View allAll Photos Tagged Filaments
It's a common lilly flower, what amazed me is the symmetric, asymmetric, and antisymmetric interplay between the 5 petals, 6 styles & 1 stigma, besides the fact that the petals are like reflectors that converge the reflected lights on the pollen pods. I have tried to highlight this apparently hidden aspect using selective colouring technique offered by Photoshop.
The same as my previous image of the solar filament, however I've added Jupiter to this one for some scale.
Today's Sun, crackling with filaments and really coming to life, contrasting with the moon from a few weeks ago. All taken with the Philips webcam and stitched together in PS CS3.
Close up on prominence at 3 meter of focal with a Daystar filter.
Take a look also at my astronomy video channel.
Since I'm putting Edison bulbs in the studio, I figured I'd make a new wallpaper out of one.
***NOTE: if you're on the mobile site, you may need to load the desktop site to access the Download button. You can usually request a desktop site inside your mobile browser app.
Since I'm putting Edison bulbs in the studio, I figured I'd make a new wallpaper out of one.
***NOTE: if you're on the mobile site, you may need to load the desktop site to access the Download button. You can usually request a desktop site inside your mobile browser app.
More info and images in my blog: www.astroanarchy.blogspot.fi/2013/09/three-experimental-s...
Filaments in the Western Veil. Witch's Broom Nebula in light of ionized Oxygen.
Micro-filament from an incandescent light-bulb.
Taken on a FEI Quanta 600F at the WPAFB AFRL Materials and Manufacturing Directorate
Dayton, Ohio
see more at: photography.designmotion.net/blog
Household incandescent lamps use Tungsten filament because of there electrical and mechanical properties.
Tungsten has strength, ductility and workability, tungsten can readily be formed into the filament coils.
Courtesy of Gerald Poirier
Image Details
Instrument used: Quanta Family
Magnification: 59x
Vacuum: -5 torr
Voltage: 15Kev
Spot: 3
Working Distance: 10.8
Detector: SE
A couple of large LED light bulbs made to look like the wound filaments of ordinary incandescent bulbs.
#67 Light Bulbs for 119 pictures in 2019
This Hubble image of galaxy NGC 1275 reveals fine, thread-like filamentary structures in the gas surrounding the galaxy. The red filaments are composed of cool gas being suspended by a magnetic field, and are surrounded by the 100-million-degree-Fahrenheit hot gas in the center of the Perseus galaxy cluster.
The filaments are dramatic markers of the feedback process through which energy is transferred from the central massive black hole to the surrounding gas. The filaments originate when cool gas is transported from the center of the galaxy by radio-frequency-emitting bubbles of radiation that rise in the hot interstellar gas.
At a distance of 230 million light-years, NGC 1275 is one of the closest giant elliptical galaxies.
For more information, visit: hubblesite.org/image/2375/news_release/2008-28
Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage (STScI/AURA)-ESA/Hubble Collaboration;
Acknowledgment: A. Fabian (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, UK)