Nagakin Capsule Tower construction

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from OTAKU GANGSTA http://bit.ly/OLhsEb

Super Kamiokande Neutrino detector


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fou-a-lier:

The Super Kamiokande (Kamioka Neutrino Detection Experiment) is a neutrino observatory located under Mount Kamioka in Japan. It is designed to observe solar and atmospheric neutrinos, neutrinos from supernovae, and aims to search for proton decay. It is a cylindrical structure measuring about 40 m tall and 40 m across, is covered in over 11,000 photomultiplier tubes (PMTs), and filled with 50,000 tons of pure water.

Neutrinos weakly interact with other particles, making it extremely difficult to detect them and observe their properties; in fact, they cannot be directed detected at all. Detectors are built underground to isolate it from other radiation. When a neutrino passes through the Super-K’s water tank, it will sometimes (hopefully) collide with a quark, causing it to change into a charged lepton (electron, muon, or tau). The very short version of what happens next is that the lepton will travel faster than the speed of light in water (not in vacuum), polarizing the water molecules; when they return to their ground state, Cherenkov radiation is emitted in a flash of light, which the PMTs detect. The last image is of a Cherenkov ring by an electron created from a neutrino collision in the Super-K, in perspective view.

Oooooh this reminds me of House of Leaves!

(vía proofmathisbeautiful)

(Fuente: firsttimeuser, vía otakugangsta)

(via Behind the scenes of Godzilla movies, 1954-1965 | Retronaut)

Photo

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from OTAKU GANGSTA http://bit.ly/MSDGih

(via Past Forward - Architecture - Domus)

Opening Expo Osaka 1970 

1970 日通記録映画 「花ひらく日本万国博」 (by tyokutoku)

(via Exposition - “Diagramme(s)” - Ecole Spéciale d’Architecture)

The end of the world will be broadcasted on TV! 津波日本

(Fuente: youtube.com)

elcontexto:

Metabolismo en Japón

elcontexto:

Metabolismo en Japón

(Fuente: drosophila, vía par3)

Giant Globe OLED Display Geo-Cosmos (by tokyotek)

Estructuras de cuerdas y cañas de bambú llamados Yukitsuri (雪つり) que ayudan a las ramas de los árboles a no sufrir y mantener la misma silueta cuando nieva.
(via Jardines Kenrokuen 兼六園 - Kirai – Un geek en Japón by Héctor García)

Estructuras de cuerdas y cañas de bambú llamados Yukitsuri (雪つり) que ayudan a las ramas de los árboles a no sufrir y mantener la misma silueta cuando nieva.

(via Jardines Kenrokuen 兼六園 - Kirai – Un geek en Japón by Héctor García)

(via Izu Islands / Sublime Things, encyclopædia of)