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Super Slow Motion

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  • Super Slow Motion

    I was sent a link to this 60 second footage of an African Eagle Owl filmed at 1000 frames per second.

    Amazing nature - The Eagle Owl
    Tags: None

  • #2
    Re: Super Slow Motion

    Magic, am so pleased I didn't have to watch it snatch it's prey to enjoy the clip.

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    • #3
      Re: Super Slow Motion

      Here's one I made earlier - a robin, shot at a mere 210 frames per second.

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      • #4
        Re: Super Slow Motion

        Did you shoot that yourself?

        I got my bro one of these Bushnell - Trophy Cam for his place in South Africa. I mounted it under the decking of his house and so far it's picked up footage of about 30 different species including baboons, mongooses, honey badgers and a black mamba.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Super Slow Motion

          Originally posted by EXC View Post
          Did you shoot that yourself?
          Yes, I shot the robin video myself, on a Casio Exilim EX-FH20. It was just taken quickly one morning last year, after I had returned from the podiatry clinic. That's why the video was hand-held and why it's so shaky - had it been planned, I'd have used a tripod.

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          • #6
            Re: Super Slow Motion

            If a video camera picked up images of a black mamba in my garden....I'd move!!

            Nice video CC
            "Although scalar fields are Lorentz scalars, they may transform nontrivially under other symmetries, such as flavour or isospin. For example, the pion is invariant under the restricted Lorentz group, but is an isospin triplet (meaning it transforms like a three component vector under the SU(2) isospin symmetry). Furthermore, it picks up a negative phase under parity inversion, so it transforms nontrivially under the full Lorentz group; such particles are called pseudoscalar rather than scalar. Most mesons are pseudoscalar particles." (finally explained to a captivated Celestine by Professor Brian Cox on Wednesday 27th June 2012 )

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