See Inside An Atomic Bomb With Extreme Speed Photos

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The Photographic Eye

The Photographic Eye

11 ай бұрын

What does an atomic detonation look like with a 1/1000000th exposure?
Does an egg dance before it cracks?
If you drop milk onto a red table, do you make art?
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Пікірлер: 288
@petertwiss356
@petertwiss356
The title of this video doesn't it match the content of the video. Sure you show a photo of the nuke but your video is about photography
@stevenjb.9275
@stevenjb.9275
Those photographic images of the nuclear tests are elegant in form, but not in function.
@alyahyai
@alyahyai
I am a biologist & have always taken photos that combine art & science because they appeal to both communities 👍🏻
@TrevorEmahizer
@TrevorEmahizer
Harold Edgerton is from my hometown, where I still live. We actually have a science center named after him here and in the spire of our courthouse, a strobe light flashes all night to honor his achievements.
@banegool
@banegool
Initially NASA did not have a defined photography program. Apparently Walter Schirra who happened to be an avid photography nut, convinced NASA to let him take a Hasselblad 500c on his Mercury mission. NASA was so impressed that Hasselblad cameras and photography training became the standard for future missions.
@mikeknapik6746
@mikeknapik6746
Another great presentation! When I was active duty Air Force in the mid 60’s I was a motion picture photographer. My first duty assignment was at Holloman AFB, New Mexico. We did high speed mopic aerial work. Our fastest amera ran at 500 FPS. Exciting times for a 19 year old! As an aside, one of our mainstay cameras ran at 240 FPS, I can accomplish the same rate with my iPhone! Again thanks and keep up the good work!
@robinwells8879
@robinwells8879 28 күн бұрын
I know exactly what you mean. There’s more beauty in physics than ever seems entirely appropriate to me. Are we looking, perhaps, at ephemeral reflections of the face of God?
@billbromer
@billbromer
As a retired biologist, I find myself looking for the art in the science, especially in plants and I am drawn to macrophotography. As I continue to learn to see, it is so fun to experiment. As long as I don’t stick my finger in the fan or fall asleep in the office. Thanks for your videos, they are so fun and thoughtful.
@MachiningandMicrowaves
@MachiningandMicrowaves
I remember spending several nights in 1977 laying on the floor of a darkened room in our student house with two cameras, flashguns, timers, trigger wires and an air rifle, using wine and milk bottles as targets and getting amazing images of the pellets as they hit the glass, and of the shattering bottles. We didn't cover the floor very well and got into a heap of trouble about the glass fragments in the carpet. Totally worth it. I must try to find the negatives and scan them.
@JU5TINPDX
@JU5TINPDX 14 күн бұрын
I’m less than one minute into this video and I’ve already “liked” it… about 15-20 years ago I bought a dvd from the $10 discount bin called, “the atomic bomb movie” …narrated by William Shatner, and scored with incredible classical music… it was beautiful and absolutely terrifying all at once.
@randy7417
@randy7417
Not only were the photos beyond amazing,but this whole video was a 14 min art piece that I thoroughly enjoyed!!!Beautiful work 👏
@DeanVincent1960
@DeanVincent1960
I was a kid in the 1960's and this brings back lots of fun memories. My older sister woke me up one night in July of 1969 to watch Neil Armstrong on a cheap black and white TV take the first steps on the moon. I definitely see this as art, although probably unintentional by the people who made it. Even though the images of the space suit, glove, cockpit can be seen as clinical, I think they can be seen as literal documentation similar to (IMO) photos by William Egleston or Walker Evans. I think you could draw similarities with some of the still life photos of Edward Weston. After the Oppenheimer film, I started shooting Kodak XX as part of my film photography. Great memories. Thanks!
@rtqii
@rtqii
9:10
@alanbrown4766
@alanbrown4766
My Dad was an impromptu photographer.. Somewhere along the way i became a photographer who took pictures of laboatory prototype hardware.. I've always been attracted to macro photography. Thanks your video
@richardlong3745
@richardlong3745
This is off topic but it struck me as I watched this video. The short clip during this video where a narrator was talking about fan blade cutting through a smoke stream brought back memories of this narrator who was used for many informational type short films of late 1930's to around 1960 when you didn't hear him any longer. This narrator had a somewhat unique American accent that wasn't all that common but you'd still hear it when was growing up in the 1950's and 60's but this American accent has completely disappeared in todays US and the only reason I wrote this ws because I fully remember some people sounding this way besides this particular narrator which I remember him well.
@michaelmoorrees3585
@michaelmoorrees3585
Harold Edgerton, the "E", in EG&G Corporation. A professor at MIT, and two of his students formed the company. The company started providing the service of high speed photography, and expanded into making specialty electronic components, such as the krytron, which was needed to detonate the chemical explosives precisely enough so that made the "implosion" type nuclear bomb (fatman) possible.
@FixerUK
@FixerUK
And now we have Gav and Dan.
@richardlarsen5716
@richardlarsen5716
That brought back some memories. Growing up in South Africa in the 60s and 70s with no TV broadcast I remember being so fascinated by the bullet cutting the card image. I even took a black and white photo of it with my Kodak instamatic to play with effects in the dark room. And the listening to the moon landing on the radio, then a few days later seeing the images in the newspaper. Finally seeing film of the landing a few weeks later on the news reel at the drive in. Sorry, gone on a bit.... nostalgia.
@joshjones3408
@joshjones3408
This an 16x9 are some of the best videos on the subject 👍👍👍
@andriescarstens9245
@andriescarstens9245
This is a nice documentary about the use of photography in the sciences. Science would not be where it is, if not for the proof by means of photography. Being a scientific/industrial photographer for all my life at a university, this type of photography is my absolute passion. I never worked a single day for close to 50 years because of the joy of the profession. I always told friends that to be able to do the job properly, you need to know the science of photography very well, every facet of it, high speed, ultra violet, infrared, you mention it and we did it. We were on the edge to do Schlieren photography as well but the department could not get their act together. The only exclusion was medical photography which our sister department did at the medical faculty. And what about the beauty of double polarized light with stress patterns, you should look at that as well!! - Good to see this Alex!
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