View allAll Photos Tagged electronation
Electron micrograph of red blood cells infected with Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria in humans. During its development, the parasite forms protrusions called 'knobs' on the surface of its host red blood cell which enable it to avoid destruction and cause inflammation. Using scanning electron microscopy, this image shows a knob-rich infected blood cell surrounded by knobless uninfected blood cells.
Credit: Rick Fairhurst and Jordan Zuspann, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
Photos taken as we slowly walked back down the dirt road towards the river.
I see very few of this group and rarely have a decent photo. This one is under a leaf but after many photos I do at least have one that shows it reasonably well. Also a butterfly I really liked seeing.
Scanning electron micrograph of a cell infected with a variant strain of SARS-CoV-2 virus particles (orange), isolated from a patient sample and colorized in Halloween colors. Image captured at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. Stay safe and have a Happy Halloween! Credit: NIAID
Si señores, hice las pases con la electronica (solo por unas horas) y pude fabricar mi cable disparador para la Pentax K10D.
Lo mas lindo de todo es que el control original cuesta unos U$S30 mientras que hacer este me salio menos de $10 (pesos argentinos) jejeje
PD: no es una bomba como supusieron en otra de mis fotos jejeje!
Broad-billed Motmot, Momoto Piquiancho, Pájaro Bobo, by Luis Vargas, El Copal, Pejibaye, Cartago, Costa Rica, mayo 2014.
Reino: Animalia
Filo: Chordata
Clase: Aves
Orden: Coraciiformes
Familia: Momotidae
Género: Electron
Especie: E. platyrhynchum
(Leadbeater, 1829)
Powerpoles stand out in B&W on a foggy morning.
Photo taken with the Olympus OM-D E-M1 and M.Zuiko 40-150mm F/2.8 Pro hand held at f/3.2. Converted to B&W during post in Lightroom.
This is the scanning electron microscope that I use in my research. It doesn't look like much, but it's capable of some pretty amazing stuff.
Electron Microscopy explores the microscopic world and introduces students to three types of microscopes used in identifying specimens too small to see with the naked eye. An overview and comparison of three different microscopes we have here at FWRI: the light microscope, scanning electron microscope, and transmission electron microscope.
Electron Microscopy explores the microscopic world and introduces students to three types of microscopes used in identifying specimens too small to see with the naked eye. An overview and comparison of three different microscopes we have here at FWRI: the light microscope, scanning electron microscope, and transmission electron microscope.
The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) features two ion accelerator/storage rings inside an underground tunnel. Both rings carry ions (any atomic nuclei from protons—hydrogen nuclei—to uranium). See EIC design for comparison.
Electron launch vehicle on the pad at Launch Complex 1 for wet dress rehearsal ahead of the CAPSTONE launch for NASA and Advanced Space
Sometime strange things happens if you turn on a hydrogen plasma on certain things... In this case, previously deposited droplets of tin turned into this filigree structure reminiscent of a group of Morris Dancers.
Subject: tin filaments on molybdenum substrate
Microscope: Philips XL30 ESEM
Acceleration voltage: 20 kV
Magnification: 800 x magnification
Detector: secondary electrons
Acknowledgement:
The image was acquired at and with equipment owned by the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics, Garching, Germany.
This is my entry for the #77 Silhouette Zen Magnet contest.
WooHoo!!! Took 1st Place in the contest. :)
This is from the archives -- the Wrightspeed motor coupling. Much of the WS machining was done by RIcardo in the UK.
Installation sonore A (continuum)
Ryoji . Continuum
Mutations / Créations 2
Centre Pompidou, Paris
Compositeur et plasticien, Ryoji Ikeda est un acteur majeur de la musique électronique au Japon. Ses créations invitent à expérimenter une immersion dans un univers qui mêle le son, l’image, l’espace, les phénomènes perceptifs et les équations mathématiques. L’exposition dévoile une installation inédite; une salle noire et une salle blanche divisent l’espace en deux univers opposés et complémentaires....
On le sait, les japonais sont des amateurs d'art minimal, car c'est dans la tradition du bouddhisme zen comme le montrent les jardins de rochers (jardins secs)
www.flickr.com/photos/dalbera/27558722527/in/album-721576...
et les intérieurs de certains temples.
www.flickr.com/photos/dalbera/27583887277/in/album-721576...
Aujourd'hui les oeuvres d'un photographe comme Hiroshi Sugimoto ou d'un plasticien comme Lee Ufan nous confrontent à ce courant minimaliste dans l'art contemporain. L'exposition Fukami qui sert d'introduction aux manifestations Japonismes 2018 a consacré un chapitre au minimalisme pour préparer les yeux et oreilles des occidentaux à ce style. C'est dans cet esprit qu'il faut écouter la "musique" A (la note La) continuum de Ryoji Ikeda. En effet, dans l'installation visible au centre Pompidou, on ne perçoit que les battements entre des notes A (ou La) légèrement désaccordées lorsqu'on passe devant les paires de haut-parleurs très directifs qui se font face. C'est vraiment peu sur le plan sonore ! heureusement l'installation de la salle est étonnante... et puis l'installation voisine du même artiste est nettement plus spectaculaire.
www.centrepompidou.fr/cpv/agenda/event.action?param.id=FR...
La manifestation fait partie du programme officiel de Japonismes 2018
japonismes.org/fr/officialprograms/%E3%80%8C%E6%B1%A0%E7%...