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Not only the light-emitting organs, also the eyes show strong fluorescence. Notice that the pronotum ("hat") is transparent! It is rather thick (~ 5 microns), about 5-10 times the thickness of a typical fly wing.

 

Night tracks go here

Refflection spectrum of pronotum

 

Objective: Mitutoyo 7.5 NA 0.21, tube lense 200mm (Nikon)

Illumination: Oblique (white)

Sh2-112 is a visibly emitting nebula in the constellation of Cygnus.

 

It is located in the northern part of the constellation, about 1.5 ° to WNW of the brilliant star Deneb.

 

It is a circular H II region of apparent size of about 15', crossed by a dark band on its western side oriented in a north-south direction. It is believed that the star responsible for its excitation is BD+45 3216; estimates of the distance of this star provide a value of 1740 parsec (about 5670 light years), which would place so Sh2-112 in a region of the Orion Arm particularly rich and physically very close to the great nebulous system of Cygnus X.

 

Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator

 

(credits Italina wiki: it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sh2-112 )

 

Technical card

Imaging telescope or lens:Altair Astro RC250-TT 10" RC Truss Tube

 

Imaging camera:ZWO ASI1600MM-Cool

 

Mounts:Mesu 200 Mk2, Astro-Physics Mach-1 GTO CP4

 

Guiding telescope or lens:Celestron OAG Deluxe

 

Guiding camera:ZWO ASI174 Mini

 

Focal reducer:Riccardi Reducer/Flattener 0.75x

 

Software:Main Sequence Software Seqence Generator Pro, Pleiades Astrophoto PixInsight

 

Filters:Astrodon L Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm, Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm, Astrodon O-III 36mm - 5nm

 

Accessories:ZWO EFW, MoonLite NiteCrawler WR30

 

Resolution: 2328x1760

 

Dates:July 7, 2019, July 21, 2019, Aug. 30, 2019, Aug. 31, 2019

 

Frames:

Astrodon B Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 35x30" (gain: 75.00) bin 1x1

Astrodon G Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 35x30" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astrodon HA 36mm - 5nm: 148x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astrodon O-III 36mm - 5nm: 30x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astrodon R Gen.2 E-series 36mm: 35x30" (gain: 75.00) -20C bin 1x1

Astrodon S-II 36mm - 5nm: 42x600" (gain: 200.00) -20C bin 1x1

 

Integration: 37.5 hours

 

Avg. Moon age: 6.39 days

 

Avg. Moon phase: 27.92%

 

Astrometry.net job: 2916861

 

RA center: 308.507 degrees

 

DEC center: 45.642 degrees

 

Pixel scale: 1.007 arcsec/pixel

 

Orientation: 90.074 degrees

 

Field radius: 0.408 degrees

 

Locations: AAS Montsec, Àger, Lleida, Spain

 

Data source: Own remote observatory

 

Remote source: Non-commercial independent facility

Curiosidades : Emite múltiples reclamos, algunos muy parecidos a los sonidos producidos por otros páridos, como el carbonero común. Sin embargo, los sonidos del herrerillo común son mucho menos potentes

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✅Static & Animations 😏

✅Smoke Emitters Options 💭

✅Quality Materials 😎

  

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A prayer wheel catches the gentle light emitted from a candle in the darkness this evening.

 

ཨོཾ་མ་ཎི་པདྨེ་ཧཱུྃ x ∞

 

-

 

"The Great Way is not difficult;

It only avoids picking and choosing.

When love and hate are both absent,

Everything becomes clear and undisguised.

Make the smallest distinction, however,

And heaven and earth are set infinitely apart.

If you wish to see the truth,

Then hold no opinions for or against anything.

To set up what you like against what you dislike

Is a disease of the mind.

When the deep meaning of things is not understood,

The mind’s essential peace is disturbed to no avail.

The Way is perfect like vast space,

Where nothing is lacking and nothing is in excess.

Indeed, it is due to our choosing to accept or reject

That we do not see the true nature of things.

Live neither in the entanglements of outer things

Nor in inner feelings of emptiness.

Be serene in the oneness of things

And such erroneous views will disappear by themselves.

To deny the reality of things

Is to miss their reality;

To assert the emptiness of things

Is to miss their reality.

The more you talk and think about it,

The further astray you wander from the truth.

Stop talking and thinking

And there is nothing that you will not be able to know."

 

Taken from "The Faith Mind Sutra: Verses on the Unfailing Source of Life" by Master Sengcan

The incredible glare emitted by the Sombrero Galaxy, catalogued as M104 or NGC4549, lights space for many thousands of light years beyond its central core. This galaxy lies in the constellation of Virgo, being some 31 million light years distant from Earth. This galaxy is approximately one quarter to one third the size of our own Milky Way Galaxy [M104: approximately 50,000 light years diameter].

 

This galaxy also has a striking dust lane that heavily contrasts against the bright glow. Rolf Olsen has previously defined in his excellent annotated image summary of M104 that the Sombrero Galaxy has a large number of orbiting globular clusters, estimated to be in the number of 1,200 to 2,000. These globular clusters are a spherical collection of a massive number of stars held tightly in formation by gravity.

 

Hope you enjoy this beautiful galaxy - thank you for looking.

 

Full Resolution link:

live.staticflickr.com/65535/47820548731_ff518bca22_o.jpg

 

Information about the image:

 

Center (RA, Dec): (189.850, -11.636)

Center (RA, hms): 12h 39m 23.927s

Center (Dec, dms): -11° 38' 08.433"

Size: 38.6 x 26.7 arcmin

Radius:0.391 deg

Pixel scale: 0.732 arcsec/pixel

Orientation: Up is 1.17 degrees E of N

 

Instrument: Planewave CDK 12.5 | Focal Ratio: F8

Camera: STXL-11000 + AOX | Mount: AP900GTO

Camera Sensitivity: Lum: BIN 1x1, RGB: BIN 2x2

Exposure Details: Total: 25 hours | Lum: 76 x 900 sec [19.0hr],RGB 450sec x 16 each [6.0hrs]

Viewing Location: Central Victoria, Australia.

Observatory: ScopeDome 3m

Date: April 2019

Software Enhancements: CCDStack2, CCDBand-Aid, PS, Pixinsight

Author: Steven Mohr

 

66 605 emits a whiff of clag as it powers towards Rugeley Town station with 6E82 13.57 Rugeley B Power Station to Leeds Holbeck loco sidings. Anyone any idea on the consist? Is it a wiring train of some sort?

 

Thanks for the info to Stuart Hassell and Stephen Burdett, cheers guys it certainly wasn't what I was expecting!

Inspired by the lovely Rosie Hardy :)

 

This image became more to me as I continued with it....somehow it took on a life of it's own. It reminded me of memories, of dreams, of a certain dream state that I love being in. I dream all the time at night. Every single night just about. I nearly always remember my dreams vividly. Sometimes they are very stressful, dealing with confrontation (which I hate) or not being able to find my classes on the first day of high school. Sometimes they are about murder which often include me running for my life, being tortured, or killed outright. Sometimes, though, they are about dark fairy tales...about the images I always try to create. Sometimes they are exactly how reality should be.

 

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As the kingfisher flies about its habitat, it frequently emits a characteristic rattling call. Accordingly, a small group of belted kingfishers is known as a rattle, concentration, or kerfuffle.

This is a shot from 2017 of the Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights in Mt Robson Provincial Park. This was the night I took my shots of STEVE to the south over Berg Lake and Mt Robson from the same position (this shot looks north). The red/pink band of forms at around 250 – 500 km altitude from high energy state excited oxygen atoms emitting light at 630 nm. The bottom layer is the more typically seen green aurora that forms between 100 – 250 km altitude by excited oxygen atoms emitting light at 557.7 nano-metres.

An LED exciter-lamp retrofit and power supply I made for my Kalart-Victor 70- and 75-series projectors. I fabricated a holder/heat sink to mount a high-intensity LED onto and mounted the assembly onto to a plastic disc. I then mounted the assembly into a sound drum unit from a parts projector, using the drum's end cap to hold it in place through holes drilled in the disc for the purpose, to avoid modifying the drum.

 

The power supply was made from a power supply module, case, and other parts purchased through electronics parts suppliers. I modified the case, installed the parts, and wired everything up.

 

Those vintage Kalart-Victors are solid, quiet-running machines, their major weakness being a lot of 60-Hertz (or 50Hz for export models) hum in the sound. Unlike other projector makes using DC-powered lamps, the exciter lamps in these machines were AC-powered; thick filaments in the lamps, intended to minimize hum, did not completely squelch the noise. I originally envisioned replacing the original lamp with some kind of internal retrofit, untill I had an LED light-bulb moment. With this gadget, I just remove the old-school exciter lamp and slip this retrofit into place and kiss the exciter lamp hum goodbye.

The sun emitted a significant solar flare, peaking at 1:48 p.m. EDT on Sept. 10, 2014. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured images of the event. Solar flares are powerful bursts of radiation. Harmful radiation from a flare cannot pass through Earth's atmosphere to physically affect humans on the ground. However -- when intense enough -- they can disturb the atmosphere in the layer where GPS and communications signals travel.

 

To see how this event may affect Earth, please visit NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center at spaceweather.gov, the U.S. government's official source for space weather forecasts, alerts, watches and warnings.

 

This flare is classified as an X1.6 class flare. "X-class" denotes the most intense flares, while the number provides more information about its strength. An X2 is twice as intense as an X1, an X3 is three times as intense, etc.

 

Credit: NASA/Goddard/SDO

 

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Emita de las Carmelitas, Cerro de los Angeles, Madrid.

Phosphorus, a key chemical element for many biological processes, has been found in icy grains emitted by the small moon and is likely abundant in its subsurface ocean.

 

Using data collected by NASA’s Cassini mission, an international team of scientists has discovered phosphorus – an essential chemical element for life – locked inside salt-rich ice grains ejected into space from Enceladus.

 

The small moon is known to possess a subsurface ocean, and water from that ocean erupts through cracks in Enceladus' icy crust as geysers at its south pole, creating a plume. The plume then feeds Saturn's E ring (a faint ring outside of the brighter main rings) with icy particles.

 

During its mission at the gas giant from 2004 to 2017, Cassini flew through the plume and E ring numerous times. Scientists found that Enceladus' ice grains contain a rich array of minerals and organic compounds – including the ingredients for amino acids – associated with life as we know it.

 

In this image, seen as a bright arc in this 2006 observation by Cassini, Saturn’s E ring is fed with icy particles from Enceladus’ plume, creating wispy fingers of bright material that is backlit by the Sun. The shadowed hemisphere of the moon can be seen as a dark dot inside the ring.

 

Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

 

#NASA #Cassini #JPL #JetPropulsionLaboratory #NASAMarshall #SolarSystemandBeyond #space #astronomy #Saturn #astronomy #planet #Enceladus

 

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Mt Bromo, emitting ash, photo taken from Mt Penanjakan, where the sunrise viewing place is. Looking south; Mt Semeru in the distance, the highest volcano on Java, the volcano in the foreground is Mt Batok, not active. The caldera is filled with a morning mist which cleared later. Best seen large.

 

Information on this complex is at the Global vulcanism Program of the Smithsonian.

 

See Bromo_Tengger_Semeru_National_Park

Press "L".

 

Pentax 67, Takumar 35mm f4.5, Fuji Provia 400X, IT8-calibrated & wet-mounted drumscan.

 

...::: 4nalog :::...

The slightest grade out of Cadillac was enough for 1225 to give a sufficient bark,

The sun emitted a trio of mid-level solar flares on April 2-3, 2017. The first peaked at 4:02 a.m. EDT on April 2, the second peaked at 4:33 p.m. EDT on April 2, and the third peaked at 10:29 a.m. EDT on April 3. NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory, which watches the sun constantly, captured images of the three events. Solar flares are powerful bursts of radiation. Harmful radiation from a flare cannot pass through Earth's atmosphere to physically affect humans on the ground, however — when intense enough — they can disturb the atmosphere in the layer where GPS and communications signals travel.

 

Learn more: go.nasa.gov/2oQVFju

 

Caption: NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image of a solar flare peaking at 10:29 a.m. EDT on April 3, 2017, as seen in the bright flash near the sun’s upper right edge. The image shows a subset of extreme ultraviolet light that highlights the extremely hot material in flares and which is typically colorized in teal.

 

Credits: NASA/SDO

 

NASA image use policy.

 

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.

 

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Mount Etna emitting smoke, Catania, Sicily, Italy.

 

Mount Etna is Europe's highest and most active volcano. Towering above the city of Catania on the island of Sicily, it has been growing for about 500,000 years and is in the midst of a series of eruptions that began in 2001. It has experienced a variety of eruption styles, including violent explosions and voluminous lava flows. More than 25% of Sicily's population lives on Etna's slopes, and it is the main source of income for the island, both from agriculture (due to its rich volcanic soil) and tourism.

 

It's cocoon spinning time for the cecropia moths I'm rearing.

 

Freshly spun silk emits a pretty strong fluorescence under UV lights, and seems to fade as time goes on. This silk is just about as fresh as it gets with the central cocoon spun earlier in the day and 3 more caterpillars actively working on cocoons of their own.

 

UV highlights every one of the fine silk strands, revealing what a complicated mess they make. I'm not sure if there's a plan to the supporting pieces, or if they just have a blast laying it all down.

 

Technical notes:

-Lit with 2 UV flashlights with filters to reduce any visible light they emit.

-Unmodified camera is capturing the visible light emitted when the silk (and caterpillar knobs) are hit with UV - this is what your eyes would see.

-This is 3 exposures with the lights aimed to highlight different areas, then combined in Photoshop.

The last in this series of experimental photos for now. I think for similar images in the future I'd like to add a star/milky way or star trail skies.

 

Filters: n/a

Processed: Lightroom CC, Photoshop CC

 

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Go on leave a comment, you know you want too.

  

This image and all other images are available to purchase.

"Following backlash from the general public after the NMTV published an article on its secret dealings with off-world entities, EMIT and its vast factories had to get more hired security to combat the growing “threat” that apparently is the public. Obviously, this was really a way to combat agents of RORG from infiltrating the organization even more. They’ve been going at the group in multiple ways, using such “notable” publishing organizations as the WOT to slander the group as enemies of the state, a threat on democracy and those who wish to suppress order in the future. That’s just what’s above ground, what’s in visible sight anyways. Down in the lower levels, that where the real treachery is taking place. Using a system of sewers I was tipped off about, I made my way to a lesser known part of section 2. Here, they had built an instillation for some more darker purposes. It was originally disguised as a water cleaning hub designed to make the disgusting, messy and quite toxic sewer water drinkable. This was promised many years ago, but we knew this wasn’t going to ever happen. Coming up on the exit, I noticed parts, crates and lights coming from the facilities windows. This was no cleaning installation. Experiments and who knows what technology is being tested. Coming around now, two guards are noticing my presence. Better silence them before I have an army to deal with."

 

Here I am, on the eve of 2021 with my final MOC of the year. This was built for the RebelLUG Cyberpunk which I am proud to be apart of. Please not only comment on the build, but the story as well. Put some work into both.

 

If you like this build, consider tapping the fave button ever so slightly and if you’re feeling like doing a bit extra, follow me here. Thanks!

~Noah

 

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Emitting a pungent blue haze of exhaust 56064 is crawling out of Barry Docks with the 15.15 Barry to Burn Naze service.

The docks are the merest shadow of the once busy coal port which shipped good Welsh steam coal out to destinations all over the world.

56064 was built at Doncaster Works, it entered service 17/09/1979. The locomotive was withdrawn in September 2008 and cut at C.F. Booth (Rotherham) in March 2009

Copyright Geoff Dowling 20/04/96: All rights reserved

 

The chimneys emitting heavy smokes as the work is at full flow in Kolaghat Thermal Power Corporation throughout the night.The picture is taken on board Puri Howrah Garibrath Express at the crack of dawn.

Photons emitted from the surface of the Sun (sunlight) take an average of 8 minutes and 20 seconds to travel to the Earth. So, when you look at the Sun, you're actually viewing about 8 minutes in the past.

 

Why did I say "an average of"? Obviously, the speed of light doesn't change. However, the Earth's distance to the Sun does change, due to its elliptical orbit.

 

By comparison, other stars in the night sky are so far away from us, light takes much, much longer to reach us. From the closest stars, light takes a few years to get to Earth. From the farthest stars, light has taken literally billions of years to reach us.

 

So when you view these stars, you are actually viewing the distant, distant past. For instance, the light that you're seeing may have left that star while dinosaurs walked the Earth.

 

If you took the time to read this, I appreciate it. Hopefully, you found it interesting. I personally think the notion of viewing the distant past in the night sky is fascinating.

 

By the way, I took this photo of the sunset at a local park. I was able to capture the distant treetops over a large pond.

Curiosidades : Emite insistentemente un reclamo seco (tac), que repite con frecuencia irregular: tac-tac…, tac-tac-tac. El canto es más elaborado y melodioso. Reclama y canta a lo largo de todo el día, pero especialmente por la mañana muy temprano, incluso antes del amanecer.

Esta torre del siglo XIV, fue erigida por el obispo Diego de Padrón. Un sólido cubo defensivo coronado por almenas que fue utilizado, inicialmente, como torre vigía y después como campanario.

Su construcción finaliza en época del arzobispo Berenguel de Landoria, y a él se lo dedican.

Y la torre, contigua a la portada de As Praterías, ya tiene un nombre: La Berenguela.

 

En 1678, sobre el cubo gótico original, se instala un primer cuerpo cuadrado y sobre él, otro octogonal rematado por una linterna, en la que una luminaria indicar a los peregrinos el camino a la tumba del Apóstol.

Se enciende el primer día de los años Xacobeo y permanece así hasta el final del Año Santo.

 

La primera campana que se colocó en la torre fue en el año 1680, era considerada una campana con amplia mezcla de frecuencias acústicas y un sonido musicalmente muy agradable, pero se rajo y perdió su sonoridad original, siendo sustituida por otra construida en el año 1729. Campana que permaneció en activo hasta los años setenta del pasado siglo, ya que también se resquebrajo en 1976. Al final del Siglo XX la sustituyo la actual, fabricada en Holanda.

 

En el primer tercio del siglo XIX, se colocó un reloj en cada una de las cuatro caras de la torre, únicamente con la aguja horaria, ya que las horas las marca la Berenguela y los cuartos una campana más pequeña llamada, obviamente, campana de los cuartos.

 

En la linterna, en el remate sobre la cúpula, focos de tecnología led emiten una luz cálida, lo que le da un aspecto semejante a una llama y se convierte en un faro guía que señala en la noche, el sepulcro del apóstol Santiago.

 

Una hilera de fieles esperan ante la portada de As Praterías, la entrada al interior del templo para asistir a la Misa del Peregrino, que se celebra al mediodía en el altar mayor de la catedral.

 

...................................................................SIGUIENTE

An old Cornish work that literally translates as "ant". Seems appropriate for a tilt-shift.

I hadn't bargained on "Mayflower" emitting quite as much clag as it sped through Twyford station with the "Chairman's Train" on a London Paddington circular private tour via Oxford.

 

Locomotive: Thompson B1 Class 4-6-0 61306 "Mayflower".

 

Location: Twyford station, Berkshire.

The Sun emitted a strong solar flare, peaking at 7:14 p.m. ET on July 2, 2023. NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory, which watches the Sun constantly, captured an image of the event.

 

Solar flares are powerful bursts of energy. Flares and solar eruptions can impact radio communications, electric power grids, navigation signals, and pose risks to spacecraft and astronauts.

 

This flare is classified as an X1.0 flare. X-class denotes the most intense flares, while the number provides more information about its strength.

 

To see how such space weather may affect Earth, please visit NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center spaceweather.gov/, the U.S. government’s official source for space weather forecasts, watches, warnings, and alerts. NASA works as a research arm of the nation's space weather effort. NASA observes the Sun and our space environment constantly with a fleet of spacecraft that study everything from the Sun's activity to the solar atmosphere, and to the particles and magnetic fields in the space surrounding Earth.

 

Image Credit: NASA/SDO

 

#NASA #space #NASAMarshall #msfc #sun #heliophysics #NASAGoddard #SolarDynamicObservatory #SDO

 

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