View allAll Photos Tagged blinking
the HELP light was blinking although this elevator worked fine. the next one had an out of order sign in front of it, and here's why: yesterday i walked past it and saw its doors were just an inch ajar and some guys were trapped in. "i'll get the doorman", i said. "awesome!!" was the reply from inside.
Around twenty exposures in Ha and OIII...
VC200L @ f/9,420 second (binned) exposures...
Probably a bit bizarre...the central star has gone blue on me in HDR Wavelets...
I need to rebalance the signal to show the Ha better...
The two intense Ha areas are seen...but not as well as in some versions.
They are Ha...so should have wound up red,like NASA's version;
apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap010526.html
(!!!)
On the other hand the NB allows the outer shell to ALSO be seen...
This is a testament to Pixinsights HDR routine.
Here is another amateur image,no shell;
www.astroimages.org/ccd/ngc6826.html
note that with LRGB imaging only 10-15 second exposures are needed...these are the equivalent of twenty minute (unbinned) exposures...
Jen Cuba is laying on grass with a red blanket on, and smoking a cigarette at Jefferson in Ventura Apartments on Wed., April 1, 2009, for a creative image using a gold reflector that is lit on the left side of her face in Ventura, Calif. (Photo by Maxine-Anne Ong/Brooks Institute ©2009)
My one year old baby loves playing with this golf toy which is a gift from my sister-in-law. I guess toys like these are a good way to introduce your toddler to golf. My hb loves to play golf and is just waiting for the baby to grow a bit so he can bring him to the golf course and teach our son his favorite sport! :)
Blinking lights on the airplane wings
Up above the trees
Blinking down a morse code signal
Especially for me
Ain't no rainbow in the sky
In the middle of the night
But the signal's coming through
One day i will be alright again
Human blinking rate is less than 400 milliseconds .
most of the people Minds is not able to Analysis faster events , except with Equipped eye .
Exposure: 0.005 sec (1/200)
Aperture: f/2.8
Focal Length: 7.1 mm
this is a blinking gif picture, showing before and after retouching the odd artefacts at the brighter stars. Go to download / show all sizes and choose original to see it blinking.
This bridge tilts to allow ships to pass underneath. It's also known as the Blinking Eye Bridge for that reason.
Also known as 'The Blinking Eye Bridge', viewed from the Gateshead (south) side of the Tyne. Taken during a short visit to Newcastle in May, unfortunately other commitments prevented us seeing the bridge opening.
The whole bridge pivots on bearings actuated by large hydraulic rams (see next two pictures)
Captured 7 Sep 2019, Springfield, VA, USA. Bortle 8 skies, MallinCam DS10c camera, 8 inch SCT f6.1, E4 sec, G43.
Clouds: clear
Seeing: 30
Transparency: 30
FOV: 36 x 48 arcmin, image cropped
Moon phase: 85% , up
Appearance: small bright object, bright bluish-green center not well resolved, slightly darker bluish-green grainy halo around center with oval two-lobed shape.
Apparent magnitude: +8.8
Size: 0.5 arcmin
Surface Brightness: 7.0 magnitudes per square arcmin
from Wikipedia
NGC 6826 (also known as Caldwell 15) is a planetary nebula located in the constellation Cygnus. It is commonly referred to as the "blinking planetary", although many other nebulae exhibit such "blinking". When viewed through a small telescope, the brightness of the central star overwhelms the eye when viewed directly, obscuring the surrounding nebula. However, it can be viewed well using averted vision, which causes it to "blink" in and out of view as the observer's eye wanders.
A distinctive feature of this nebula are the two bright patches on either side, which are known as Fast Low-Ionization Emission Regions, or FLIERS. They appear to be relatively young, moving outwards at supersonic speeds.
Waiting for midnight.
Alan.
blinking, smiling, standing.
Chris B's house, Leesburg, Virginia.
December 31, 2010.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
Christmas light background. Holiday glowing backdrop. Defocused Background With Blinking Stars. Blurred Bokeh.
Edited European Southern Observatory image of the galaxy NGC 6118. Color/processing variant.
Original caption: NGC 6118, a grand-design spiral galaxy, shines bright in this image, displaying its central bar and tight spiral arms from its home in the constellation of Serpens (The Snake). The galaxy is sometimes known to amateur astronomers as the “Blinking Galaxy” because this relatively faint, fuzzy object would appear to flick into existence when viewed through their telescopes in a certain orientation, and then suddenly disappear again as the eye position shifted. The brilliant blue star-forming regions of the galaxy, where hot young stars are born, are beautifully illuminated, even from over 80 million light-years away. In 2004, regular observers of this galaxy saw a “new star” appear near the edge of the galaxy (above the centre of the image). Far from being a new star, this object, supernova 2004dk, is in fact the final, powerful burst of light emitted by the explosion of a star. Though shy to lesser telescopes, the galaxy cannot hide from ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) at Cerro Paranal, Chile. The image was obtained using the VIsible MultiObject Spectrograph (VIMOS) at the VLT.
Sit back from this a bit, and you experience that age-old optical illusion of the blinking lights in between the squares. The actual subject is an out of focus fence.
I swear it -- we took three pics like this. Shlomy closed his eyes in every single one. (Sorry Shlomy, I couldn't photoshop you eyes on this one. ;))
Almost blinking. His brother is much worse about that :)
Mark.
sitting.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
November 13, 2009.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: We had a get-together at our house. We thought it was going to be very small gathering, but then people kept unexpectedly showed up, so we ended up with 8 or 9 people.