merlovsky:

The Gold Scab by James Abbott McNeill Whistler 1862

merlovsky:

The Gold Scab by James Abbott McNeill Whistler 1862

(via 50watts)

prostheticknowledge:

Minjeong An

Creative, diagrammatic self-portraits of the artist.

The full size versions of the works can be found on the artist’s website (although it seems to have taken a bit hit in traffic)

http://myartda.com/

Alternatively, you can see more at 50Watts profile of the artist.

(via 50watts)

littleorphanammo:

wooliebear:

Turbine Contrails: Clouds form in the wake of the front row of wind turbines at the Horns Rev offshore wind farm near Denmark.  Aeolus

Clouds stream in the wake of wind turbines arrayed at the Horns Rev offshore wind farm in this stunning photo. But David MacKay, a physicist at the University of Cambridge in the UK, sees the image as illustrating the common problem of back-row wind turbines losing power relative to the front row.
Downstream wind turbines may lose 20 percent or even 30 percent of their power compared to their fellows in front, according to a study on wake effects at Horns Rev that MacKay highlights on his blog. The paper also emphasizes that different wind directions make it practically impossible to gauge an overall “steady state” for large wind farms, unless researchers can sample wind speeds and directions at multiple points throughout the array.
This shows that wind energy may represent a highly visible form of alternative energy, but certainly not one without its quirks and controversies. Still, better technology can squeeze more juice out of each gust, and cooperative energy-sharing efforts can help offset the fickle nature of wind power,
Readers seeking more info on the energy revolution might also look at MacKay’s book, Sustainable Energy — Without the Hot Air. The work has received rave reviews from the likes of Science magazine and The Economist, and it’s available for free digital reading here.

POPSCI

littleorphanammo:

wooliebear:

Turbine Contrails: Clouds form in the wake of the front row of wind turbines at the Horns Rev offshore wind farm near Denmark.  Aeolus

Clouds stream in the wake of wind turbines arrayed at the Horns Rev offshore wind farm in this stunning photo. But David MacKay, a physicist at the University of Cambridge in the UK, sees the image as illustrating the common problem of back-row wind turbines losing power relative to the front row.

Downstream wind turbines may lose 20 percent or even 30 percent of their power compared to their fellows in front, according to a study on wake effects at Horns Rev that MacKay highlights on his blog. The paper also emphasizes that different wind directions make it practically impossible to gauge an overall “steady state” for large wind farms, unless researchers can sample wind speeds and directions at multiple points throughout the array.

This shows that wind energy may represent a highly visible form of alternative energy, but certainly not one without its quirks and controversies. Still, better technology can squeeze more juice out of each gust, and cooperative energy-sharing efforts can help offset the fickle nature of wind power,

Readers seeking more info on the energy revolution might also look at MacKay’s book, Sustainable Energy — Without the Hot Air. The work has received rave reviews from the likes of Science magazine and The Economist, and it’s available for free digital reading here.

POPSCI

ymutate:

UWE HENNEKEN: “THE FRONTIER PEOPLE - OLIBAN,” 2008
        found at joshuaabelow.blogspot.com

ymutate:

UWE HENNEKEN: “THE FRONTIER PEOPLE - OLIBAN,” 2008

        found at joshuaabelow.blogspot.com

(via jickdacco)

la choza

la choza

sometimes you just have to pick yourself up and carry on

sometimes you just have to pick yourself up and carry on

“He had the obscure sensation of everything’s being suddenly turned the other way round, so that he had to read it all backward if he wanted to understand.”

Vladimir Nabokov, Laughter in the Dark (via knockturn)
slaughterhouse90210:

“We construct a narrative for ourselves, and that’s the thread that we follow from one day to the next. People who disintegrate as personalities are the ones who lose that thread.” ― Paul Auster 

slaughterhouse90210:

“We construct a narrative for ourselves, and that’s the thread that we follow from one day to the next. People who disintegrate as personalities are the ones who lose that thread.”
― Paul Auster 

pulmonaire:

Reading Landscape by Kyle Kirkpatrick