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Search Result for: capture Cool
These guys managed to capture a 2.2 million volt lightning strike using just a thick piece of Plexiglass. As the lightning strike travels through it, it melts the plastic, leaving an imprint of the strike, called a Lichtenberg figure. Pretty cool, isn't it?
Funny
A funny spoof done by Mad TV. I followed the action of the show on HBO (for a season or so) and I must say, that they captured the essence of it perfectly. For those who didn't get to see it..this video is all you need. Really!
A really funny reality video from a baseball game between Red Sox and Angels at Fenway Park. One of the camera watching the ball captures a really funny event: One fan throws a pizza at another fan. I don't know why, but he must've figured that a pizza slice would've gone great with the beer spilled on his shirt. Hilarious! Enjoy!
An OH-58D Kiowa helicopter (just like the one in the image) was on a training mission at night doing some surveillance, when they captured this cool footage
Amazing
One of the biggest crocodiles to have ever been captured (if not the biggest) has been filmed here on camera. It is huge, but still is a dwarf compared to one of its ancestors: Sarcosuchus, which could reach 12m and weigh as much as 10 tons! Enjoy!
A truly spectacular moment captured at the Yi Peng Lantern Festival in Thailand! Enjoy!
This video was captured by a nature research vessel south-west of the Japanese coast. The fish flew for 45 seconds, before going back in the water, surpassing the 42 seconds that was registered in the '20s by an American researcher.
It's amazing to see evolution in action! Let's drink a beer for Darwin, because he deserves it!
![]() The glacier in question is the Perito Moreno, from Patagonia, Argentina.The event captured in this video, is actually a result of a natural cycle that has been recorded for more than 100 years. The bridge you see falling usually regenerates after a few years, and then falls again. This event is not related to the greenhouse effect, since it's a unique natural spectacle of extreme beauty!
Here's an amazingly close lighting strike, filmed in Oklahoma City on 23rd march 2007. It's pretty scary to see it so close, and to realize the aftermath of the lighting on that poor tree. Take look. Spectacular!
Wow. That guy is phenomenal. It must've taken him ages to find this trick. Anyway, it's lightning fast, so don't blink because you'll miss it!
This is the first time that a giant squid video footage features such a sea creature alive. Although it died soon after capture, at 3.5 meters long, this giant squid from Japan is young and small compared to some 20 meters giant squids that washed up a few years back. Anyway, enjoy this giant squid video footage from Japan
Technology and Health News
A highly resistant and self lubricating material has been discovered, thanks to the formation of an oxide surface that captures the water vapor
Hard as diamond and slippery as a sheet of ice. The secret of the extraordinary characteristics of Bam, a special alloy-ceramics produced by blending a mix of boron, aluminum and magnesium (AlMgB14) with titanium boride (TiB2), was unveiled by researchers of Ames Laboratory, in Iowa (Usa ), who had accidentally discovered it a decade ago.
In 1999, researchers tried to obtain a substance capable of generating electricity if overheated, when, unexpectedly, found in the hands a league owned by the exceptional and seemingly inexplicable. The Bam is tough, despite possessing a complex structure, asymmetrical and not compact. Moreover, says Alan Russel of Iowa University, it is inherently slippery. One characteristic that, according to researchers, could be due to the formation on the surface of boron oxide, which can attract water molecules present in the air.
Filming particles is now possible. It was done for the first time by a group of Swedish researchers using extremely short pulses of light
Getting images of electrons that do not appear to "move" has been impossible because of the speed of these microscopic particles. But a group of researchers in the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Lund (Sweden) now has found a way to shoot the movement of an electron using an innovative technique that provides for the use of flash light of extremely short duration.
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