DMC-FX7
ƒ/2.8
5.8 mm
1/8
200

Puzzle Series: What is this, or what do you want it to be?

Valentine’s Day gift? Alien head? I think this one should go quickly….

Update: Answer: This is a picture of two frolicking comb jellies at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
The rainbows ripple down eight ridges, each of which is a comb of tiny hairs used for propulsion through the water. The intense colors are caused by diffraction since the structures repeat with a period precisely related to the wavelength of light (just like in a diffraction grating… which also makes the rainbow of colors appear on a music CD).

24 responses to “What’s That? (62)”

  1. an animal that didn’t wait for us to invent the light !

  2. Oooh ooh, a Steve puzzle. Cool, I’m first! (Not first, after all, quick guy!)

    I want it to be a visualization of stresses on a seagull or other bird in flight.

  3. Purple Heart. Or A Bicycle Saddle That the Gel Has Burst 😉 Looks like it’s from the Sea.

  4. i love ’em – thanks to David Attenborough and the BBC for their wonderful "Blue Planet" series… these pulsating spectral light displays are incredible 🙂

  5. i’ve just noticed, it’s two mating!

  6. "I think this one should go quickly…."

    that sounded sooo a clue…

    A happy bday party hat (like mine?)

    <|-)

  7. HA! I haven´t seen biotron´s post. =D

    All in all, it was about happy parties…

    !

  8. Bingo Biotron!…. a new winner I believe. It was inevitable that he would get it; his icon shows him to be closely realted species…

    This is a picture of two frolicking comb jellies at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.

    The rainbows ripple down eight ridges, each of which is a comb of tiny hairs used for propulsion through the water. The intense colors are caused by diffraction since the structures repeat with a period precisely related to the wavelength of light (just like in a diffraction grating… which also makes the rainbow of colors appear on a music CD).

  9. Ok, so my not just smoking things answer… Um um, maybe a fusion gidget/flashbulb?

    (Edit, ok, so maybe not, congrats biotron!)

  10. …you mean you weren’t deep sea diving with your amazing underwater camera? pffft! aquarium schmaquarium! 😉

    *note to self: take up Tony Buzan memory techniques to recall precise scientific explanation for phenomena for future puzzles*

  11. Could I have been further from the truth? 🙁

  12. well, it does smack slightly of the ceremonial saddle in Matthew Barney’s "Cremaster 2"… 🙂

  13. LOL atanas. Well, just shows how good at symmetry nature is! *grin*

  14. Thank you, guys, for the merciful consolation… 🙂

  15. your soul?!

    wow, mimosa, I´d never have imagine… COOL!

    =D

  16. Looks like a pair of Mnemiopsis leidyi they also have a wonderful bioluminescence when disturbed.

    Frolicking perhaps, but not mating. All ctenophores (comb jellies) are hermaphroditic, and they are broadcast fertilizers. One adult can spawn both eggs and sperm into the water in the same night and fertilize it’s own eggs.

  17. Miss Argentina:
    That is what I see….!

  18. like watching underwater ballet, only better, more graceful…beautiful capture

  19. Oh, dang… I missed another famous Jurvetson puzzle…

  20. i really need to get my own jellyfish. although maybe i should get out of the bad habit of wanting to own creatures that i haven’t the faintest idea how to care for.

  21. Beautiful shot .. complimenti👍

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