• ONE: Highest Resolution Photo of the Sun:
About a week ago, Miami astronomers released the highest resolution images of the sun that anyone has ever created. It shows "a surface that’s divided up into discrete, Texas-size cells, like cracked sections in the desert soil. You can see plasma oozing off the surface, rising high into the solar atmosphere before sinking back into darker lanes."
The surface of the sun in motion.
To observe the sun, you can’t just build a telescope the old-fashioned way. DKIST boasts one of the world’s most complex solar-adaptive optics systems. It uses deformable mirrors to offset distortions caused by Earth’s atmosphere. The shape of the mirror adjusts 2,000 times per second. Staring at the sun also makes the telescope hot enough to melt metal. To cool it down, the DKIST team has to use a swimming pool of ice and 7.5 miles of pipe-distributed coolant.
• TWO: Capa's "The Falling Soldier" Sold:
Late last year, Sotheby's Paris sold the famous photograph "The Falling Soldier" shot by Robert Capa, hailed "the most emblematic image of photojournalism." It sold for €75,000, or just under $100,000.
One of Capa's famous quotes that I like to share with students is:
"If your pictures aren't good enough, then you're not close enough."
• THREE: New York Times' "The Year in Pictures" for 2019:
I always like to share this because it's an important curation of photographs. Check out the The Year in Pictures 2019 by the NY Times:
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