View allAll Photos Tagged MATHEMATICAL

ⓒRebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved

Do not use without permission.

 

This wooden bridge connects the two parts of Queens' college in Cambridge. This bridge was built in 1906, replacing an earlier bridge from 1749 (which had seen repairs in 1866). But the later version kept the original design (designed by William Etheridge and built by James Essex the Younger), using straight timber but at the same time creating the allusion of an arch.

 

The rather unusual design of the bridge has given it its current popular name of the Mathematical Bridge - but as Queens' college themselves point out on their website: "There is no such thing as an “official name” for the bridge. It has never been named." In the 18th century it was known as “Essex’s Bridge”, it was later also known as “Newton’s Bridge” because it was erroneously believed he had designed the it. The bridge was sometimes called the Mathematical Bridge from 1803 onwards - but there was also another Cambridge bridge known by that name. But the bridge is also known as the "Queens' bridge" - the above mentioned website calls it both the Mathematical and Queens' bridge.

 

If you are really in to bridges I must recommend the college web-page on the subject, it is extensive and very informative.

ⓒRebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved

Do not use without permission.

 

This wooden bridge connects the two parts of Queens' college in Cambridge. This bridge was built in 1906, replacing an earlier bridge from 1749 (which had seen repairs in 1866). But the later version kept the original design (designed by William Etheridge and built by James Essex the Younger), using straight timber but at the same time creating the allusion of an arch.

 

The rather unusual design of the bridge has given it its current popular name of the Mathematical Bridge - but as Queens' college themselves point out on their website: 'There is no such thing as an “official name” for the bridge. It has never been named.'

 

In the 18th century it was known as “Essex’s Bridge”, it was later also known as “Newton’s Bridge” because it was erroneously believed he had designed the it. The bridge was sometimes called the Mathematical Bridge from 1803 onwards - but there was also another Cambridge bridge known by that name. But the bridge is also known as the 'Queens' bridge' - the above mentioned website calls it both the Mathematical and Queens' bridge.

 

If you are really in to bridges I must recommend the college web-page on the subject, it is extensive and very informative.

 

And the flag decorating the bridge is the Transgender Pride Flag.

MELODY SHEY FATPACK

40 COLORS SHORT-40 COLORS TOP-SOLIDS ,LACE-40 COLORS BELT SIZES: MAITREYA-LEGACY-HOURGLASS-FREYA-ISIS

 

::Fluffy Stuff::

::Fluffy Stuff:: So Fluffy Slippers

 

all info in the blog

 

blog

  

Cervo is a small picturesque village on the Italian Riviera. It is compactly situated on a hillside and slopes down towards the Mediterranean Sea (for those who are concerned about the term "compact" in the context of a village: in mathematics, "compact" means closed and bounded). From the sea to the upper town wall, it is a few dozen metres uphill through narrow alleyways quite steeply, so that "higher semesters" may have to breathe heavily. The colour of the houses is a yellowish-orange ochre.

of a small sensor.

15 mm. Summilux lens.

Fire Spiral is a part of a series of spirals created in Ultra Fractal 6.

The Mathematical Bridge, also known as Newton's bridge, Queen's College Cambridge UK. It looks like an arch but is made of straight timbers.

The Penrose Paving is constructed from just two different diamond-shaped granite tiles, each adorned identically with stainless steel circular arcs. There are various ways of covering the infinite plane with them, matching the arcs. But every such pattern is non-repetitive and contains infinitely many exact copies of what you see before you.

Mathematical Institute, Oxford

Pont du Gard.

A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1985 and 'Grand site de France®' since 2004.

© 2014 Marc Haegeman. All Rights Reserved.

*please do not use without permission

 

Website: Marc Haegeman Photography

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Pont du Gard official site: www.pontdugard.fr/fr

Thank You Deep Dream Generator. Yes I was a math nerd back in the days. I hope I don't bore you with this series.

An exhibition by the artist Isa Genzkens in K21 museum in Düsseldorf, Germany

Amsterdam - Station Zuid - Strawinskylaan

 

Copyright - All images are copyright © protected. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

There is a madness to the mathematics involved with these shots.

 

HP5 is 400 speed film. I pushed it to 1600 - two stops faster. I then stacked a yellow and ND filter atop the lens, knocking it down to a meterable 200iso.

 

So why not just shoot HP5 with a ND filter that knocks off a stop or two? Simple. I didn't have one. I have a three-stop, a six-stop and the mighty ND1000 - a ten stop filters.

 

Here's how I worked it.

 

The scene was around 11EV. With 400 speed film, I'd have shot it at f/12 and 1/100th of a second (the fastest this shutter will go). But to me that's a little boring for a scene like this. I wanted the oddness of the lens to show through a bit.

 

Separately, I've noticed that I really like HP5 shot at 1600iso rather than 400. It's a bit darker (possibly because of reciprocity failure, possibly because of how I develop it - no idea, really), and grainier due to the pushing.

 

I wanted to shoot it at f/6.3 - a stop "slower" than the lens itself. To do this, I'd need to deaden some of the light, especially since it's at 1600.

 

So with a light of EV11 and an aperture of f/6.3 and an ISO of 1600, that would hand me a shutter speed of around f/1000. Obviously that's not going to fly.

 

But what if I also wanted to have a slow shutter speed - the slowest I could get with this shutter: 1 second.

 

Well, the difference between 1/1000 of a second and one second is ten stops. Fortunately I have a 10 stop ND filter. Huzzah for me!

 

With the yellow filter... well, sometimes I decide not to meter for it. Sometimes I just want things a little darker.

 

And that's my set up here. f/6.3 and 1 second at 1600. It's sort of odd and pointless, but so many things are.

 

Technically, I could shoot this at box speed (400) and use an 8-stop ND filter, but there really isn't such a thing. I could stack a 6-stop and a 3-stop and adjust accordingly, but doing the full 10-stop at 1600 iso will bring out the grain when I dev. Granted, at 4x5, it's hard to tell, but it's there.

 

.

.

.

'Stasis No. 3'

 

Camera: Graflex Speed Graphic

Lens: Steinheil München Anastigmat Actinar 4.5; 135mm

Film: Ilford HP5+ at 1600iso

Exposure: f/6.3; 1sec

Process: HC-110B; 11min

 

Wyoming

July 2022

State University

Moscow, Russia

20250830_7796

"Mathematical biologists love sunflowers. The giant flowers are one of the most obvious—as well as the prettiest—demonstrations of a hidden mathematical rule shaping the patterns of life: the Fibonacci sequence, a set in which each number is the sum of the previous two (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 610, ...), found in everything from pineapples to pine cones. In this case, the telltale sign is the number of different seed spirals on the sunflower's face." From Science Magazine, link: www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/05/sunflowers-show-complex-f...

Thank You Deep Dream Generator

IMGP2764

 

The bridge was designed in 1748 by William Etheridge (1709–76), and was built in 1749 by James Essex the Younger (1722–84). It has subsequently been repaired in 1866 and rebuilt to the same design in 1905.

 

The myth that the bridge was originally built without fastenings at the joints, but could not be rebuilt successfully without introducing fastenings at the joints, might owe its origin to a change in the nature of the fastenings during the 1905 rebuilding.

 

Although it appears to be an arch, it is composed entirely of straight timbers built to an unusually sophisticated engineering design, hence the name. A replica of the bridge was built in 1923 near the Iffley Lock in Oxford.

Creativity is solving problems that cannot be formulated before they have been solved.

The shaping of the question is part of the answer.

― Piet Hein

 

The first picture in a small task I have given myself. Simplisity in expression, in colours, edit and words.

 

The settings are created by great and wonderful people on SL who opened their sims for us all to have fun. The words will be small grooks made by a Danish mathematic and poet called Piet Hein.

 

This picture is taken at Furillen

 

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Love%20of%20Life/169/103/22

© Dan McCabe

 

A geeky computer joke. This shell is nature's way of exploring cellular automata :).

 

A cellular automaton is a mathematical technique that evolves a collection of data using very simple rules. This shell exhibits that sort of evolution along its outer surface.

 

In the computer world, a shell is a program that accepts a persons inputs (usually by typing commands) and then spits out the results.

  

Texture By Joes Sistah

  

The Mathematical Bridge is the popular name of a wooden bridge across the River Cam, between two parts of Queens' College, Cambridge. Its official name is simply the Wooden Bridge.

 

The bridge was designed by William Etheridge, and built by James Essex in 1749. It has been rebuilt on two occasions, in 1866 and in 1905, but has kept the same overall design.

 

The original "mathematical bridge" was another bridge of the same design, also designed by James Essex, crossing the Cam between Trinity and Trinity Hall, where Garret Hostel bridge now stands.

The Mathematical Bridge is the popular name of a wooden footbridge in the southwest of central Cambridge. It bridges the River Cam and joins two parts of Queens' College.

“The chief forms of beauty are order and symmetry and definiteness, which the mathematical sciences demonstrate in a special degree”

Aristotle

 

Strauss

I have always granted myself the freedom to exercise artistic license and pursue whatever brings me joy. Currently, shots from my cellphone and digital AI artwork fulfill that purpose, at least for the time being.

 

If in doubt which is my work and which is Generative AI, just look for the watermark on my photography.

 

- Generative AI art

_upscayl_4x_realesrgan-x4plus-anime

An exhibition by the artist Isa Genzkens in K21 museum in Düsseldorf, Germany

Mathematical Bridge, Queens' College, Cambridge, 27 Mar 2023

A oft shot image of the Mathematical Bridge in Cambridge. Nothing original here, but why not, like thousands of other photographers!

Thank You Deep Dream Generator (AI software)

Mathematical Bridge, Queen's College, Cambridge, 12 Feb 2024

Sited next to Queens College, this wooden bridge over the River Cam was originally built in 1749, and was rebuilt in 1905 to the same design. It is an example of a voussoir arch bridge.

 

Minolta Autocord, yellow filter, Kentmere 100, Caffenol CL-CS, 15°C. starting temperature, 45 minutes.

IMG_2969

 

The bridge was designed in 1748 by William Etheridge (1709–76), and was built in 1749 by James Essex the Younger (1722–84). It has subsequently been repaired in 1866 and rebuilt to the same design in 1905.

 

The myth that the bridge was originally built without fastenings at the joints, but could not be rebuilt successfully without introducing fastenings at the joints, might owe its origin to a change in the nature of the fastenings during the 1905 rebuilding.

 

Although it appears to be an arch, it is composed entirely of straight timbers built to an unusually sophisticated engineering design, hence the name. A replica of the bridge was built in 1923 near the Iffley Lock in Oxford.

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