Water is a polar molecule because it has a slightly negative oxygen end and a slightly positive hydrogen end due to differences in electronegativity. This polarity allows water molecules to form hydrogen bonds with each other, giving water its unique properties such as cohesion, adhesion, and high surface tension.
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Why was it important for art to be painted realistically before photography was invented?
Painting's needed to serve as useful and accurate historical documents, therefore has to appear realistic.
What is the song at the end of American pie 1 when Jason biggs his dancing in front of the camera?
Its Bare Naked Ladies-One Week then Summertime by Bachelor Number One for the credits
What is the themes statement of This is a Photograph of you?
The theme of "This is a Photograph of You" by Margaret Atwood explores memory, identity, and the passage of time. The poem reflects on how photographs capture moments in time and serve as a reminder of our past selves. It also delves into the idea of how our perception of ourselves changes as we grow and evolve.
Most cameras will connect as a remote disk. at that point just use the file explorer to see what you have and to transfer the files.
Alternatively, you can purchase a reader that connects to the USB port and allows you to read the camera memory card directly.
But then, why not just visit the web site of the camera manufacturer and download the software?
What opens and allows light to hit film?
The device is called a "shutter." Shutters take many forms, but consist generally of some mechanism for opening and closing a light pathway over a specific interval. In the earliest cameras, it consisted of nothing more than a lens cap, removed and replaced manually. As photographic media became more sensitive and required shorter exposure times, this method proved too cumbersome, and a variety of mechanical devices were invented to control the duration of exposure, in some cases down to thousandths of a second.
Why did joesph niepce invent photography?
He couldn't draw. Seriously. When Niepce was alive, a popular artist's tool was the "camera obscura." If you know what a pinhole camera is, you're one step ahead of the game here. Instead of using film, the camera obscura had a sheet of really thin paper in it. An image appeared on the paper; to make it permanent you traced it with a pencil. Niepce didn't have a steady-enough hand to make good tracings, so he invented a way to make the camera do the work for him.
What is the best way to get into the photography business and do you need a college degree?
no formal education is required to be a photographer, just talent. Take lots of pictures, in all kinds of settings, lighting, weather, etcetera, so that you become confident in your ability to take good pictures. Learn how to do developing, printing, enlarging, mounting, framing, and how to use different types of film. Experiment with camera angles, backlighting, perspective, depth of field. Get to know the science of photography, not just the art. Submit photos to newspapers, magazines, local orginzations, give them to your friends, and take your camera with you everywhere.
AnswerI agree with the above answer, however, there really isn't any need to learn about film and processing or the darkroom. Photography is very quickly becoming entirely digital. Learn Photoshop.Also, to get into the business, get a job as a photographer's assistant. You will learn far more than you would in school. Do you want to shoot portraits and weddings? You can do that in any city in the country. Do you want to shoot commercial advertising work? You will need to be in a major city.
ANSWER
Honestly, the best way to learn is by doing. Classes and apprenticeship are by far the best ways. Short of that I have listed some of the best videos and books that I have learned from on vigorotaku.blogspot.com There is a lot out there and these are some of the best!
http://vigorotaku.blogspot.com/2010/11/best-way-to-learn-photography.html
I will post more from time to time, but with so much out there it is hard to weed through it all.
If it uses an SD card, make sure that the write-protect slider is in the unlocked position.
In a mechanical shutter it is the time that it takes for the mechanical components to mesh and begin the movement of the shutter blades. These components must also build up the forces necessary to move against the springs that hold the blades in the closed position. This build up of forces takes some finite amount of time to overcome, hence a lag time. Then, depending on mass of the shutter blades there is a finite time it takes for the blades to move to the open position. This is due to inertia. (Inertia is the property of matter by which it retains its state of rest or its velocity along a straight line so long as it is not acted upon by an external force.) In an electro-mechanical shutter additional lag times are provided by the inductance of the actuating mechanisms, (usually some electro-magnetic actuator). In these cases the time it takes for the actuator to build up the energy necessary to be able to overcome the "at rest" forces causes additional lag. Shutter lag is a property that shutter manufacturers work very hard to reduce to a minimum required duration.
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While technically correct, shutter lag in a modern non-digital SLR is virtually undetectable. The questioner was probably referring to the lag time of a non-SLR digital camera, which as most people have observed, can be a pain in the butt. The answer in that respect is that the lag is due to the time it takes the image to be converted to digital information. High priced digital SLRs have much less lag as their processing time is much shorter. The trade-off is the dent it puts in your wallet.
Micron.
Why do computer monitors roll when on camera?
It is not so much rolling as it is that the video is catching the periodic screen refresh on the computer monitor.
This dream seems to be about hope and loss. If you have been whale watching in real life, you know how one hopes to catch a glimpse of flukes or a full breach. It can come close to a spiritual experience.
But in your dream you only catch glimpses, which feels deeply disappointing. Then the loss of the camera is not only disappointing but feels like a loss of power. Not only have you not seen the whales but you have lost the ability to record the experience. In the dream you literally "can't hold onto it."
So the interpretation of your dream has to do with a significant disappointment and your inability to hold onto your connection or memory with the source of the disappointment. An all too frequent example might be learning that a dear friend has Alzheimer's and cannot remember you any more.
Yet something about this dream seems to have spiritual overtones. The disappointment in seeing the whale could represent disappointment in prayer or disillusionment. Then the lost camera could be a symbol of inability to hold onto faith.
Is exposure composed of shutter speed and aperture in various combinations?
Yes. Sensitivity of the film is also a factor in correct exposure, as are the processing conditions, though the latter are less significant as a variable in a very tightly controlled repeatable process (as in machine processing of color films under tight certification controls). A "correct" exposure can be any equivalent combination of shutter speed and aperture settings; for example, an exposure of f/8 at 1/125 second is equivalent to f/16 at 1/60 second or f/22 at 1/30 second.
Please read the manual or borrow a library book. Your question is not too general due to the number of camera types and manufacturers involved, and would be a very lengthy topic even if specific.
Who bought First still camera in India?
Homai Vyarawala was the first photo-journalist who bought the first still camera in India.
What is a professional name for an aerial photography business?
The professional name for an aerial photography is aerial photographer. Either (your name) Aerial Photography Service or (your town) Aerial Photography Service. The business people and government agencies who hire aerial photographers want to see that kind of name for two reasons. It gives off an aura of sober professionalism. And when your company's name shows up on the list of payables for the period, no questions like "what did we buy from these guys?"
I'll give an example. Next spring I will buy a drum scanner and a rotary film processor and start a business preparing huge images for things like billboards and bus wraps. I could name the company something like "Bas Relief" (BAS would mean big-a scans) or Whirling Art (because the drum spins in the scanner) but no, it I'll be Pacific Northwest Drum Scanner Service. I am working at Singaporeaerialphotography.com as an aerial photographer.
Do all cameras take batteries?
No, but most do today. For one thing or another. Even the least expensive disposable film camera will have a small battery for the built-in flash if it has one. Any cameras with electronics will need some kind of battery. But some cameras, even incredibly good ones, don't need any. They are considered "mechanical" only.
How many trail cameras for hunting are sold annually?
haw many trail cameras have been sold scince1884-2012
Where can I find a video of the Haiti earthquake caught on security camera?
There are many videos on YouTube with footage of the Haitian earthquake captured by security cameras in Port-au-prince.
See related links for one example.
What is the value of a photograph?
What someone might PAY for a particular photograph varies so widely that the question cannot be answered in that context. Philosophically, however, all photographs have intrinsic historical value inasmuch as all photographs may be perceived as moments frozen in time. The more time passes, the greater the value of even the most insignificant snapshot. People change and pass on, streets are rerouted, buildings torn down and rebuilt … Ansel Adams, the acknowledged dean of American landscape photographers, said, "Not everybody trusts paintings but people believe photographs." Adams also said, "These people live again in print as intensely as when their images were captured on old dry plates of sixty years ago ... I am walking in their alleys, standing in their rooms and sheds and workshops, looking in and out of their windows. And they in turn seem to be aware of me."
We all make dreadfully exposed, unfocused little horrors of snapshots, disasters from an artistic and technical standpoint, but still they capture that unique instant in time that is gone in that instant and will never come again. Most of us discard such dreck, yet perhaps we ought not; it may not be art, but it is history. What monetary value can be placed on that in, say, a hundred years?