The cam allows the user to capture from 500 to 1,000 frames per second and to replay them without delay.
This new technology has applications in live sports and other live TV productions, but also in the production of commercials, documentaries, and movies.
NASA’s Chandra X-ray observatory recently snapped the image of this unusual hand-shaped nebula.
The by-product of a star gone supernova, its energetic particles span 150 light-years.
This is big considering their source (a pulsar) spans a mere 19.3 km. The particles have had such wide reach because the pulsar spins incredibly fast: seven complete rotations every second.
The particles that form the fingers appear to be transferring energy to a nearby gas cloud (the part that glows orange and red on the image).
Dubbed B1509, the pulsar is believed to be 1,700 years old. It’s about 17,000 light-years from Earth.
So I’m a bit late on this one (Daily Planetcovered it a few days ago), but it’s so amazing, it’d be a travesty not to repost this vid…NatGeo did a great job with the explainer.
The site launched a little over a week ago, and while there’s still some tweaks to be made, I can’t stop raving about how much I love it…MUCH easier to navigate (and populate), and easy on the eyes…
It also allows us to start afresh, in terms of content…
We have several great new additions (including the Daily Discovery, pictured bottom-centre), and The Daily Chase – a quick behind-the-scenes look at what’s coming up in the evening’s Daily Planet. Here, you’ll get to meet the team who stitch the show daily, +more.
Jeff Berman, one of the fantastic segment producers at Daily Planet, is working on a behind-the-scenes piece for this upcoming IMAX 3D feature, directed by Howard Hall.
I’ll be working on the web-side version, for our soon-to-be-relaunched site, www.DiscoveryChannel.ca.
Digging around on the doc site, I found this neat widget.
I spent a large part of my childhood by frolicking by the Mediterranean, and thus have an undying admiration for the Big Blue and its derivatives (another reason why it was an incredible privilege to chat with underwater explorer Jean-Michel Cousteau, earlier in 2008).
Looking forward to watching Under the Sea, and doing a review in the upcoming weeks.
Our site designer, Matt Carson, first brought this to my attention last week…Like the hordes of people who subsequently brought Bergman’s site down, I was in awe…One might wonder about the security implications of these types of shots.
You can view the image, and the specks on Gigapan.org. Here’s Bergman’s How-To. He used a version of the GigaPan to make it (forwarded to me by friend and photographer, Marcel Dee). Make sure to also check out Bergman’s portfolio..he’s portraits, etc. made me ooh and aah.
Lookout for Barenaked Ladies’ Ed Robertson (who also happens to host Daily Planet on occasion; Go here to check out some pictures from his C130 Hercules with notes from Ed).