This page shows you the latest news items in this category. This is page number 14.

Total 1555 results found since Jan 2013.

Total lunar eclipse: how to take a good photograph of the November 2022 full blood moon tonight
Guardian Australia picture editor Carly Earl explains the dos and don ’ts of photographing the moon. Tuesday night’s total lunar eclipse will be the last one visible from the region until 2025.How to see Tuesday ’s blood moon total lunar eclipse from Australia and New ZealandGet ourmorning and afternoon news emails,free app ordaily news podcastWith a total lunar eclipse and the November 2022 full bloodmoon, also known as a beaver moon, on Tuesday night, many people will pull out their mobile phones to try and get an Instagram-worthy photograph, but unfortunately getting a great photo of the moon is really challenging...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - November 8, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Carly Earl Tags: Photography The moon Space Science Astronomy Source Type: news

Total lunar eclipse: how to take a good photograph of the November 2022 full blood moon with a phone or camera
Guardian Australia picture editor Carly Earl explains the dos and don ’ts of photographing the moon. Tuesday night’s total lunar eclipse will be the last one visible from the region until 2025.How to see Tuesday ’s blood moon total lunar eclipse from Australia and New ZealandGet ourmorning and afternoon news emails,free app ordaily news podcastWith a total lunar eclipse and the November 2022 full bloodmoon, also known as a beaver moon, on Tuesday night, many people will pull out their mobile phones to try and get an Instagram-worthy photograph, but unfortunately getting a great photo of the moon is really challenging...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - November 7, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Carly Earl Tags: Photography The moon Space Science Astronomy Source Type: news

Ready for my close-up: beetles and bacteria in Nikon Small World photomicrography 2022 – in pictures
Nikon Small World is widely regarded as the leading forum for recognising the art, proficiency and photographic excellence involved in photomicrography, or the art of photography through a light microscope. Each year, the competition attracts hundreds of vivid pictures revealing details of a world unseen by the naked eye. Founded in 1975, this year ’s entries numbered almost 1,300 and were drawn from 72 countriesWhimsy, Covid and a ‘self-portrait in drag’: the 2022 small sculpture prize – in picturesContinue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - October 19, 2022 Category: Science Tags: Photography Biology Insects Fungi Art and design Source Type: news

14 Actually Good Books To Teach Kids About Climate Change
Climate change is not a pleasant thing to think about. It’s complicated and contentious. It can feel overwhelming and frightening. It can even seem hopeless at times. Which is why talking about it with children can be daunting. But children today are being introduced to climate change concepts much earlier than their older family members. Unlike their parents and grandparents, they are growing up in a world that is both experiencing the impacts of climate change and actively adapting to it. They are part of a broad generational movement of young activists who want to address climate change. A third of all U.S. stude...
Source: TIME: Science - October 12, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Emily Barone and Kyla Mandel Tags: Uncategorized Books climate change healthscienceclimate Source Type: news

Marvel Studios Pauses ‘Blade’ Movie Amid Search for New Director (Exclusive)
The feature project was in pre-production in Atlanta heading for a November start of photography. #atlanta
Source: Reuters: Health - October 11, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Freeze frame: how the Antarctic ’s hidden jewel box of creatures was captured
Wildlife Photographer of the Year ’s portfolio award goes to Laurent Ballesta, who describes his long and deep dives under the iceHanging from the underside of an Antarctic ice floe, a sea anemone ’s delicate, glassy tentacles wave in the current. This isEdwardsiella andrillae, one of the planet ’s most remarkable creatures. Unlike other sea anemones that dwell on the ocean floor, this recently discovered species thrives by embedding itself in ice – though how it penetrates the floe with its soft body or survives there remains a mystery.The photograph, taken by Laurent Ballesta, is the first detailed image of the s...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - October 9, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Robin McKie Tags: Wildlife photographer of the year Photography Environment Culture Art and design Antarctica Source Type: news

An evaluation of injury photography practices in sexual assault referral centres (SARC) - Smith P, Marsh N, Bayley S, Volpellier M.
A review was carried out of injury photography methods in a Sexual Assault Referral Centre (SARC). An initial case study review was conducted with a London based SARC where injury photography of sexual assault complainants was routinely undertaken, and has...
Source: SafetyLit - October 5, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Economics of Injury and Safety, PTSD, Injury Outcomes Source Type: news

Black History Month: Black NHS workers going above and beyond
Alvina Ware UNISON member Alvina Ware (pictured above) is a clinical practice support worker at the Royal United Hospital (RUH) in Bath. Over the past two years, Alvina has transformed hair and skincare for Black patients at the hospital. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Alvina began to notice that elderly Black patients on her ward weren’t getting the skincare and haircare they needed – and set about to change that. She explained: “Culturally it’s so important for our hair and skin to be oiled. Skin is the biggest organ in the body, and usually when a Black elderly person is in hospital, their family will come and ta...
Source: UNISON meat hygiene - October 3, 2022 Category: Food Science Authors: Janey Starling Tags: Article Black history month Black workers health workers Source Type: news

Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2022 – winning images
Some of the winning images from the Royal Observatory Greenwich ’s 14thAstronomy Photographer of the Year competition. The selection includes the winning image by Gerald Rhemann, Disconnection Event, a rare photograph of a piece of Comet Leonard ’s gas tail being disconnected and carried away by the solar windThe images will be on display as part of an exhibition, which opens at theNational Maritime Museum on Saturday 17 SeptemberContinue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - September 16, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Matt Fidler Tags: Astronomy Photography Science Space The sun The moon Planets Jupiter Source Type: news

How to take a good photograph of the moon on your phone or camera with the best settings
Guardian Australia picture editor Carly Earl explains the dos and don ’ts of photographing the moonGet ourfree news app,morning email briefing ordaily news podcastWhen a full moon rises, many people will pull out their mobile phones to try to get an Instagram-worthy photograph, but unfortunately getting a great photo of the moon is really challenging.Two reasons: it is very far away and unless you have a telephoto lens (which makes the moon appear closer than it is) it will always appear as a very small glowing dot in the frame.Continue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - September 14, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Carly Earl Tags: Photography The moon Space Science Astronomy Source Type: news

Conflict reported at the Boise Pride Festival
According to police, the conflict was between a protestor and a member from a private security team. #protestor #boisepridefestival #securityteam
Source: Reuters: Health - September 10, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

September full moon 2022: how to take a good photograph of the harvest moon tonight on your phone or camera
Guardian Australia picture editor Carly Earl explains the dos and don ’ts of photographing the moonGet ourfree news app,morning email briefing ordaily news podcastWith the September 2022 full moon rising, also known as the harvest moon, many people will pull out their mobile phones to try and get an Instagram-worthy photograph, but unfortunately the moon is really challenging to get a great photo of.Two reasons: it is very far away and unless you have a telephoto lens (which makes the moon appear closer than it is) it will always appear as a very small glowing dot in the frame.Continue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - September 10, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Carly Earl Tags: Photography The moon Space Science Astronomy Source Type: news

Engineers use modified 19th-century photography technique to make flexible films that change color
Engineers at MIT funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation have repurposed a photographic technique from the 1800s and detailed the outcome in a paper published in Nature Materials. The experiment resulted in films that change shades when …
Source: NSF News - September 8, 2022 Category: Science Authors: NSF Source Type: news

Emerging trends in smartphone photo documentation of child physical abuse - Schulte AG, Ricci LR, Melville JD, Brown J.
Photo documentation of injuries on children is universally recommended in cases of suspected child physical abuse. As technology improves, the ability to document physical examination findings through smartphone photography is increasingly accessible and p...
Source: SafetyLit - September 3, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Age: Infants and Children Source Type: news

Exoplanets Have Been Impossible to Photograph Directly —Until Now
There’s nothing terribly special about the exoplanet known as HIP 65426 b. It’s a gas giant nine times the mass of Jupiter, orbiting its host star 385 light years from Earth. Just one of at least 5,000 exoplanets astronomers have detected, it could easily go overlooked. But, as NASA announced yesterday, HIP 65426 b is all at once very big news—becoming the first exoplanet imaged directly by the new James Webb Space Telescope. Exoplanets are typically detected only inferentially—either by the slight dimming of light that occurs as they orbit in front of their parent star, or by the slight wobble the...
Source: TIME: Science - September 2, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Jeffrey Kluger Tags: Uncategorized healthscienceclimate Space Source Type: news