View allAll Photos Tagged integrations

nature and man-made elements blend

beautifully on local college campus

Bits around the edge

Range of things

Need a core

Taft, California

When things don't go well they know how to suck it up.

East Ridge Road, Ridgefield CT

View On Black

Turkish Family runs Dutch Fish Shop

road sign in vienna ....

i like the symbol-charakter

Comments are always welcome and favs most appreciated.

Comentarios y favs son siempre bienvenidos

 

© Fotografía de Ricardo Gomez Angel

Todos los derechos reservados. Todas las imágenes contenidas en este sitio web son propiedad de Ricardo Gomez Angel. Las imágenes no se pueden reproducir, copiar o utilizar de ninguna manera sin el permiso escrito.

Die Peking-Ente auf der Panke, Berlin

Order of thought

Differentiating function

Contradictory element syntheses

 

I like anything that is like an obstruction, something that I have to act through is good. -- Peter Sarsgaard

For Macro Mondays "Numbers" theme. A mechanical integrator is a complex device that was used to calculate ship's stability before digital computers became practical. The complete device is similar to this image: commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mechanical_integrator_CHM...

 

The lens used was an old manual Zuiko 80mm f/4 macro on a sliding extension tube and micro 4/3's adapter, in spite of what the exif info states. Four Olympus high res shots were stacked in Photoshop. I would of liked to gotten one more but ran of focus adjustment.

Light painting 🔦

 

more abaout my Light painting here: www.galerie-ef.de

Japanese Garden, Margaret Island, Budapest

_3607P 136v 29f 3c

A bit of messiness from the woods

at its best ...

 

inside and outside

in harmony

 

;-) ...

 

ƒ/8.0 14.0 mm 1/30 160

 

_DSC1593_pa3

  

The last of the patients were being prepared for life outside the asylum as the demolition took hold .....

  

(Thanks for getting this to Explore guys)

  

www.westparkhospital.co.uk

While the broken clay pipe used to protect the shoreline along this section of Lake Ontario makes somewhat unsure footing to walk on I loved the contrast it created.

 

_DSF4001

Integration time : 6h

Mount: Astrotrac 360

Refractor: TS CF-APO 90mm f/6 + 0.8x reducer

Camera: ASI 2600MC Gain 100 -10°

Taken at Astrocamp September 2014 in Brecon Beacon, Wales.

 

This was my most desired object that I wanted to capture ever since I started imaging. I finally learnt to polar align my equatorial mount and in the darkest skies of Brecon Beacon, Wales, I have finally fulfilled my dream in capturing this magnificent Celestial being that is 2.5 million light years away.

 

My next steps are to now learn the secrets of post processing to bring out the true colours and contrast of deep space imaging but for now, I am satisfied with my progress.

 

22 X 60 sec exposures = 22mins total integration ime

5 Dark calibration frames

30 Bias calibration frames

ISO 6400

Camera: Canon 650D

Mount: HEQ5 Pro Synscan

Telescope: Skywatcher Equinox 80 APO refractor

No Filters

Location: Brecon Beacons

Seeing: Very good, milky way on show

Date: 23rd September 2014

File: Andromeda dss stacked iso 6400 60 secs photoshopped 2

Excerpt from www.mtr.com.hk/en/customer/community/art_archi_integratio...:

 

Art in station architecture

 

Artwork Title:

Integration

 

Artist Name:

Danny Lee Chin-fai (Hong Kong)

 

Artwork Location:

Nam Cheong Station – Concourse Level

 

Form of Artwork:

Black stone, stainless steel and copper sculpture

 

Artwork Completion Date:

November 2007

 

Artist's Concept:

"Integration" compares the growth of Hong Kong's railway network to that of a tree. From a tiny sapling, it has branched out continuously to provide fruitful benefits to the community.

Zinneke parade 2018 • Bruxelles

impressions @ cubism

NOVOFLEX Auto Bellows Macro Noflexar 1 : 4 / 60

trying to visualize inner conflicts.

SH2 132 INTEGRATION 43X45 ZWO 2600MC AZEQ6 AVEC FSQ85

158X600S +154X300+11X1800S filtre l'XTREME master dark 600 300 et 1800

   

© 2011 Werner Schnell

   

(Updated on July 26,2025)

 

Looking north-northwest toward the High Falls of the Pigeon River.

 

In this region, this stream marks the boundary of the United States and Canada. Here it spills over a northeast-southwest-oriented dike of Mesoproterozoic diabase, a dark wall of highly resistant mafic igneous rock. Then it rushes down a canyon deeply incised into much softer shale, siltstone, and graywacke of the Paleoproterozoic Rove Formation. These sedimentary strata can be dimly discerned through the mist at lower left and right.

 

The tremendous visceral impact of the surging water and splashing spray is matched by the spectacle of geologic time presented at the High Falls. The Rove beds were deposited between 1.836 and 1.78 Ga ago in the Animikie Basin, a downwarped section of the Earth's crust linked to the Penokean mountain-building episode.

 

Then, at about 1.1 Ga and long after the lofty Penokean Mountains had been beveled flat by erosion, the magma that would become the diabase was injected into a large vertical fissure in the Rove. This occurred during the cataclysmic episode that created the Midcontinent Rift (MCR) and almost tore North America apart. While specialists still debate the details of its origin, the MCR formed in a time of crustal extension and thinning. Its massive outpourings of lava may also be linked to mantle-plume activity.

 

To see the other photos and descriptions of this series, visit my

Natural History: Minnesota album.

''Immortals are never alien to one another.''

  

— Homer (The Odyssey)

 

Press L to view in Lightbox

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NO GIFS AND ANIMATED ICONS, PLEASE!

This week in 1973, the second crewed Skylab mission splashed down in the Pacific Ocean following a successful 59-day mission in the orbiting laboratory. Here, astronaut Owen K. Garriott retrieves an image experiment from the Apollo Telescope Mount during an extravehicular activity. Today, the Payload Operations Integration Center at Marshall serves as "science central" for the space station, working 24/7, 365 days a year in support of the orbiting laboratory's scientific experiments. The NASA History Program is responsible for generating, disseminating and preserving NASA’s remarkable history and providing a comprehensive understanding of the institutional, cultural, social, political, economic, technological and scientific aspects of NASA’s activities in aeronautics and space. For more pictures like this one and to connect to NASA’s history, visit the Marshall History Program’s webpage.

 

Image credit: NASA

 

Read more

 

Marshall History

 

For more NASA History photos

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

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