Picture this...

Thread Starter

cmartinez

Joined Jan 17, 2007
8,777
Another macro by my significant other ... the colors a vibrant, but the show stopper is the heart shaped mark on the bug's back:

bb070493-0f3d-4140-83ee-7eceec976922.jpg
 

Ya’akov

Joined Jan 27, 2019
10,244
Not exactly a year in review but at least an abbreviated recap of recently taken shots of 2025. It suddenly struck me that it's been 50 years since 1976, a year I remember well for all the bicentennial hullabaloo. I recently gave my grandkids bicentennial quarters along with 1970s Eisenhower dollars that feature an eagle landing on the moon, earth in the sky above it on the reverse. Time has flowed as it is wont to do and I can't help but feel I didn't flow with it as I should have...

BD-AMRO-S-EXP=YR1_6236-1443 x 1924.jpg
American Robin

BD-MUSW-EXP=YR1_9421-2436 x 3246-2.jpg
Mute Swan
BD-BASW-EXP=YR3_9812.jpg
Barn Swallows
BD-MALL-FT-EXP=YR1_0535-2348 x 3131-.jpeg
Mallard
BD-RIGU-EXP=YR1_6681.jpeg
Ring-billed Gull
IT-COHB-EXP=YR3_4839-2.jpeg
Common (European) Honeybee
BD-AMGO-EXP=YR3_2985.jpeg
American Goldfinch
BD-SACR._-EXP=bd-sacr-EXP=photos_241123110400.jpeg
Sandhill Crane
HOWR-EXP=HOWR-EXP=YR3_7378.jpeg
House Wren
BASW-EXP=YR3_9699.jpegBarn Swallow​
 

Thread Starter

cmartinez

Joined Jan 17, 2007
8,777
Scientists have unveiled a new way to capture ultra-sharp optical images without lenses or painstaking alignment. The approach uses multiple sensors to collect raw light patterns independently, then synchronizes them later using computation. This sidesteps long-standing physical limits that have held optical imaging back for decades. The result is wide-field, sub-micron resolution from distances that were previously impossible.
 
Top