View allAll Photos Tagged Orbiting
Brian begins his exploration of the circular bony socket for an eye, known as the orbit, in a skull from a sheep. On Skye, with its thousands of sheep, coming across a skeleton happens regularly - I came across six on my last outing.
For Macro Mondays theme 'Circles'. The orbit measured 3.5cm in diameter.
No snails were harmed in the making of this photograph.
the people on top are walking on a net
walkable Artwork Installation "in Orbit" bei Tomás Saraceno
Museum "K21"
Düsseldorf
Getting a little closer to the action. I really miss using my 100mm macro lens, but it's such a pain since the auto-focus stopped working.
Thought I'd have a go at using the moon instead of the stars for a change in long exposure night shots. Although, I had to move it to make it perfectly vertical (it really did not look good slanted).
Fantastic night spent chasing meteors on Holy Island Northumberland , plenty meteors spotted, more difficult to capture though. with Gopostal and Ellieslion. Thanks Rob and Dave for a class night, and some spot on Light Painting. We must do this again soon lads.
This shot was taken behind the castle to try and soften the light being thrown off by a very bright moon.
In anatomy, the orbit is the cavity or socket of the skull in which the eye and its appendages are situated.
This is a cave, which remembered me on the orbit, called Teufelsloch.
The Teufelsloch is a cave on the Hamburger Wappen in the Teufelsmauer near Timmenrode in the Harz district, Saxony-Anhalt.
The cave is on the southeast side of a small rocky basin, the north side of which is occupied by the rocks of the Hamburger Wappen. The cowshed caves are located somewhat northwest. The name Kuhstall is also common for Teufelsloch.
Le Solar Orbiter, fruit d'une collaboration internationale entre la NASA et l' Agence spatiale européenne (ESA), a été lancé en février 2020. Depuis, il a acquis des données qui aident les astronomes à mieux comprendre la volatilité de la surface solaire et à prévoir les tempêtes solaires.
Grâce à ses dix instruments de pointe, il s'agit du laboratoire scientifique le plus complexe jamais envoyé par l'humanité vers notre étoile la plus proche. L'un de ses plus grands exploits à ce jour est d'avoir obtenu la plus large vue haute résolution du Soleil jamais réalisée.
°°°°°°°°°°°°
The Solar Orbiter, an international collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) launched in February 2020. Since then, it has acquired data that helps astronomers better understand the volatile solar surface and predict solar storms.
Aided by its 10 state-of-the-art instruments, it is the most complex scientific laboratory sent by humankind to our nearest star. One of its biggest feats to date is having taken the widest high-resolution view of the sun ever achieved.
Credit : Photo : ESA et équipe NASA/Solar Orbiter/EUI, E. Kraaikamp (ROB) ( CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO )
lake activities
[Kodak Brownie Cresta modified with flipped lens / expired ORWP NP 27 / Rodinal stand dev. / 2018]
the berlin sky darkens. reflections capture the last light, then the artificial suns emerge. spheres of amber and gold. they float in the glass, a celestial dance over a bridge of steel. a solitary figure crosses, a silhouette in the structured void. the city breathes. a moment where architecture, light, and the vast, passing sky merge into a single, layered dream.
OBSERVE Collective
All images are © Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved
germanstreetphotography.com/michael-monty-may/
The London Orbit (often referred to as the Orbit Tower or its original name, Orbit) is a 114.5-metre-high sculpture and observation tower in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, London. It is Britain's largest piece of public art, and is intended to be a permanent lasting legacy of London's hosting of the 2012 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games, assisting in the post-Olympics.