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2 yr. ago

  • No. The thing below the p in "Spez".

  • On a side note, I'm pleased to see that the void demon is looking beautiful as ever. Easily the best actually original idea/artwork to have come out of there.

  • I was thinking about HDR photography where you take multiple pictures of the same scene with different expoures and combine the best parts of each for a picture with a high dynamic range. This evidently wasn't the case here.

  • I see. Thanks for the explanation.

  • When shooting double exposure, one isn't supposed to move the camera. The church tower should appear darker than the other buildings and definitely not translucent. My guess would be that this picture was taken through a window with the bright sunset behind the camera and reflected on the glass. Or then it really is just two completely different pictures stitched together. Wouldn't call that a double exposure though...

  • I'd wager that yes. The problem is that natural UV light is available only during daytime when visible light outshines its effects.

  • I used my Sony RX10. These guys came surprisingly close, but still nowhere close enough to take such pictures on a phone. And thanks!

  • Correct for the most part. You can still have very high relative humidity with a low WBT if the dry-bulb temperature is equally low.

    When the WBT gets above 35°C, it's not only dangerous, but positively lethal when sustained for even the healthiest person as sweating (or any other form of evaporative cooling for that matter) can no longer keep the body at a suitable temperature.

    WBT is also not to be confused with wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT), which is an index for heat stress that also takes into account the effect of sunshine among other things. It's much more situational and best suited to judge the heat stress of athletic outdoor activity in sunshine.

  • I've seen the term misused a lot recently, so I'll state that a wet-bulb is a part of a measurement instrument. Wet-bulb temperature is a measured quantity (along with dry-bulb temperature, pressure etc.) and an Extreme wet-bulb temperature event is what actually kills people.