Powers of Ten

Adriana✿

New member
Sep 2, 2008
911
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Happily Ever After!
Powers of Ten


Credit & Copyright: Charles & Ray Eames (Eames Office)

Explanation: How different does the universe look on small, medium, and large scales? The most famous short science film of its generation gives breathtaking comparisons. That film, Powers of Ten, originally created in the 1960s, has now been officially posted to YouTube and embedded above. Please click the above arrow to see the nine minute movie for yourself. From a picnic blanket near Chicago out past the Virgo Cluster of Galaxies, every ten seconds the film zooms out to show a square a factor of ten times larger on each side. The video then reverses, zooming back in a factor of ten every two seconds and ends up inside a single proton. The Powers of Ten sequence is actually based on the book Cosmic View by Kees Boeke in 1957, as is a similar but mostly animated film Cosmic Zoom that was also created in the late 1960s. The changing perspectives are so enthralling and educational that sections have been recreated using more modern computerized techniques, including the first few minutes of the movie Contact, and in a short digital video called The Known Universe created last year for the American Museum of Natural History. Ray and husband Charles Eames, the film's creators, were known as quite visionary spirits and even invented their own popular chair.
 

pdicko

unordinary guy
Jan 27, 2011
47
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0
Vancouver
Adriana✿;1117638 said:
Powers of Ten


Credit & Copyright: Charles & Ray Eames (Eames Office)

Explanation: How different does the universe look on small, medium, and large scales? The most famous short science film of its generation gives breathtaking comparisons. That film, Powers of Ten, originally created in the 1960s, has now been officially posted to YouTube and embedded above. Please click the above arrow to see the nine minute movie for yourself. From a picnic blanket near Chicago out past the Virgo Cluster of Galaxies, every ten seconds the film zooms out to show a square a factor of ten times larger on each side. The video then reverses, zooming back in a factor of ten every two seconds and ends up inside a single proton. The Powers of Ten sequence is actually based on the book Cosmic View by Kees Boeke in 1957, as is a similar but mostly animated film Cosmic Zoom that was also created in the late 1960s. The changing perspectives are so enthralling and educational that sections have been recreated using more modern computerized techniques, including the first few minutes of the movie Contact, and in a short digital video called The Known Universe created last year for the American Museum of Natural History. Ray and husband Charles Eames, the film's creators, were known as quite visionary spirits and even invented their own popular chair.

Great find! It's been shared on my FB page. Thanks
 

mistressfreyja

New member
Aug 25, 2008
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Welcome back, hunsperger/'pi' aka 3.14..../'Euler's constant' 2.718.....?
Adriana, are you an intellect? Have you ever studied fractal geometry? Are you familiar with Benoit Mandelbrot? Could you tell me the two people who made the most significant impact in the development of circuit integration. Do you even have a clue as to who Brattain, Bardeen and Shockley are? For without these people, you would totally be obscure.
 

Adriana✿

New member
Sep 2, 2008
911
11
0
Happily Ever After!
YW Nina, Pdicko. I love being reminded that now matter how much is going on in my life, there is a much bigger picture and my matters aren't that pressing lol

Thanks my fair lady; Miss Freya, you beat me to it! lol
 
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