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Shaman awas, grouped at the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar. This is a gathering place for traditional rites and ceremonies of an ancient way of life.
With all 66 of their backs turned to the constellation of Orion, the antennas of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) sit high on their perch on the Chajnantor Plateau in the Chilean Andes.
More information: www.eso.org/public/images/potw1513a/
Credit:
ESO/B. Tafreshi (twanight.org)
I stumbled upon this in Edmonton's Citadel Theatre complex...and only had my point and shoot... still worth capturing...
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These are the newer additions to the Square Kilometer Array(SKA).
These form part of the SKA-mid array if I am correctly informed, using an offset Gregorian design having a height of 15 metres and a width of 12 metres.
The orange light fill was from the vehicles alarm system activating and the white fill from a fellow photographers headlamp.
Nikon D800, Nikkor 14-24 at 15mm, f/2.8 aperture with an 30 second exposure at ISO 3200.
The Very Large Array, one of the world's premier astronomical radio observatories, consists of 27 radio antennas in a Y-shaped configuration on the Plains of San Agustin fifty miles west of Socorro, New Mexico. Each antenna is 25 meters (82 feet) in diameter. The data from the antennas is combined electronically to give the resolution of an antenna 36km (22 miles) across, with the sensitivity of a dish 130 meters (422 feet) in diameter.
Has she covered up her camera? No, it's a flip-up LED light array, used to light her subjects during filming.
Very Large Array (VLA) near Socorro, New Mexico. Visit during a storm created some interesting photographs.
It has blown and rained for days, to the point that outdoor photography was pretty impractical. So I set up some indoor fall subjects. I think this is my first significant dark field focus stack. More of a proof of concept than anything, but it turned out well enough that I felt like editing it after stacking, and since it's edited, why not share it?
— Theodore Tollefson @thetollart
This is IROSA, the rolled-up solar array that we’ll go out and install and deploy tomorrow. It looked beautiful (at least to us), as it was manoeuvred into position by ground controllers with the Station's robotic arm . The teams are ready and the equipment is ready. EVA day is always a great day
IROSA, un joli nom pour les panneaux solaires que nous allons installer et déployer demain. Pour l'instant ils sont enroulés sur eux-même, comme… des crêpes très serrées. J'ai pris ces photos lorsque les équipes au sol les ont déplacés avec le bras robotique vers leur position de départ pour demain. Les équipes sont prêtes et Shane et moi aussi... on est tous très impatients 😃
Credits: ESA/NASA–T. Pesquet
527C4361
Steam Engines of all shapes and sizes gather together for the grand opening of the 2014 Driffield Steam and Vintage Ralley in East Yorkshire,
The impressive combination of G529, A81, X39, XR554, H1 and X41 lift a very late 9028 loaded Pacific National grain train from Piangil in Northern Victoria near the NSW border to Melbourne's Appleton Dock for unloading.
G529, A81 and X39 had been sent light engine from Melbourne to rescue the train as XR554 and X41 had failed, resulting in H1 being the only operational engine left.
Saturday 8th September 2012