travel, photography, movie, music

17th May 2010

Photo reblogged from fuck yeah eyegasms with 122 notes

fuckyeaheyegasms:

[134/365] STS-132: Atlantis Shuttle Launch (by pea g.)

fuckyeaheyegasms:

[134/365] STS-132: Atlantis Shuttle Launch (by pea g.)

Tagged: SpaceScience

Source: flickr.com

15th May 2010

Photo

KSC, Florida. 20 minutes after the Space Shuttle launch, and we still could see the contrail! Atlantis was launched Friday  afternoon, and it is on OUR way:-)		..

KSC, Florida. 20 minutes after the Space Shuttle launch, and we still could see the contrail! Atlantis was launched Friday afternoon, and it is on OUR way:-) ..

Tagged: spacescience

Source: twitpic.com

3rd May 2010

Photo

View of the round earth from Cupola (via Astro_Soichi)

View of the round earth from Cupola (via Astro_Soichi)

Tagged: sciencespaceearth

Source: twitpic.com

27th April 2010

Photo reblogged from puta, por favor with 7 notes

stayfrosty:

Tortoises at Dawn, Galapagos Islands, 1984,  by Frans Lanting.

stayfrosty:

Tortoises at Dawn, Galapagos Islands, 1984, by Frans Lanting.

Tagged: photographysciencenatureanimalsisland

Source: absolutelyfabregas

26th April 2010

Photo with 2 notes

Aurora Borealis

Aurora Borealis

Tagged: sciencespaceaurora borealis

Source: environmentalgraffiti.com

19th April 2010

Photo with 1 note

Bye!

Bye!

Tagged: photographysciencespace

Source: twitpic.com

17th April 2010

Photo reblogged from Fresh Photons with 284 notes

freshphotons:

fuckyeahtheuniverse:

crookedindifference:

STS-124 Shuttle Mission: Karen L. Nyberg

freshphotons:

fuckyeahtheuniverse:

crookedindifference:

STS-124 Shuttle Mission: Karen L. Nyberg

Tagged: photographysciencespace

Source: crookedindifference

28th March 2010

Photo reblogged from letters to dead people. with 422 notes

(via letterstodeadpeople)

(via letterstodeadpeople)

Tagged: quotesscienceartdesign

Source: letterstodeadpeople

25th March 2010

Photo with 2 notes

From Richard Waller, “A Catalogue of Simple and Mixt Colours with a Specimen of Each Colour Prefixt Its Properties” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 6, 1686/1687 (London, 1688) Noting the lack of a standard for colors in natural philosophy, and inspired by a similar table published in Stockholm, Richard Waller indicated that his “Table of Physiological Colors Both Mixt and Simple” would permit unambiguous descriptions of the colors of natural bodies. To describe a plant, for example, one could compare it to the chart and use the names found there to identify the colors of the bark, wood, leaves, etc. Similar applications of the information collected in the chart might also extend to the arts and trades, he suggested. Read more about Waller’s color system in The Creation of Color in Eighteenth-Century Europe by Sarah Lowengard. (via A naturalist’s color palette, circa 1686 : bioephemera
)

From Richard Waller, “A Catalogue of Simple and Mixt Colours with a Specimen of Each Colour Prefixt Its Properties” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, vol. 6, 1686/1687 (London, 1688) Noting the lack of a standard for colors in natural philosophy, and inspired by a similar table published in Stockholm, Richard Waller indicated that his “Table of Physiological Colors Both Mixt and Simple” would permit unambiguous descriptions of the colors of natural bodies. To describe a plant, for example, one could compare it to the chart and use the names found there to identify the colors of the bark, wood, leaves, etc. Similar applications of the information collected in the chart might also extend to the arts and trades, he suggested. Read more about Waller’s color system in The Creation of Color in Eighteenth-Century Europe by Sarah Lowengard. (via A naturalist’s color palette, circa 1686 : bioephemera

)

Tagged: sciencenaturecolorvisualizationhistory

Source: scienceblogs.com

10th March 2010

Photo

via kottke.org


The formula for Hollywood movies
After analyzing dozens of Hollywood films, a team of researchers has found evidence that the visual rhythm of movies at the shot level matches a pattern called the 1/f fluctuation, the same pattern that is found in dozens of natually occurring phenomena, including the length of the human attention span.

These results suggest that Hollywood film has become increasingly clustered in packets of shots of similar length. For example, action sequences are typically a cluster of relatively short shots, whereas dialogue sequences (with alternating shots and reverse-shots focused sequentially on the speakers) are likely to be a cluster of longer shots. In this manner and others, film editors and directors have incrementally increased their control over the visual momentum of their narratives, making the relations among shot lengths more coherent over a 70-year span.

Modern action movies are particularly adept at matching the audience’s attention span in this manner. The full paper is available here.

via kottke.org

The formula for Hollywood movies

After analyzing dozens of Hollywood films, a team of researchers has found evidence that the visual rhythm of movies at the shot level matches a pattern called the 1/f fluctuation, the same pattern that is found in dozens of natually occurring phenomena, including the length of the human attention span.

These results suggest that Hollywood film has become increasingly clustered in packets of shots of similar length. For example, action sequences are typically a cluster of relatively short shots, whereas dialogue sequences (with alternating shots and reverse-shots focused sequentially on the speakers) are likely to be a cluster of longer shots. In this manner and others, film editors and directors have incrementally increased their control over the visual momentum of their narratives, making the relations among shot lengths more coherent over a 70-year span.

Modern action movies are particularly adept at matching the audience’s attention span in this manner. The full paper is available here.

Tagged: moviesciencestats

Source: cdn.physorg.com

3rd February 2010

Photo reblogged from The Daily What with 235 notes

thedailywhat:

Infographic of the Day: “Big Brothers: Satellites orbiting Earth” by Michael Paukner.

What’s up there? How many countries have stuck satellites up into space, how many of those satellites are working, part-working or just bits of junk? This graphic may help to enlighten you.

Embiggen.
Source: UCS Satellite Database
[more.]

thedailywhat:

Infographic of the Day:Big Brothers: Satellites orbiting Earth” by Michael Paukner.

What’s up there? How many countries have stuck satellites up into space, how many of those satellites are working, part-working or just bits of junk? This graphic may help to enlighten you.

Embiggen.

Source: UCS Satellite Database

[more.]

Tagged: visualizationsciencedesign

Source: thedailywhat

29th January 2010

Photo

blog of the day: Myrmecos Blog - Insects, Photography, Life

blog of the day: Myrmecos Blog - Insects, Photography, Life

Tagged: blog of the daysciencephotography

Source: myrmecos.wordpress.com

29th January 2010

Photo with 1 note

The Solvay Conference 
1911 Physics Conference: Max Planck, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg among others.

The Solvay Conference

1911 Physics Conference: Max Planck, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg among others.

Tagged: photographyhistoryscience

Source: iconicphotos.wordpress.com