 2020-07-03 20:30:53Z

Software: POV-Ray 3.7.0.1.unofficial

Platform: x86_64-pc-win

Compiler: msvc 14

 

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