Solar Maximum happens every 11 years or so, right? I will keep paying attention!
Sal
Wow, that is spectacular!
Stay up until 3:30 the other night. When it exploded again it gave a giant middle finger to Europe:
Aahh, that's rough 😅
But lo, the density died and the pillars are diffused. My friend caught a little bit on the horizon in camera. I saw a little bit of red but nothing stunning. Very faint. You can just see the pink on the horizon. This is facing north.
Nice! Is this your first time seeing it, or is this something that you get to attempt often?
Those remind me a bit of when we were putting colors and other stuff into dia frames and then projecting.
Possibly similar type of dynamics going on! I never tried this.
I used 99%. 70% will probably work too. I can test later and let you know.
Ahaha, after the 7th snooze finally got out of bed. Great photo!
Beautiful! Thanks for sharing!
When I saw it, I thought "this looks like it must be fluorescent under UV!". So, I looked it up, and found out that it probably isn't fluorescent (but if you have a UV flashlight to test, I am quite curious to know).
From what I can find, the yellowish green color comes from the molecule vulpinic acid. Especially interesting is that this molecule is prone to breaking down in the presence of light (terrible quality for a pigment), but a recent paper suggests that inside of the lichen the molecule sticks to polysaccharide chains in a way that dampens the molecule's photogradation pathway. The pigment can still absorb UV light but rather than dissipating the energy in a destructive process the polysaccharide holds the molecule in place and dampens the molecule's response by quickly dissipate the energy. Here is the open-access paper, and diagram below.
I also found that the name Vulpicida, Letharia vulpina, and Vulpinic acid come from folk tales about these lichens being used to poison foxes (vulpes = fox) and wolves. Not sure if it is true...
Apologize for the information dump, but I saw the bright colors and just had to look into its photophysics 😂
I continued playing with this concept. Turmeric resin extracted with isopropanol, and now I blended some beets with water and passed the blended liquid through a coffee filter to obtain the purple betains in water. Deposited as layers one on top of the other. Once dried, I added a drop of oil, and then one drop of soap. No baking soda this time.
It is quite fun to see these under the microscope. It looks like a living landscape, with mountains walking across and interacting with each other as turbulent particles whiz inside of them erratically.
You’ve still got time! Between 10pm and 2am are the golden hours for this sort of thing, but look north as it gets dark. Use your phone camera with a long exposure to check. :)
I'm living in Amsterdam at the moment, in a city environment. From what I have found, I would need to travel to the north of the Netherlands to have a good chance of seeing something. A difficult trip to improvise on a Sunday night. Hopefully when the next opportunity arises I will know enough to appreciate it more deeply.
Ahh cool! Actually it was one of that mod's latest post that I had just read before making my flux rope comment 😆
Not intentional!
Took a bit of digging. The post was federated, but it showed up to me as "Removed by mod":
Looking through the post's moderation history, I find that the user was banned from community and then unbanned. I also see some removed posts from that same author to that same community around that same time.
My guess is that the most was removed by mod, then restored, but only the removal federated through and not the restore.
I have manually restored it, so you should be able to find it now: https://mander.xyz/post/977581/19535554
Unfortunately the article is behind a paywall... But I am curious, does this mean there won't be any new Cortex-Mxs microprocessors?
The summary says that Arm wants to "enter the chip design space". They weren't doing this already?
And, is the prospect of a proprietary chip an exciting tease when pitted against an open standard one? I am excited about RISC-V microprocessors precisely because they rely on an open standard, so I am curious to see what their angle here is. I tried to find a non-paywalled source but I couldn't find one.