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Photos from the March for Science in San Francisco, California, on April 22, 2017. Definitely the smartest signs of any protest I've ever seen.
MSL 3758-3825-MARKER BAND VALLEY
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© 2011 Servalpe. Photos are copyrighted. All rights reserved. Pictures can not be used without explicit permission by the creator.
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Localization:
Sciences sculpture as part of the Monumental Complex to Alonso XII, at Retiro Park, Madrid (Spain).
Exif Data:
Canon EOS 450D | Sigma 10-20mm f/4-5.6 DC EX HSM + Hitech ND 0.9 filter @ 10 mm | f/11, 5s, ISO 100.
HDR/DRI from 3 exposures on a tripod Manfrotto 055XPROB + 322RC2 Joystick Head @ [-2 EV .. 0 .. +2 EV ] .
Processing:
Lightroom for catalog > Photoshop to generate HDR file > Tonemapped with Photomatix 4 > Hue/Saturation + Color Efex Pro + Noiseware + High Pass filter Sharpening technique with Photoshop CS5.
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The swear word is in glow in the dark thread. Christmas present for the scientist that lives in my house.
From:
If you pay any attention to the online community, particularly YouTube you already know sony often gets bashed for their "Color Science". First of all can we drop the science... it's Sony colors or Canon colors, you wan't science read a journal.
I've always said this is a BS myth that just gets regurgitated by a public that can't see or think for themselves.
I think the colors of this image are great. Skin tones fantastic. And, yes of course I did not adjust them. This is a 100% crop image with ZERO post production color grading.
My honest take on Sony colors is that with a good lens Sony cameras deliver colors that are largely true to the scene. This give me a good base. If a camera alters the colors for me then all that means is that I know have to return them to "normal" before I can aptly my own vision.
If you want images that are come out of the camera pre-graded to look good then my suggestion to you is use your phone with filters or by a Fuji camera for it's simulations.
Sony A7R4 w/ GM85mm f/1.4 lens.
They may not make you experts in physics, but these 2 new, science prints might make you a bit smarter than your friends.
Lockheed 10A Electra tail-dragger NC5171N from 1935.
In this pose I think she looks way ahead of her time. She spent her airline career with Eastern Air Lines, Boston-Maine and Suburban. The Electra could carry around ten passengers in pressurised comfort.
Her museum career started back in the late seventies with Orlando Wings and Wheels.
N5171N * was acquired by the Science Museum in June 1982 and was put on the UK register as G-LIOA and I think initially located at Wroughton in Wiltshire.
*The letter C had been officially deleted in USA registrations back in the fifties.
Photos from the March for Science in San Francisco, California, on April 22, 2017. Definitely the smartest signs of any protest I've ever seen.
The only science/lab equipment in this photo that's actually mine are the lab glasses and the two beakers in the front part of the counter.
Katie, Kyle, and I went to a few abandoned places yesterday, and this was taken at Horace Mann High School in Gary (where the photo I uploaded yesterday was, as well). My science equipment came from my high school. I helped my friend ta for one of the science teachers, so we were always in the back room preparing stuff for classes. So obviously, I was around the extra/old lab equipment that they never used, so I took a few things, haha. I was amazed at how much stuff was left in the school, let alone the lab. They literally just left everything there when the school closed down. There's a room with all of the textbooks alone which I find haunting in a way. But anyways, I always wanted to do a "mad scientist" type photo. I definitely want to visit this concept again in a more mad and frightening type of way.
By the way, I thought on the fly how to make interesting "chemicals": Water and food coloring :3
Mural in the Life Sciences Building
I like the rat with the big brain, upper right. Enlarge, for greater definition.
I have passed this building on my morning walk many times without ever trying to enter. (Many of the campus buildings are closed except to those with a key.) Today I realized that this one is open, and I went in for a short walk around. This mural is in the entry lobby.
Moderne kunst, achtergelaten door de kabeltrekkers. Buizentrekkers volgens de deskundigen.
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Visualizing the chemical composition of Earth's crust was done through scaling the volume of each sphere according to the mass each element relative to the total mass.
The mass of each element in Earth's crust is printed in the bottom right corner in parts per billion by mass.
Source: CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 97th Edition, (2016-2017)
NAPP Pharma, Cambridge Science Park, Cambridge, 13 Jun 2020
The biggest and best of the early Science Park buildings, built 1980-1983 to a design by Canadian Arthur Erickson.
Pevsner comments 'this type of linear, ground-hugging building-as-extruded-machine was a fruitful North American type in the 1970s not widely imitated in Britain'.