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Just over a month into its mission, NASA's Parker Solar Probe has returned first-light data from each of its four instrument suites. These early observations – while not yet examples of the key science observations Parker Solar Probe will take closer to the Sun – show that each of the instruments is working well. The instruments work in tandem to measure the Sun’s electric and magnetic fields, particles from the Sun and the solar wind, and capture images of the environment around the spacecraft.

 

This image shows the first-light data from Parker Solar Probe's WISPR (Wide-field Imager for Solar Probe) instrument suite. The right side of this image — from WISPR's inner telescope — has a 40-degree field of view, with its right edge 58.5 degrees from the Sun's center. The bright object slightly to the right of the image's center is Jupiter. The left side of the image is from WISPR’s outer telescope, which has a 58-degree field of view and extends to about 160 degrees from the Sun. It shows the Milky Way, looking at the galactic center. There is a parallax of about 13 degrees in the apparent position of the Sun as viewed from Earth and from Parker Solar Probe.

 

Image credit: First Light Data for NASA's Parker Solar Probe

 

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Phenotypic measurements being scanned in to test for the development of new corn hybrids at the UW-Madison Wisconsin Crop Innovation Center.

3x1 cropped pano. I might one to get a pano head/setup in the future

Vancouver, BC

Christian Science Plaza, Boston

 

View LARGE On Black

 

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Taken from The Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel.

 

'Science Of Numbers'

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Art representing Science

107 (BD57 WDK) is one of two Brighton & Hove "Science buses" and is seen on the Lewes Road this morning, 29th July, 2022.

Ya en Vancouver, recorrimos la ciudad a pie y en bicicleta. El Science World, cerca de la villa olímpica en False Creek

Life Sciences at Berkeley. . . . Valley Building extension. University of California. Official name: Life Sciences Addition.

He's already back on Earth, but I took this picture of Mike doing some science last week because it looked so cool. On the Space Station we have a tight schedule and all of us are always doing different things. Often we don't know exactly what the other person is doing, and it is a testament to the planners at mission control that they ensure we don't get in each other's way all the time. Think of all the constraints, from power, to vibrations, equipment, time and physical space inside the Station, during the week we were 11 of us it was hectic but we also got so much done. Mike was packing the RTPCG-2 experiment for its return to Earth, it involves growing protein crystals in space that are helping researchers identify new ways of making medicine.

 

Il est déjà de retour sur Terre, mais j'aime bien cette photo de Mike prise la semaine dernière. Je n'avais aucune idée de l'expérience sur laquelle il travaillait : ça reflète bien notre quotidien. À bord de la Station, les plannings sont très serrés et tout le monde s'affaire sans arrêt. Le plus souvent, on ne sait même pas ce que font les autres astronautes. Au centre de contrôle, nos planneurs travaillent durs pour éviter qu'on ait besoin des mêmes équipements ensemble. Et à 11 la semaine dernière, on leur a donné du fil à retordre ! Alimentation électrique, disponibilité des équipements, vibrations ou même simplement le fait d'avoir assez d'espace physique pour travailler : il y a énormément de contraintes à prendre en compte. J'ai fini par lui poser la question : Mike rangeait l'expérience RTPCG-2 avant de la ramener sur Terre. Elle sert à étudie la croissance de cristaux de protéines en impesanteur. À terme, elle devrait aider les chercheurs à découvrir de nouveaux moyens de fabriquer des médicaments.

 

Credits: ESA/NASA–T. Pesquet

 

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A long exposure of Science World and BC Place made during the blur hour in Vancouver BC.

 

www.facebook.com/SDHPics/photos/a.485996904864387.1073741...

The Ice Man's mule is parked

Outside the bar

Where a man with missing fingers

Plays a strange guitar

 

- Tom Waits (A Little Rain)

العلم يبني بيوتا لا عماد لها ** والجهل يهدم بيت العز والكرم

العلم دون دين أعرج، والدين دون علم أعمى.....انيشتاين

with science, everything different..!

Dedicated to the readers of Science Fiction.

 

Reality in The Globe of Science and Innovation, CERN, Geneva.

[Explore #319 11/09/2013]

Science World at Telus World of Science. One of my favorite spots in Vancouver. Built for Expo '86 Worlds Fair, Science World has seen many changes over the years.

Someone sent me some fan art. Thanks, it looks really science fiction like

The south shore of Science Lake. Allegany State Park, NY. October 10, 2018.

Alexander Semenov @ Aquatilis Expedition

students took part in the Advanced Fire Science Camp and through hands-on experience learned how to work with fire equipment, put out fires, clear rooms, and the importance of staying hydrated at the scene of a fire.

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Science world with fog hiding the tops of the condos in the background.

 

Other Photo Gear Used: Sirui T-2005X Tripod with K-10x Tripod Head

Photo Processing Software used: Adobe Lightroom; Adobe Photoshop; Topaz Adjust;

 

Feel free to download the full size version of Foggy Science World from my blog for personal use. For commercial use, please contact me for pricing.

 

April 22, 2017

 

March for Science - Des Moines, Iowa. Earth Day 2017.

 

More images of Iowa protests can be seen in this album.

 

www.flickr.com/gp/mfhiatt/Eh3Qs3

 

www.mfhiattphotography.com/documentary/

My first attempt at HDR images, sorry if they are rubbish

Captain Hax was livid.

"You said this was a whale!"

The small, soft alien twitched its antennae dismissively.

-My people do not distinguish between these two things-

"Bullcrap! You sent me a picture of a whale!"

-My assistant must have been confused-

"Double bullcrap! You just told me we were on a whale!"

-Let me refocus our conversation: I already have your bartered goods, and you have already came here with your equipment and personnel. Does it really matter?-

"Yes, it matters!"

-Why?-

"Why? Why? Well... why... well... I mean... who would want to hear about my years living on a giant catfish?"

-Indeed. I have been unkind. Please, let us drink together and I will teach you to cook the parasites that burrow on its fin.-

"Ugh."

-Yes-

  

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Made as a high-value asset for Intercept Orbit, the space battle game where you build your fleet with LEGO!

Exterior signage at the University of Texas at Arlington‘s Science Hall.

Farmer & Brindley was a firm of architectural sculptors and ornamentalists based in London and created Science in the 1860. The object she holds indicates the speed of a steam engine.

Working on the SUBSA experiment. It stands for "Solidification Using a Baffle in Sealed Ampoules" which doesn't help much to understand what is going on admittedly. We were processing samples of metal alloys for researchers to observe how they are cast. Metallurgy is a hot subject for space research (not only because of the casting temperatures #dadjoke) because how metals form is complicated, very precise, and as metals are used everywhere on Earth improving them could have enormous benefits. As metals form, they grow crystals that resemble Christmas trees, and these crystals influence the strength of the metal. On Earth gravity influences how these crystals grow, so observing the process in space helps to understand the process, making it easier for researchers to create mathematical models. ESA has a facility called the Electromagnetic levitator in the Materials Science Laboratory to conduct research in this same domain. After the bronze age and iron age this type of research could lead to another metal age... 😎 An observant viewer will notice that I am wearing different t-shirts – no I didn't spill any (they are in sealed ampoules remember!) but the experiment runs over many days, actually the Materials Science Laboratory was running similar metal batches in Columbus too!

L’expérience SUBSA sur laquelle j’ai déjà travaillé plusieurs fois (les plus observateurs auront remarqué les t-shirts différents 😉) : en gros, c’est de la métallurgie spatiale. Les alliages sont un sujet assez chaud pour la recherche spatiale, et pas seulement à cause de leur température de fusion (je ne résiste pas à la blague de papa 😄). L’amélioration des alliages, omniprésents dans notre vie moderne, a évidemment un potentiel d’applications immense sur terre. Les métaux se forment en poussant comme des cristaux (avec une forme un peu sapin de noël si on a de l’imagination), et ces processus sont fortement influencés par la pesanteur, d’où l’idée d’enlever ce facteur pour mieux les appréhender. Après le bronze et le fer, ces recherches pourraient donner naissance à un nouvel âge du métal 👍

 

Credits: ESA/NASA–T. Pesquet

 

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Day 188/365

 

Out and about in Sudbury taking some photos. I got rained on quickly and then it was over in a minute

  

Have a great week friends

 

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Everywhere I go in this house, I find your little science experiments; sitting on countertops, growing in cupboards, and taped to windows.

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