View allAll Photos Tagged asteroids
Blue Sidelit Asteroid - Diameter: ¾"
Taken 10.10.2021 and
uploaded for the group
Macro Mondays #Sidelit
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
😄 Happy Macro Monday 😄
Gigaset GS290
ƒ/2.0
3.5 mm
1/100 Sec
ISO 270
No apocalypse of course. Just the setting sun that creates a somewhat curious image.
Location: Le Lavandou, Var, France
Macro Monday
Theme: Bubbles
Size: Less than 3x3 inches
I made up some washing liquid bubbles and mixed it with some drops of olive oil in a Petri dish.
I then used a toothpick and arranged this two collections of bubbles and surround them with the olive oil drops.
Only one light source from an incandescent table lamp at 9 o'clock.
They look like Asteroids floating in space.
Many thanks for your visit, comments and faves...it is always appreciated..
Peaceful MM
Been going through old images for work reasons and I found this rather pleasing sunrise photo. I did post the portrait version but never the landscape one and I've no idea why.
Always thought that the rock looks like an asteroid that's smashed into the ice, albeit travelling at low velocity and not the usual asteroid-entering-the-earth's-atmosphere speed. I also remember it being very cold that day - enough to be able to walk out on the ice covered sea.
I think I’ll stay a little longer in Paris
Hair by Wasabi - Yelena Beret Edition
Clothing by Tentacio @ Cozyfest
Boots by Asteroid
"Asteroid Soul Belt"
Acrylic on stretched canvas 12*12"
Located between Epsilon Eridani of Kravinipod and Jupiter lies the planetary soul sucker called the "Soul Belt". Thousands of souls are sequestered there for all eternity.
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Thoughts & Ideas,
Joseph Kravis
Asteroid is an alternative name for the animal we more commonly call a starfish, an echinoderm so named because it belongs to the class Asteroidea. I had forgotten this curious alternative name until I checked Wikipedia for some starfish info and realised the image could be used for the Smile on Saturday theme 'Anything with A'.
My thanks to SkyeBaggie for spotting this wee critter among the barnacles during our recent trip over to Elgol. I thought it rather looked like it was running along and reaching out to pat a limpet. It was definitely alive, just waiting for the tide to come back in, but even its slight movements made doing a focus stack a bit problematic.
An exhibition at Fondazione Prada showcased props, materials, and visual and audio documents from Wes Anderson's film Asteroid City (2023).
Fondazione Prada in Corvetto, Milan
Lombardy, Italy 13.12.2023
artssummary.com/2023/09/28/wes-anderson-asteroid-city-exh...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CdPhrCRc3o
www.fondazioneprada.org/?lang=en
Eine Ausstellung der Fondazione Prada zeigte Requisiten, Materialien, Bild- und Tondokumente von Wes Andersons Film 'Asteroid City' (2023)
Fondazione Prada in Corvetto, Mailand
Lombardei, Italien 13.12.2023
this is obviously so inspired by alison scarpulla
well and anyone else who has done it because i've seen it done a few times by others.
www.instagram.com/lightcrafter.artistry
Made with Unsplash
All images © 2017 Daniel Kessel.
All rights reserved
I was putting the final touches on the edit when my husband walked up behind me and said, "You find the pearls among asteroids." I assumed that he was referring to himself with characteristic lack of modesty. In fact, he was saying that the suburban woods we walked through this morning were not exactly spectacular, but I had some success in visualizing how this scene would translate into a finished photo. I set out looking for a spot captured somewhere in this park by a very talented photographer on 500px, didn't find it, but thoroughly enjoyed getting my feet wet next to the creek.
Kousa Dogwood berries are small fruits, averaging 2 to 4 centimeters in diameter, and have a uniform, globular, to slightly oval shape. The fruits are a type of drupe, comprised of 20 to 40 individual carpels that fuse to form a spherical appearance and are connected to slender, elongated, and fibrous light brown-green stems averaging 7 to 10 centimeters in length. The fruit's skin is semi-thick, rough, and taut, covered in small bumps, creating a pointed, ridged appearance. The surface also ripens from green to orange-red or red-purple and has a gritty and grainy feel with a bitter, astringent taste, making it somewhat unpleasant to consume. Underneath the skin, the bright orange-yellow flesh has a slippery, lightly mealy, sticky, custard-like consistency. The solid, pulpy flesh also encases a few to many small seeds that should be discarded when eaten. Select Kousa Dogwood berries that are bright red and feel soft to the touch. The fruits should be slightly squishy, which signifies that the flesh has converted most of its starch into sugars for a sweeter eating experience. Ripe Kousa Dogwood berries are consumed for their flesh, discarding the skin and seeds. The flesh has a sweet, tropical, and earthy taste with a unique blend of pumpkin, mango, and persimmon-like nuances.
Last summer, I needed to have some time alone. I needed to drive through the mountains to find myself back. Thus, I decided to drive to the maximum passes above 2000 meters (6000 feets) and shoot what remains the most relaxing place(s) to me: Mountains, Alps...
- La Grave La Meije / Les Terrasses
- Hautes Alpes (05)
- 1700 meters.
Start of 3rd day.
20200305 : 17/335 = 5.07%
Images of asteroid impact craters as seen from the International Space Station. ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst published these to his social media accounts on Asteroid Day 2020 (30 June) with the caption: Scary. I took these photos from the International Space Station. They show two meteorite impact craters in Chad (Sahara) which are 13 & 14 km wide. Imagine how many times your city could fit in them. To avoid future impacts, the European Space Agency works with international partner agencies on space safety. #AsteroidDay #bluedot #horizons
ID: 401U7781
Credit: ESA-A.Gerst
A group of space miners working on the harsh surface of an asteroid mining it for a very rare and special mineral called Brickonium.
A big asteroid will safely fly by Earth early tomorrow morning (April 29).
Don't be fooled by any hyped-up headlines you may have read: This week's asteroid flyby poses no threat to Earth or anything on it.
The big asteroid 1998 OR2 will zoom within 3.9 million miles (6.3 million kilometers) of our planet early Wednesday morning (April 29).
While that's a close shave in the context of the visible universe, which is more than 90 billion light-years wide, there's zero chance that the space rock will hit Earth on this pass, scientists stress.
Indeed, at its closest approach, the roughly 1.5-mile-wide (2.4 km) 1998 OR2 will still be about 16 times farther from us than the moon is from the Earth. (The moon orbits Earth at an average distance of 239,000 miles, or 385,000 km.)
Flickr-UFO or Asteroid? [Explore]
It's coming, it's getting closer, it's racing toward us and we're doing nothing to stop it. It destroys our environment and us. Do we really not want to do anything about it?
The right music for it:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0LS2k-GFmD4
Es kommt, es kommt immer näher, es rast auf uns zu und wir tun nichts, um es zu verhindern. Es zerstört unsere Umwelt und uns. Wollen wir wirklich nichts dagegen tun?
This is soooo much easier than making space scenes in software like Photoshop or Gimp where you work in 2D and have to draw each crater, each shadow and so on.
In Blender (which is a 3D environment) you just create a 3D object - like a rock - then add a material to it, bump or displace it to create relief, add a light that automatically results in the right shadows. And by moving your camera around you can look at the same scene from a different perspective.
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Once again I spent a weekend with Moritz - happineeeess! :)
Thank you, for letting me use your props and your studio equipment, for helping me with this photo and most of all, for always making me laugh.
Aren't we all like some sort of celestial bodies, floating on our paths? Sometimes I spend hours wondering how human beings influence each other and what happens when we collide. And I keep on wondering.
*THESE ARE NOT MY PHOTOS!!*
I'm not sure when I first happened up on an Asteroid pic. Honestly? It was probably while I was searching Explore (looking to see if any of my pics were there right? haha) In any case, I've been hooked ever since. Despite his hundreds of pics on Explore and near stardom on flickr he's a very real person. If you leave a real comment on a pic or two of his you'll find this out. ;o) I must admit, that of all the photostreams I frequent his can be the raciest... but never in a nasty way and he usually makes me laugh. I love his colorful silhouettes and fabulous play with DoF!!
SO... visit away! have fun :o)
1. Do you believe in Summertime?, 2. Pick a fresh color and start your Easter week-end, 3. Love is nothing if not a sailboat waiting for us to get on board and sail away..., 4. Blue curtain
Created with fd's Flickr Toys