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When I saw this I wasn't sure what it was or what it represented as workers were finishing the installation. Since then I've learned that it represents data visualization it reflects the global impact of food production and consumption on the environment. Part of the "Around The Table" exhibit at the New York Botanical Garden. I still don't understand it but it's nice to look at.

 

Under the cover of night, Eurasian forces move through an industrial area of Pristina. The target: a LORO data centre believed to contain data drives taken in the arrest of multiple Eurasian ambassadors during a meeting in Copenhagen. While the Nordic oil fields had been of prior interest, the seized data contained developing information on large reserves hidden along the Northern coast of Libya.

The Mata-Nui mainframe has been infected by the Makuta Virus. Engage Data Knight Kopaka to freeze the virus's operations and cool the overheated GPU.

 

My entry into Ron's What If...? contest. I decided to reimagine Kopaka as a sort of cybertech knight dude in a Tron-esque data scape. Originally this was going to be a very different character design, but I ended up splitting it into this and another MOC I'll be sharing in October since the two concepts didn't really merge well.

Crazy Tuesday, Transport

Photo Recipe:

 

580EX2 fired off camera using TTL cord, into water tank from camera left. Black paper and foam used as background, sides, and bottom.

Fort Lauderdale station is an inter-city rail station located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. It is served by Brightline, which connects Miami, West Palm Beach, and Orlando International Airport. The station is located in downtown Fort Lauderdale, on NW 2nd Avenue between Broward Boulevard and NW 4th Street, adjacent to the Broward County Transit's Central Terminal.

 

Construction for the station began in October 2014 with the demolition of existing structures on the site. The complex consists of an elevated concourse above an 800-foot-long (240 m), 35-foot-wide (11 m) island platform for the trains. The station is a modern-style structure with illuminated V-shaped columns supporting the upper concourse, echoing the designs of the Miami and West Palm Beach stations on the line. It was planned and designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill in association with Zyscovich Architects, and was completed in January 2018.

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Lauderdale_station_(Brightline)

www.gobrightline.com/fort-lauderdale

www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g34227-d13396562-Re...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brightline

 

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You can never have too much Data.

 

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Learn more about this image at the source.

 

Source: photos.jdhancock.com/photo/2012-09-28-001422-big-data.html

A whole new world!

 

41 light-years away is the small, rocky planet LHS 475 b. At 99% of Earth’s diameter, it’s almost exactly the same size as our home world. This marks the first time researchers have used the Webb telescope to confirm an exoplanet.

 

NASA’s TESS mission hinted at the planet’s existence, making it a target of interest for Webb. Webb’s NIRSpec instrument then captured the planet easily and clearly with just 2 transit observations.

 

Although Webb data definitively tells us that LHS 475 b is a small rocky world, the existence and composition of its atmosphere is a mystery. The planet is a few hundred degrees warmer than Earth and very close to its star, completing an orbit in just 2 days. However, its red dwarf star is much cooler than our Sun, so scientists theorize an atmosphere is still possible. Additional follow-up observations are scheduled this summer.

 

Learn more about this exciting new discovery: www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2023/nasa-s-webb-confirms-it...

 

Credits: Illustration - NASA, ESA, CSA, L. Hustak (STScI); Science - K. Stevenson, J. Lustig-Yaeger, E. May (Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory), G. Fu (Johns Hopkins University), and S. Moran (University of Arizona)

 

Two panel mosaic in Auriga containg left to right, IC417 - The Fly Nebula and open clusters NGC1907 and Messier38. Data collected Feb22 and Jan25

Get her away from me...

Webb has revealed an exoplanet atmosphere as never seen before!

 

The telescope has revisited gas giant WASP-39 b to give us the first molecular and chemical profile of an exoplanet’s atmosphere, revealing the presence of water, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, sodium and potassium, as well as signs of clouds. This builds on Webb’s initial look at the planet back in August, which showed the first clear evidence of carbon dioxide in a planet outside our solar system. The latest findings bode well for Webb’s capability to investigate all types of exoplanets, including the atmospheres of smaller, rocky planets like those in the TRAPPIST-1 system.

 

We learn about exoplanet atmospheres by breaking their light into components and creating spectra. Think of a spectrum as a barcode. Elements and molecules have characteristic signatures in that “barcode” we can read.

 

This planet is what is known as a “hot Saturn” — a planet about as massive as Saturn but eight times closer in orbit around its star than Mercury is around the Sun. The data shown here is taken from 3 of Webb’s science instruments. Together, they mark a series of firsts in science, including the first detection of sulfur dioxide in an exoplanet atmosphere. This, in turn, is the first concrete evidence of photochemistry — chemical reactions initiated by high-energy light, which are fundamental to life on Earth — on an exoplanet. Understanding the ratio of different elements in relation to each other also offers clues as to how the planet was formed.

 

Want to see the data in more detail and learn more? Head to the feature here: www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2022/nasa-s-webb-reveals-an-...

 

Download different versions of this graphic (and individual spectra) here: webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2022/060/01GJ3Q66...

 

Image credit: Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, J. Olmsted (STScI)

 

Image description:

 

Graphic of the atmospheric composition of exoplanet WASP-39 b, showing 2 graphs and a background illustration of the planet and its star.

 

(Left side)

The top graph shows data from Webb’s NIRISS instrument, the bottom graph data from NIRSpec. Both graphs show the amount of light blocked on the y axis versus wavelength of light on the x axis. The y axes range from 2.00 percent (less light blocked) to 2.35 percent (more light blocked). The x axes range from less than 0.1 microns to 5.5 microns. Data points are plotted as white circles with gray error bars. A curvy blue line represents a best-fit model. The NIRISS data covers a range of about 0.5 to 3.0 microns and highlights the signatures of potassium, water and carbon monoxide in semi-transparent bars of varying colors. Potassium is gray, water is blue, and carbon monoxide is red. The NIRSpec data covers a range of about 2.5 to 5.25 microns. It highlights water and carbon monoxide in addition to sulfur dioxide in green and carbon dioxide in yellow.

 

(Right side)

The top graph shows data from Webb’s NIRCam instrument, the bottom graph data from NIRSpec. Both graphs show the amount of light blocked on the y axis versus wavelength of light on the x axis. The y axes range from 2.00 percent (less light blocked) to 2.35 percent (more light blocked). The x axes range from less than 0.1 microns to 5.5 microns. Data points are plotted as white circles with gray error bars. A curvy blue line represents a best-fit model. The NIRCam data covers a wavelength range of about 2.5 to 4.0 microns and highlights the signatures of water in a blue semi-transparent bar. The NIRSpec data covers a range of about 0.5 to 5.25 microns and highlights multiple signatures of water, in addition to sodium in a dark blue bar, carbon monoxide in red, carbon dioxide in light green, sulfur dioxide in dark green, and carbon dioxide in yellow.

  

big bang data exhibition, somerset house (london)

Lt. Commander Data in his officers uniform. He is holding a trusty tricorder and composing a poem for his good friend Spot.

 

I'm waiting for the day that lego makes the brickheadz eyes in yellow...

 

This model may be found on Mecabricks here: mecabricks.com/en/models/qxv4BDbQ2dJ

Big Data Institute, University of Oxford Old Road Campus in Headington. Oxford Flickr Photowalk.

Here are the last of the photos I have of this lovely open forecourt garage, it still looks like this even now, never had a canopy! This is one of the sites for which I have the most extensive branding and historical record. In the 1960s and 1970s it was a National branded site, as a result of this I am guessing prior to that it would have been a Shell BP site. Quite when it changed from National to Little David, its next brand, I'm not sure but around 1989 seems likely as that's roughly when the National name finally disappeared. It was Little David branded for a few years before changing again to Butler as we see here. By the earliest Streetview it was a Gulf site and that didn't last for long before it was rebranded again to be a Pace site, which it is to the present day. It may have been branded Power for a few years in the early part of the century but no photo of that as so far surfaced so it may gone straight to Gulf.

The garage was once located on what was then the A12 but the road was re-routed and this section became effectively a minor road despite being dual carriageway for much of its length. As it reaches Copdock it switches to single lanes with a central reservation and then, after the final junction where one must turn off to head into Ipswich, it becomes a dead end with just a footpath and cycleway completing the journey under the A14 and onto the site of the Ipswich Park and Ride. That means the garage here once had a lot more passing trade than it does now, and it is pretty amazing that it continues to trade. However quite a lot of traffic does head this way still as I'm sure there are times when the A12/A14 junction is super busy and backed up.

Below you can see it as National, Little David and Pace but for the Gulf era you'll need to look on Streetview.

www.google.com/maps/@52.0359169,1.0886297,3a,75y,265.83h,...

Happy Halloween! NASA’s Tracking and Data Relay Satellites send thrilling scientific data from low-Earth orbit 24/7/365! They provide communications and tracking support for more than 40 NASA missions and just launched a new TDRS satellite in August! This illustration shows first-generation TDRS from the 1980s, overlaid with an image from Hubble Space Telescope, one of the spacecraft that TDRS supports.

 

Credit: NASA Goddard

 

NASA image use policy.

 

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.

 

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data visualization using gephi (gephi.org), data courtesy of dbpedia.

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