PF Photography: Tips, Tricks, & Photo Sharing

In summary, PF Photography offers valuable tips and tricks for improving photography skills and techniques. They also provide a platform for photo sharing, allowing photographers to showcase their work and receive feedback from others in the community. From beginner tips to advanced techniques, PF Photography has something for every level of photographer. Additionally, their photo sharing feature encourages collaboration and growth among photographers. With a focus on education and community, PF Photography is a valuable resource for anyone looking to improve their photography skills and connect with other photographers.
  • #1,261
Manual setting of an audio level is what I was really missing.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #1,262
I finally was able to escape the lab last night for the first time since April (where we had some great skies that I missed :cry:) and grabbed a few shots of M101. Unfortunately it was hot and muggy so the seeing conditions were terrible, I couldn't even see Megrez.

Anyway, I tried my EQ-1 mount again with my telescope to see how it compares to my 0-GPS1 (I'm selling all my long FL glass). The answer is "not well". I took about 40 frames and in the end could only use 6 of them. So here is 6 minutes of the Pinwheel galaxy.

6x60sec, ST-80 (400mm), ISO 3200/1600
53u7bn.jpg


Anyone want to buy an EQ-1 equatorial mount?
 
  • #1,263
I was out shooting flowers to try out the color settings on a new camera when I ran across this little (VERY little) fellow sitting on a 2" wide flower (see lower left insert) and thought I'd check out the super-macro capability. It works pretty well. This little guy would easily fit on my one of my fingernails and the image you see here is scaled down from 1/2 the original size (the insert is a separate pic)

attachment.php?attachmentid=48802&stc=1&d=1341182174.jpg
 

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  • #1,264
I worked with a few photos I took last summer, using software to turn my ultrawide into something like what this lens (http://www.the-digital-picture.com/Reviews/Canon-TS-E-17mm-f-4-L-Tilt-Shift-Lens-Review.aspx) can do:

http://img850.imageshack.us/img850/9228/perspective2.png

http://img98.imageshack.us/img98/4168/perspective1.png

http://img109.imageshack.us/img109/706/perspective3.png

The image was 'warped' to perform the equivalent to a back tilt/swing on a view camera. In software, I stretched the rectangular image into a trapezoid and then cropped the excess. These images look *terrible* at normal size.

The upper image was a 10 minute exposure, with heavy cloud cover concealing the moonlight- it's amazing the foreground grass stayed completely still during that time and so are sharp, while the ocean is completely blurred out from the motion. The clouds retained a lot of structure, which is also unexpected.

The lower two images are my attempts at copying proper architectural photography. The image warping brought all the lines that lie within the image plane (the horizontal and vertical lines) into right angles, but the depth perspective is highly exaggerated due to the short focal length of the lens- magnification varies with distance much more strongly than 'normal' vision, and so the near-far relationship is exaggerated: the telephone pole shadows converge extra-strongly, for example. In the bottom photo, the receding columns show this effect as well.

The building in the middle photo was torn down this past week- I feel lucky to have gotten this shot. In addition to warping the image, I (tried to) erase the telephone pole on the left.
 
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  • #1,265
This was taken with a Phase One digital back attached to a 4x5 view camera:

junebug+web.jpg


This is composed for 6 sheets of 4x5 film. I scanned the negatives and blended them in photoshop to create a focus stack:

jackson+final+web.jpg
 
  • #1,266
Fantastic! jealous = me. What lens(es) did you use?
 
  • #1,267
Thank you, Andy. For the top one I used a 135mm lens and a 90mm for the bottom one.
 
  • #1,268
Really nice!
 
  • #1,269
Finally got my camera back- a 3 month repair job...

During the summer, we spent some time decapsulating computer chips from dead cell phones and old computers (for fun). Here's a few- the large ones (about 1cm on a side), starting from the lower right, are a 512 Mb DRAM, a Pentium 4, and I don't know what the other ones are. The small ones are chips and diodes, showing the huge differences in sizes. The thicknesses also vary considerably- the Pentium and large rectangular one above it are quite thick, while the DRAM is about as thin as a coverslip.

http://img841.imageshack.us/img841/7529/dsc09246rt.jpg

These two images are close-ups of a diode and the DRAM, using epi-DIC imaging:

http://img824.imageshack.us/img824/6353/dsc09255small.jpg

http://img401.imageshack.us/img401/7229/dsc09258small.jpg

This one came from a cell phone and seems to have a lot of ring inductors, possibly as part of resonant circuit(s):

http://img703.imageshack.us/img703/8830/dsc09229p.jpg

The color in the first and last images are from diffraction, as opposed to DIC.
 
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  • #1,270
A few more images of chips:

http://img36.imageshack.us/img36/3859/montagezo.jpg

http://img14.imageshack.us/img14/3298/dsc09528p.jpg

http://img717.imageshack.us/img717/1749/dsc09521a.jpg

http://img43.imageshack.us/img43/5736/dsc09293wn.jpg

These have all been significantly downsized- the full sized versions of these and some additional images will get posted on our blog shortly.

All the images (except one of the chips in the top photo) were taken with epi-brightfield (tungsten halogen source), using a variety of magnifications- the first image is a collection of FETs (Field Effect Transistors) at 16x or 40x, the second and third images were acquired at 8x, and the last at about 10x.

The colors are most likely due to a combination of thin-film interference and surface plasmon resonance from the various metal layers- off-axis, these chips appear mirrorlike.
 
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  • #1,271
Wow, Andy, those are fantastic! I think some would make beautiful quilt patterns :!)!
 
  • #1,272
Imagine a hand made knitted fabric following these designs. Geek's paradise!
 
  • #1,274
Its kind of mind blowing that man kind is capable of making such things.
 
  • #1,275
Topher925 said:
Its kind of mind blowing that man kind is capable of making such things.
...that actually work.
 
  • #1,276
I'm still learning how to use microscopes! Typically, when mounting a camera to a microscope, the sensor is presented with a small image size: microscopes were developed with image sizes matched to the retina, and optical designs all evolved with the constraint of a 20mm diameter image size. That's why many microscopy images appear circular- the sensor is larger than the image size. And to add insult to injury, the image quality falls off as the edge of the image is approached, meaning only the very center of the sensor has an image worth keeping.

The ultraphot, along with the aristophot (Leica) and multiphot (Nikon), all basically have a bellows attachment which is used to provide a much larger image size- the ultraphot has an 8" image circle. I'm not able to accurately convey what that looks like- if you have seen a large-format contact print, you will know what I mean. This is the best I can do- this is a snapshot of the display using my lowest magnification lens at the shortest bellows length (corresponding to 0.8x magnification):

http://imageshack.us/a/img6/6451/dsc097821.jpg

A penny just barely fits in the image- I don't understand how that's 0.8x, but whatever... Now, this is the amount of that image I can acquire with a 35mm format sensor (at the same scale):

http://imageshack.us/a/img407/1083/dsc097831.jpg

Again, with my camera I can produce 16" x 20" prints at 300 dpi, or 6 foot wide prints at 80 dpi (computer monitor resolutions)- if I could scan or digitally capture the entire image, I could produce publication-quality prints that are *17 feet* wide, or 60-foot wide prints suitable for the side of a truck, or >600-foot wide prints for roadside signage :)

What I have learned to do is take the ground glass off and stick my camera (w/o lens) into the hole, so I can get images like this (these are full-frame images, downsized):

http://imageshack.us/a/img401/9800/dsc09728dh.jpg


http://imageshack.us/a/img515/5620/dsc09741h.jpg

and a 1:1 crop of an image- this would be the 600-foot long poster :)

http://imageshack.us/a/img193/9356/dsc097871.jpg

What's really excellent is that the objective lenses all happily provide the larger image size- the full 8" images are truly incredible to see.
 
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  • #1,277
Our best image yet:

http://imageshack.us/a/img585/7328/100147.jpg

This is 1700x magnification, using our 100/1.47 lens. Here's the whole image (downsized)-

http://imageshack.us/a/img41/9130/1001471p.jpg

The NA is high enough to isolate the plane of focus to a single circuit layer.
 
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  • #1,278
Andy are you putting the camera at prime focus in a microscope? I'm not sure if the terminology from astrophotography matches up with normal photography, so I hope that makes sense.
 
  • #1,279
Drakkith said:
Andy are you putting the camera at prime focus in a microscope? I'm not sure if the terminology from astrophotography matches up with normal photography, so I hope that makes sense.

Yes, if I understand what you mean- the microscope is the camera lens.
 
  • #1,280
Andy Resnick said:
Yes, if I understand what you mean- the microscope is the camera lens.

Yes, that makes sense now.
What's that circular display thing with the penny on it?
 
  • #1,281
That's the projector viewscreen for the Ultraphot; there's a different screen for use with a 4"x5" filmpack. I put up the viewscreen image to show how I gain an additional 10x magnification from the 'crop factor' of my sensor.
 
  • #1,282
Todays sunset here in South France

14m6rfa.jpg
 
  • #1,283
Emir, the happy lab of my sister and his ball. I posted him also in August I think.

2d2g7rd.jpg
 
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  • #1,284
Andre said:
Todays sunset here in South France

<snip>
Nice- excellent lighting!
 
  • #1,285
A few more images of chips- these are some of the markings present. Most chips have a small area that contains the company logo, the device ID, and various process marks:

http://imageshack.us/a/img208/7666/dsc00621e.jpg
http://imageshack.us/a/img513/4131/dsc00644fo.jpg
http://imageshack.us/a/img405/4092/dsc00633rk.jpg

and also some markings around the edges, where the chips are diced:

http://imageshack.us/a/img69/9374/dsc00617xh.jpg

But there are also cryptic things like

http://imageshack.us/a/img210/2467/dsc006141l.jpg
http://imageshack.us/a/img836/1778/dsc006251.jpg

and artistic doodles:

http://imageshack.us/a/img39/6913/dsc00592k.jpg

I haven't gotten a definitive translation of this- nobody knows exactly what it says (the best guess is 'Wash')

http://imageshack.us/a/img850/4660/dsc00639bs.jpg

This one is the best (so far)
http://imageshack.us/a/img15/1639/dsc00597xj.jpg
 
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  • #1,286
LOLZ the last one is the best! Thanks for sharing Andy.
 
  • #1,287
I think this one is the most interesting. Markings on the edges.

http://imageshack.us/a/img69/9374/dsc00617xh.jpg
 
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  • #1,288
Thanks, guys! Elvis was hiding behind an inductor:

http://imageshack.us/a/img827/7594/dsc00656lh.jpg

CSR also hates Barney:

http://imageshack.us/a/img856/3094/dsc00653vy.jpg
 
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  • #1,289
Who says engineers don't have a sense of humor.
 
  • #1,290
http://img703.imageshack.us/img703/4219/img20121226wa0018.jpg

:biggrin:

My sister sent me this, and she got me. :grumpy:
 
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  • #1,291
Gad said:
<snip>
My sister sent me this, and she got me. :grumpy:

Clever image- very creative!
 
  • #1,292
Andy Resnick said:
Clever image- very creative!

Thanks Andy, good to hear that from a professional ;)

She is creative, talented, and a potential photographer. :smile:
 
  • #1,293
Patting myself on the back for this one- successful decapsulation of a MEMS device (old laptop). This device costs less than $0.01 to manufacture- I found an iPhone bill of materials with this device listed. Three axis accelerometer plus tilt- STMicroelectronics CSL05E, similar to the CSL10B. The lower image is about 400X magnification.

http://imageshack.us/a/img534/6023/dsc02306zk.jpg

http://imageshack.us/a/img692/3649/dsc02312xpfo.jpg

My understanding is that this works by capacitance sensing- movements of the masses (suspended polysilicon) changes the spacings, leading to a signal.

We should be *astounded* by our ability to mass-produce this technology. We probably throw away millions of these every year.
 
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  • #1,294
Jet blast from a B767 taking off in St Maarten(the airport beach) - Jan 2013

2d2iusy.jpg
 
  • #1,295
Maui said:
Jet blast from a B767 taking off in St Maarten(the airport beach) - Jan 2013

2d2iusy.jpg


Outstanding photo. :!)



If it were the 787, you probably could have smelled these: :devil:

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/components/display_image.php?id=525289?123
 

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