APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Guest » Fri Jun 10, 2011 5:56 pm

look like cannabis at first but im sure its japanese maple im looking at one right now

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by bystander » Mon May 09, 2011 6:10 pm

Orionsubaru wrote:On the Flickr site, we cannot see his images introduced here.
We can see more a lot of his images on the AstroArts site.
I would like everybody to see.
If you know the artist, and he wants his images shown, tell him to post them on Recent Submissions.
Please note, it must be the artist, or someone with explicit permission to post who posts the images.
See instructions on posting in How to post images.

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by geckzilla » Mon May 09, 2011 2:20 pm

Yes Ori, this is a discussion forum, not a "bump a thread every day with a new link" forum. Once is enough. :)

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by owlice » Mon May 09, 2011 9:27 am

I understand you want everyone to see these pictures, but this is not the place to advertise them. Please don't do it again.

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Orionsubaru » Mon May 09, 2011 5:52 am

owlice wrote:This photographer has a Flickr site for his lovely work which is accessible by clicking the link for his name on the APOD page. Please do not keep listing URLs for individual photos for this imager since his Flickr site is readily available.

Thanks.
On the Flickr site, we cannot see his images introduced here.
We can see more a lot of his images on the AstroArts site.
I would like everybody to see.

Thank you.

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by owlice » Sun May 08, 2011 8:09 pm

This photographer has a Flickr site for his lovely work which is accessible by clicking the link for his name on the APOD page. Please do not keep listing URLs for individual photos for this imager since his Flickr site is readily available.

Thanks.

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Orionsubaru » Sun May 08, 2011 7:52 pm

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by geckzilla » Thu May 05, 2011 4:14 pm

Thanks for letting us know. In the future, please only write in English as it is one of our rules. That is why your other post was removed. I would send this as a private message but you are posting as a guest.

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Ailean4321 » Thu May 05, 2011 2:08 pm

lol at people arguing about the leaf. I saw several good cosmic questions which were ignored in favor of arguing about the leaf!! WoW.....
humans can be so silly when they need to be right!

APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Orionsubaru » Thu May 05, 2011 9:36 am

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Céline Richard » Sat Jan 08, 2011 12:55 pm

masahiro miyasaka wrote:Happy New Year.
Thank you for comment for my shot. :D

 I think the frozen dead leaves to be a maple.
This leaf resembles the leaf of this image. (^_^)v

Pleiades and maple
Thank you for your new picture "Pleiades and Maple" masahiro miyasaka, it is great! :D
Very happy New Year!

Céline

leaf type?

by kairnk » Mon Jan 03, 2011 10:07 pm

its a japanese maple, of course

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by masahiro miyasaka » Fri Dec 31, 2010 1:18 pm

Happy New Year.
Thank you for comment for my shot. :D

 I think the frozen dead leaves to be a maple.
This leaf resembles the leaf of this image. (^_^)v

Pleiades and maple
Image

masahiro miyasaka from NAGANO JAPAN

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Céline Richard » Sat Dec 11, 2010 11:07 am

markseibold wrote:I designed and built my own home 22 years ago. Planted many trees, several of which were known as Laceleaf, and Palmatum Maples originating from Japan. I miss seeing those trees now as I lost the home in foreclosure a couple years ago after 20 years there. This image by Masahiro brought me back home for a few moments again. Mark Seibold
I am sorry too, it might have been hard :(
We have Japanese maple trees in the US, too; they are very popular ornamental trees
Yes, the photographer might have taken this photo in many other places than in Japan. Actually, i remember that in the South of France, i have already seen an Eucalyptus :shock: , while i thought it was a tree more likely to grow in Australia!!

Céline

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by owlice » Sat Dec 11, 2010 3:14 am

Céline, thanks!
Do you think Masahiro Miyasaka was trying to make a challenge, or just to be artistic?
I think the photographer was being artistic, and the APOD editor was trying to make a challenge. :D

We have Japanese maple trees in the US, too; they are very popular ornamental trees.

Mark Seibold, I weep for your lost house; how sad. :(

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Céline Richard » Sat Dec 11, 2010 1:33 am

Such a good precision Owlice: i was about to forget you can see at night :owl:
Thank you :) for your pictures, i think you are right.

It might be a Japanese Maple tree, all the more since the photographer has a Japanese name.
Do you think Masahiro Miyasaka was trying to make a challenge, or just to be artistic? If he wanted both, i am convinced of his success :)

Céline

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by owlice » Thu Dec 09, 2010 7:38 pm

I'm not, either. I don't find it hard to look at the leaf and compare it to other leaves, though, so did.

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by yuribasin » Thu Dec 09, 2010 5:48 pm

owlice wrote:I don't think so. ... It's a Japanese maple leaf.
I find it hard to judge, I'm not a botanist :)

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by owlice » Wed Dec 08, 2010 12:51 pm

I don't think so. Let's compare the castor leaf with the leaf depicted in the APOD:
Notice how this leaf has no break; the stem comes into the leaf at its back, not at the bottom. There is no real "bottom" to the leaf.
Notice how this leaf has no break; the stem comes into the leaf at its back, not at the bottom. There is no real "bottom" to the leaf.
castor.jpg (45.07 KiB) Viewed 14737 times
This is the leaf in the APOD image. The lobes do not go 360° around, and the stem comes into a well-defined "bottom" of the leaf, rather than the back of the leaf.
This is the leaf in the APOD image. The lobes do not go 360° around, and the stem comes into a well-defined "bottom" of the leaf, rather than the back of the leaf.
I think this post has it right for the reasons listed in the post.

It's a Japanese maple leaf.

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by YURI BASIN » Wed Dec 08, 2010 12:09 pm

Much information can be found here http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Ricinus_communis

Céline Richard wrote:Yes :D , i attach a picture (unfortunately little) about what you suggest, and see how it looks like a lot!!
I guess this frozen leaf is Palmcrist (Ricinus).

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Céline Richard » Tue Dec 07, 2010 8:32 pm

Yes :D , i attach a picture (unfortunately little) about what you suggest, and see how it looks like a lot!!
I guess this frozen leaf is Palmcrist (Ricinus).
Attachments
Palmcrist (Ricinus)
Palmcrist (Ricinus)
220px-Ricinusstrauch.jpg (18.95 KiB) Viewed 14747 times

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by YURI BASIN » Tue Dec 07, 2010 8:58 am

What I meant was that this plant is Palmcrist (Ricinus)

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Beyond » Mon Dec 06, 2010 11:05 pm

YURI BASIN wrote:Ricinus communis
It is BEYOND me and my WEBSTER's :!:

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by YURI BASIN » Mon Dec 06, 2010 2:11 pm

Ricinus communis

Re: APOD: Frosted Leaf Orion (2010 Nov 17)

by Céline Richard » Sun Dec 05, 2010 11:28 am

This is deeply interesting, thank you a lot!
go back more than about 100 years, and window glass was made by spinning large discs. These were thicker at the center than the edges, so window panes were generally wedge shaped.Glazers usually installed the panes with the thick side down, which is one reason for the belief about glass flowing.
It makes sense a lot :)
Consider telescope mirrors. They are made of glass, and ground to an accuracy of less than the wavelength of light. If windows could change shape at the rate of a millimeter per century or so (as you might guess looking at cathedral windows), how long would it take for a telescope mirror to become deformed by a few tens of nanometers? Answer: not very long. If telescope mirrors changed shape with time, all but the newest professional telescopes would currently be useless. It's a good thing glass is stable!
Actually, you answered better to my questions than what i have expected to understand. With an accuracy of less than the wavelength of light :)

Have a very good day, thank you,

Céline

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