View allAll Photos Tagged MAGNETICFIELDS

Macro Mondays : Made of Metal

 

I shot this magnet through a glass pane. The iron powder shows you the magnetic field of it.

 

Hope you enjoy!

 

Happy Macro Mondays!

 

All my pictures of MM you will find in my album Macro Mondays 🔬

Macro Mondays

Figura composta por imãs de ferrite (14 mm Ø) e imãs de neodímio (10 mm Ø), peso total 60 gramas.

Figure composed of ferrite magnets (14 mm Ø) and neodymium magnets (10 mm Ø), total weight 60 grams.

IMG_7190

My parents always warned me

never date dead dudes.

It just seems unfair.

I never had a chance to get to know you

back when you were still alive

and wouldn’t try to eat the waiter.

  

You may be a biter when you get hangry

and maybe your conversation style is lacking...

But I think we all put way too much emphasis

on what is in a body anyway.

And when I feed you enough,

you’re actually a really good listener.

  

Zombie boy I’m going to play your song

by the Magnetic Fields

and we’re going to dance around and be

weird and wonderful together.

Everyone is in a great vast process of decay

a race to a desiccated destiny.

  

Some of us are just overachievers

and have a big head start!

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdMHG9h__Oo

 

**All photos and poems are copyrighted. Do not use without permission**

Austin, Texas

 

I dislike a lot of music that one would call country but this song has always really gotten to me.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=8yZ50ptDpuQ

 

**All photos are copyrighted. Please don't use without permission**

 

MY SWALLOWS HAVE FLY 10,000 KM TO RETURN TO ITS NEST OF MY YARD. I HAVE MISSED THEM SO MUCH.

 

Ich habe sie so sehr vermisst.

.................................................................................................................

allen Besuchern und Freunden meines Fotostreams ein herzliches Dankeschön für eure Kommentare und Kritiken, Einladungen und Favoriten.

all visitors and friends of my photostream, a heartfelt thank you for your comments and reviews, invitations and favorites

Happy Monday dear friends, I wish you a great week ahead.

 

What you see here is four translucent colorful push pins taped on a 6 cm white magnetic stir bar, which is turning on a magnetic platform.

 

If you would like to see how the system works please see this video. www.youtube.com/watch?v=YeuZPAqFn50

 

Thank you for your visit :))

Woolly whiskers of iron filings suspended from a magnet, illustrating magnetic field lines.

See the Alaska 2019 set.

 

Another view of the Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights). Standing there watching this was like witnessing someone blowing a cloud across the sky. I could almost feel a 'puff' of solar wind moving the sun's charged particles across the sky. It was astounding.

 

Architectural design: “Magnetic Field I” by Christopher Puzio

www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhcCEHX6TaQ&list=RDIhcCEHX6TaQ

 

**All photos are copyrighted. Please don't use without permission**

# Seriously, I just found this discard on a drop drive, let it sit on my desk hitting me with guilt vibes for allowing it to languish... so, its premier! Actually, I like oddities, but remain uncertain how many minutes it will survive in my stream. [sigh] Well, what the hell? ;-}

 

# I do have a large collection of experimental solar photography, including sun spot imagery, high ISO shots, et al., some results of which are posted here, shot w/ a relatively pedestrian Fuji. This looks like it might have been shot with an iPhone, however! But if you like it... it stays. 8^)

One more image from the incredible display of aurora we were fortunate to witness in Sweden a couple of weeks ago.

 

I think these forests are my favourite part of Arctic Scandinavia in winter, absolutely incredible to photograph.

 

I wanted to make some time lapse movies here but it was so cold that during a lens change the mirror froze down on my 1dsmkiii. I couldn't move it and I knew that if I got myself and my camera back into the warm car it would thaw out, but that would cause a bigger problem. As the sensor warms it will condensate with the warm air. When one gets the camera out into -35 again you run the risk of loosing the sensor altogether as it freezes up within seconds. Pretty tough going and unforgiving when it gets this cold! All part of the fun and experience though!

 

The aurora here is the only thing lighting the snow covered landscape, when the aurora dies away it gets very dark indeed and makes balancing the exposures more difficult.

 

Canon 5dmkii Nikon 14-24 @ 14mm 2.5 seconds @ f2.8 iso 3200

It has been said that optical astronomy from the surface of the earth is like bird watching from the bottom of a lake. My view of this partial solar eclipse phenomena was completely obscured by clouds for most of the event and this image was photographed through a muddling layer of cloud. The cluster of sunspots near the center of the sun adjacent to the lunar umbra was designated as AR3842. Its twisted magnetic polarity was highly energetic creating an X-class solar flare that will likely produce geomagnetic storms and auroras within the next several days. 02 October 2024.

The auroras here at South Pole often look like waves of light. In fact, the aurora patterns follow the magnetic field lines of the Earth's magnetic field.

Inspired by one of the many creative ideas from M.C. Escher, I modified the vertical wall painting, called "Optical Glade" (2017) by Stanley Donwood at the remarkable tower that is the heart of Bonnefantenmuseum (1995, Aldo Rossi) In Maastricht, The Netherlands.

 

Best seen full screen.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonnefantenmuseum

 

Iron filings under the influence of a fairly strong magnet.

Continuing on with this series of Paris at night in the summer combined with photos from the Magnetic Fields lyric book for the album i for this very song....

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZX8xHXcAEiY&list=PLF598080EC4..

 

**All photos are copyrighted. Please don't use without permission**

I.O.U. a magnet photograph.

NEWS ARTICLE:

www.caller2.com/2000/august/14/today/texas_me/1885.html

 

Worked with scanning technician Mr. Lee Lawrence of P&Q Photo Hollywood California trying to figure out the color embedded in the 35mm Fuji Superia ISO 800 negative, and our research proved miraculously rewarding!! low latitude rare aurora during solar maximum aug 12, 2000 from a coronal mass ejection on approx Aug 9/10. Negative scanned by Graytone.com in 2002 with Isomet 405HR drum scanner with high dynamic range sensitivity. Atomic nitrogen glowing blue at 1000km as confirmed by physicist Neil Davis. Pink oxygen emissions and Perseid Meteor crashing thru due to simultaneous meteor shower that night at 4am 12 Aug 2000. Scanned by P & Q Photo, 6660 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, California.

 

ROCKET TRAIL PHOTO OF GLOWING COLORS IN THE STRATOSPHERE by Flickr member Angel Villanueva

www.flickr.com/photos/angelvillanueva/289510093/

   

Representation of magnetic field.

Aurora Borealis above our hotel.... mind blowingly beautiful.

The visualisation software Uniview allows visitors of the Linz-based Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K to explore the universe not only in a breathtaking resolution - but also in 3-D.

 

Photo showing the Earth with its magnetic field.

- Composite of shots taken during the total phase of the recent eclipse. The frames are ordered from left to right and the illuminated thin clouds are also left in the image. Interestingly, if you like a challenge, one can calculate how far I am from the eclipse centre line by looking at the positions of the first and last light at the beginning and the end of totality phase.

This is a photo of my first ever capture of the Aurora Borealis after a trip to Iceland with my partner.

We drove out of Reykjavik with a company and parked up and waited for the skies to clear.

Unfortunately we didn't see the Northern Lights with our eyes but after setting my Canon 80d to a 25/30 second exposure it brought out a faint air glow of green.

This is the only decent image out of about 50 I took that night.

Edited in Photoshop CC & Lightroom.

The ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) has been observing the Sun for 25 years. In that time, SOHO has observed two of the Sun’s 11-year sunspot cycles, as solar activity waxes and wanes. This montage of 25 images captured by the spacecraft’s Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope provides a snapshot of the changing face of our Sun. The individual images show gas with a temperature of about two million degrees Celsius in the Sun’s atmosphere, or corona, which extends millions of kilometres from the Sun. The brightest images occur around the time of solar maximum, when the Sun’s magnetic field is strongest and highly dynamic, changing its configuration and releasing energy into space.

 

View this image as an animated gif

 

Credits: SOHO (ESA & NASA)

Space Science image of the week:

 

A gigantic ribbon of hot gas bursts upwards from the Sun, guided by a giant loop of invisible magnetism. This remarkable image was captured on 27 July 1999 by SOHO, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory. Earth is superimposed for comparison and shows that from top to bottom the loop of gas, or prominence, extends about 35 times the diameter of our planet into space.

 

A prominence is an extension of gas that arches up from the surface of the Sun. Prominences are sculpted by magnetic fields that are generated inside the Sun, and then burst through the surface, propelling themselves into the solar atmosphere.

 

The Sun is predominantly made of plasma – an electrified gas of electrons and ions. Being electrically charged, the ions respond to magnetic fields. So when the magnetic loops reach up into the solar atmosphere, huge streams of plasma are attracted to fill them, creating the prominences that can last for weeks or months.

 

Spectacular prominences like this one are not particularly common, a few being detected each year. When they start to collapse, mostly the gas ‘drains’ down the magnetic field lines back into the Sun. Occasionally, however, they become unstable and release their energy into space. These eruptive prominences fling out a huge quantity of plasma that solar physicists call a coronal mass ejection. Solar flares are also associated with coronal mass ejections.

 

If this plasma hits Earth it can disrupt satellites, power grids and communications. It also causes the aurora to shine in the polar skies.

 

Taken by SOHO’s ultraviolet telescope, this image shows ionised helium at a temperature of about 70 000ºC.

 

A version of the image without the Earth for comparison can be found here.

 

Credit: SOHO (ESA & NASA)

 

Total Solar Eclipse, 2017.08.21, taken in Oregon by the Snake River north of Spring Recreation Site.

 

I could not see the Earthshine with my eyes, but my camera had no problem capturing it during the longer exposures.

 

Thoughts?

 

100mm, f/5.5

5D4 ISO100

Seven exposure sets combined (32 photos):

5x 1/800s

5x 1/50s

5x 1/13s

4x 1/4s

6x 0.6s

3 x2s

4 x4s

Travelling back down South through the night after being in the Snæfellsnes Peninsula we caught a glimpse of Aurora, after a quick stop off it disappeared only to burst into life further along the road and it was another dash out to capture what was for me the best display I had seen(until the last night over there). I've shot the spikes of Aurora before but to see the swirls was something else - magical.

 

If you like my work and are on facebook, then please feel free to like/share my page.

 

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Thanks for looking.

 

All images are © Steve Clasper Photography, 2015 - All Rights Reserved.

   

Balthrop, Alabama at Magnetic Field

Brooklyn

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZX8xHXcAEiY&list=PLF598080EC4.

 

**All photos are copyighted. Please don't use without permission**

- Looks I'm doing all possible processes and perspectives of the sun so got to have the solar corona, and this is my attempt of catching the corona during the eclipse. We had some thin cloud cover so the corona is a bit disturbed by the clouds to the upper left of the disc. Otherwise, the corona was captured out towards 1-2 solar radius. Looking forward to get a better picture next time.

I wanted to take a photo of The Eiffel Tower because I knew there was a real scarcity of them. My friend Amy convinced me to go and, coincidentally, there was a bike tour that met up there exactly at noon one day. The tour guide was hilarious. He was actually from Ireland and had relocated to Paris on account of his girlfriend. He told us that one of the American tourists in another group had asked him once "Is that the REAL Eiffel Tower?"

 

He also told us that at the top you get to vote on what color you want the Eiffel Tower to be painted next and because so many tourists vs. French citizens vote, the top color right now is neon pink. I'm not sure if he was kidding or not...I hope so but you never know.

 

I'm not a huge fan of tourism and tourist shots but I figured I could put my own spin on things a little here.

 

Lyrics at the bottom again taken from the song by the Magnetic Fields "Infinitely Late at Night"

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZX8xHXcAEiY&list=PLF598080EC4

 

***All photos are copyrighted. Please don't use without permission***

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZX8xHXcAEiY&list=PLF598080EC4...

 

**All photos are copyrighted. Please don't use without permission**

For the Flickr Friday Group. This weeks theme, "Magnetic".

 

Made me think of those lines from that 'old movie'.

 

"We're passing through their magnetic field, hold tight. Switch your deflectors on, double front."

 

Total Solar Eclipse, 2017.08.21. Taken in Oregon along the Snake River, north of Spring Recreation Site near the center line of totality. Celestial North is up.

 

I also created a version that kept the Earthshine, but since my eye saw a black moon, I made this version, too. My Baily's Beads sequence is up next ...

 

Thoughts?

 

100mm f/5.5

5D4

Seven exposure sets combined (32 photos total):

5x 1/800s

5x 1/50s

5x 1/13s

4x 1/4s

6x 0.6s

3 x2s

4 x4s

 

The Aurora Australis beaming through the clouds at Tuross Head, Australia, last Sunday night, 4th of August. It was 1:30 am when I shot this twelve-frame panorama. A jumper and two jackets only barely managed to keep the cold out!

 

You can read the story behind this photo here: nightscapades.com

Northern Lights and forest close to Yellownife, Northwest Territories, Canada.

 

*I certainly welcome comments but please do not post "Award" comments. Thanks! ;o)

 

©2013 Vincent Demers

 

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Iron filings held in a magnetic field as an alternate take on this week's Smile on Saturday theme: Magnets.

The Aurora Australis outburst on Sunday, June 1st, 2025, at Jervis Bay, Australia.

This composite shows a 2 second burst taken ~3s before and after totality of the 2017.08.21 total solar eclipse. Taken North of Spring Recreation Site in Oregon on the Snake River (OR/ID border).

 

Thoughts?

 

Baily's Beads exposures were ISO 50, 1/5000, Chromosphere shots are 1/6400 ISO 100. Chromosphere shot is a merger of two shots, one just after C2, the other just before C3.

 

Esprit 100ED f/5.5

5D4

AP900

 

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