• ES Picture of the Day 09 2022

    From Black Panther@21:1/186 to All on Wed Nov 9 11:01:02 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Cloud Shadow Projection over Novi Ligure, Italy

    November 09, 2022

    Nuvola e ombra (2)

    Photographer: Valter Luna

    Summary Authors: Valter Luna; Jim Foster

    The photo above showing an eye-catching cloud shadow was captured
    from my home in Novi Ligure, Italy on July 30, 2022. Shadow projections
    such as shown here are formed when a shadow is cast upon a layer of
    thin dust or haze. The scattering angle of sunlight by the
    aerosols within the layer plays a role in observing the projected
    shadows. Typically, you’ll have more success seeing them if you’re
    looking in the vicinity of the Sun – about 10 degrees away or about the
    width of your fist when extended as arm’s length. Also, it seems that
    they can be seen more often in cumulus congestus clouds than in
    other cloud types.

    Photo details: Nikon D100 camera; Sigma 18-250 lens; 50mm; 1/200 second
    exposure; f / 16; ISO 200.


    Novi Ligure, Italy Coordinates: 44.7620, 8.7859


    Recent EPODs

    wafer_thin_moon_and_pumpkin_sky
    the_primeval_rocks_of_unicorn_point
    paraselene_antares_and_supermoon
    two_types_of_bewildering_sunset_mirages
    lamiaceae_family_of_aromatic_flowering_plants
    meteors_from_fragments_of_chang_zheng_2f_rocket_launch
    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

    --- up 36 weeks, 2 days, 21 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (21:1/186)
  • From Black Panther@21:1/186 to All on Sun Oct 9 12:01:10 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Two Views of the Wondrous Andromeda Galaxy

    October 07, 2022

    GregP_Combine_Sky90_Hyperstar_200mm_EPOD_2

    GregP_M31_85subs_3mins_EPOD

    Photographer: Greg Parker

    Summary Authors: Greg Parker; Jim Foster

    The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is considered the most distant
    object that we can detect with the unaided eye. If you live in the
    Northern Hemisphere and have never seen a galaxy, other than our
    Milky Way, you owe it to yourself to venture into the countryside
    on a clear, moonless autumn evening and look to the northeast. Between
    the stars is the asterism of the Square of Pegasus and the
    constellation of Perseus, a very faint glow will appear in the
    constellation of Andromeda. You may need to use averted vision
    to see it. If you still can’t spot it, grab a pair of binoculars.

    Of course, don’t expect to see anything that resembles the remarkable
    images above, captured from the New Forest Observatory.
    Nevertheless, just being able to discern this distant smudge (some
    2.5 million light years away) is thrilling. The light we see when we
    gaze at M31 began its path to our eyes about the time that North
    America and South America were linked by the Isthmus of Panama and
    around the time our ancestors were starting to stand upright. We can
    see it with the naked eye not only because it’s relatively close by
    (one of the Milky Way's nearest galactic neighbors), but because it’s
    huge -– 220,000 light years across, holding perhaps a trillion stars.

    Photo details:

    Top "zoomed out view" - Canon 200 mm prime lens; ASI 2600MC Pro colour
    CMOS camera.

    Bottom: “zoomed in view” - Hyperstar 4 (on a Celestron C11 telescope)
    image; ASI 2600MC Pro colour CMOS camera.

    New Forest Observatory, U.K. Coordinates: 50.819444, -1.59


    Recent EPODs

    thunderstorm_and_rainbow_over_zagreb_croatia
    etna_volcano_at_night quechee_gorge_in_east_central_vermont
    emerald_lakes_new_zealand basket_stinkhorn
    use_of_wild_plants_in_floriculture
    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

    --- up 31 weeks, 6 days, 21 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (21:1/186)
  • From Black Panther@21:1/186 to All on Fri Dec 9 11:01:10 2022
    EPOD - a service of USRA

    The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
    captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
    community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
    relevant links.


    Crystal Forms in Petrified Wood

    December 09, 2022

    TomMc_EPODImage2.WolverineLoopPetrifiedForest2022#2 (003)

    TomMc_EPODImage1.PetrifiedWoodWolverineClose2022#1 (003)

    Photographer: Thomas McGuire

    Summary Author: Thomas McGuire


    Grand Staircase National Monument is a spectacularly rich geologic
    area in remote southern Utah. Within this monument, Wolverine
    Petrified Forest, shown above at top, features silicified (petrified)
    tree trunks and sections. The variety of colors is caused by iron
    oxide and other oxide minerals.


    In the bottom photo, the geometric forms at right are dark stained
    quartz crystals that probably grew by groundwater deposition in
    openings called “ vugs.” Quartz is extremely common, but visible
    quartz crystals less so. When an igneous rock cools and
    crystallizes, quartz is the last common mineral to harden, so it
    usually fills in the irregular openings between previously formed
    minerals including feldspar, mica, amphibole and pyroxene. What
    surprised me was the texture on this expose surface. The radial forms
    at the bottom of the photo are new to me, and I have yet to understand
    how they formed. Photos taken in July 2022.



    Grand Staircase National Monument, Utah Coordinates: 37.799633,
    -111.214906


    Related EPODs

    Crystal Forms in Petrified Wood Mt. Baker at Sunrise Fossil
    Find in Sicily, Italy Arizona’s China Wall Fossil Lake’s Legacy
    at Wyoming’s Fossil Butte Wagon Tracks from the Old West?
    More...

    Geology Links

    * Earthquakes
    * Geologic Time
    * Geomagnetism
    * General Dictionary of Geology
    * Mineral and Locality Database
    * Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness
    * This Dynamic Earth
    * USGS
    * MyShake - University of California, Berkeley
    * USGS Ask a Geologist
    * USGS/NPS Geologic Glossary
    * USGS Volcano Hazards Program

    -
    Earth Science Picture of the Day is a service of the Universities
    Space Research Association.

    https://epod.usra.edu

    --- up 40 weeks, 4 days, 21 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (21:1/186)