The Daily Croissant

Eclectic Perambulations in the Noosphere

  • Splendor of Grand Teton...Iridescent Cloud in Himalaya

    • 21 Jan 2012
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    • Clouds Himalayas Iridescence January 21 2012 Landscapes Mountains Wyoming
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    At 13,775 feet (4,199 meters), Grand Teton is the highest point in the Teton range in Wyoming and considered one of the most formidable mountain climbs in the United States.

    via all-that-is-interesting.com


    "An Iridescent Cloud in Himalaya, I observed early morning on October 18, 2009 from path to Khumjung, just 500 meters from road fork to Gokyo and Tengboche. I was ahead of my friends, so when I met my Annapurna buddy, who was going to Khunjung (to see Yeti scalp) I decided to go with him for a while. We sat on stones to talk and drink my green tea and suddenly I saw this spectacular phenomena . It was my first time I saw this phenomena and luckily I had my Nikon D90, so I was able to capture it.... Turbulence, ice crystals in the low cloud and wonderful Himalaya produce this great picture. The mountain is Thamserku (6623 m)."
    by Oleg Bartunov

     

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  • Heaven of Delight

    • 12 Oct 2011
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    • 11October11 Beetles Exhibit Iridescence architecture
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    "With the help of 29 young artists, Fabre created Heaven of Delight, a fresco in the Hall of Mirrors in the Royal Palace of Brussels. Made completely out of one million six hundred thousand jewel-scarab wing cases, it contains various shapes that glow in a greenish-blue light, depending on the angle from which they are viewed."
    via angelos.be

     

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  • Diatoms may be Key to Pearly Paint

    • 22 Sep 2011
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    • 21September11 Diatoms Iridescence Nanotechnology Technique
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    "A new technique using microscopic ocean organisms could lead to cheaper, greener methods for producing iridescent cosmetics, paints and holographic plastics.  

    "The whole industrial process has a low carbon footprint when compared to conventional [methods]," said Andrew Parker, a professor of biology at Green College, at Oxford University in England.

    The new method, developed by Parker and his team, enlists the light-altering properties of diatoms — plant-like microorganisms that live in oceans, fresh water and soil.

    A diatom's ability to alter light comes from the silica shell encasing it. Each shell is comprised of a complex network of tiny holes — called photonic structures — that allow some colors in the rainbow spectrum of light to pass through, while rejecting others.

    We see the rejected wavelengths of light. And when viewed from different angles, the colors seem to shift and become opalescent. Different species of the tiny phytoplankton have differently shaped shells, which in turn reflect light in a unique way.

    The idea is to use specific species of diatoms to produce iridescent colors in consumer products.

    By immersing a few living diatoms in a nutritious solution that encourages them to divide and multiply, Parker says his team can produce up to a ton of the single-celled organisms per day.

    Once enough diatoms are grown, the researchers raise the temperature of the solution or introduce a weak acid to kill off the organic matter, leaving the light-reflecting structures behind.

    Those structures can then be added to a transparent paint mixture, for example, to produce anything from iridescent car paint to opalescent cosmetics. The structures could also be added to a polymer solution and used to make holographic security codes on credit cards."

    via dsc.discovery.com

     

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  • Madagascan Sunset Moth, Chrysiridia rhiphearia

    • 22 Sep 2011
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    • 21September11 Iridescence Madagascar Moths insects
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    via bugman123.com

     

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  • A Pileus Iridescent Cloud Over Ethiopia

    • 4 Sep 2011
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    • 03September11 Africa Clouds Ethiopia Iridescence
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    Image Credit & Copyright: Esther Havens 

    "Yes, but how many dark clouds have a multicolored lining? Pictured, behind this darker cloud, is a pileus iridescent cloud, a group of water droplets that have a uniformly similar size and so together diffract different colors of sunlight by different amounts. The above image was taken just after the picturesque sight was noticed by chance by a photographer in Ethiopia. A more detailed picture of the same cloud shows not only many colors, but unusual dark and wavy bands whose origins are thought related to wave disturbances in the cloud."

    via apod.nasa.gov

     

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  • Insects' Beautiful Iridescent Wings

    • 4 Aug 2011
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    • 03August11 Iridescence Wings insects photography
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    Hymenoptera-wing-color1-02jpg

    "“The claim that fly and wasp wing patterns are no match for the incredible diversity of colorful butterfly wing patterns is obsolete.”  

    Not only do they have incredible colors, but different species have their own spots and markings. Scientists think that the insects use their colorful wings to communicate with and also differentiate between species,

    Scientist Ekaterina Shevtsova from Lund University has shone a light on these oft overlooked wings that could belong to the fairies of our imaginations".

    via environmentalgraffiti.com

     

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  • Sea-foam Gems

    • 1 Jun 2011
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    • 31May11 Bubbles Iridescence Sea-foam photography
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    Photographer: Bill Oterson Photographer: Bill Oterson

    "While walking a local beach earlier this month on Long Island, New York, I was amazed by these colorful sea-foam “jewels.” The structure of sea foam is related to the structure of clouds but where clouds are tiny droplets surrounded by air, foam is composed of air bubbles surrounded by water. Like clouds, sea-foam appears white. However, coloration can occur if a thin interference film is present on the bubbles, which acts to deflect sunlight. The colors that are viewed result from variations in the thickness of the film and the angle of the observer’s line of sight with the bubbles. These colors, shown here on a piling, lasted until the bubbles were jostled by the rising tide. Note my silhouetted image reflected in the bubbles. Photo taken about 10:00 a.m. May 15 in Great South Bay, Sayville, Long Island, New York."
    via epod.usra.edu

     

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  • Iridescent Heart

    • 14 Feb 2011
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    • 14Feb11 Clouds Iridescence Phenomena
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    by Dariusz Dorosz

    The photo above showing a heart-shaped mid-level cloud fringed with iridescent colors was captured above Zabikow, Poland on July 30, 2010. Diffraction of sunlight by minute cloud droplets is responsible for the lovely pastel hues. Because the droplets are so tiny (1/10 to 1/1000 the size of raindrops), light waves that interact with them aren't refracted nearly as much as they're deflected -- in all directions. Iridescence or irisation is generally observed in clouds that have formed relatively recently since then their droplets are more likely to be quite small and of more uniform size. Iridescent clouds are found within about 20 degrees of the Sun, so make sure to protect your eyes whenever looking for them.

    via epod.usra.edu

     

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  • Amazing World of Insect-Wing Color

    • 9 Feb 2011
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    • 09Feb11 Iridescence Wings insects
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    A closer look at seemingly drab, transparent insect wings has revealed realms of previously unappreciated color, visible to the naked eye yet overlooked for centuries.
    via wired.com

     

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