Canon PowerShot SD700 IS
ƒ/2.8
5.8 mm
1/50

Before stars, the universe had only the three lightest elements: hydrogen, inert helium, and a bit of lithium. With just these building blocks, the complex molecules needed for life would not be possible (blog: Ode to Carbon).

Carbon, oxygen and the rest of the heavier elements came from the crucible of stars that died billions of years ago.

Here you see a light blue pellet of “dry ice” floating on a shallow bed of dark blue water and shooting off geysers of carbon dioxide as it warms up. The dry ice is solid CO2 which sublimates directly to gas as it warms up (skipping the liquid phase altogether).

Particles glide along the surface, spin, and merge when they touch. Here is a very cool video of the icy bodies spinning and shooting around.

23 responses to “☆”

  1. This is incredibly fascinating…..the most unusual photo I have viewed in a long time….fabulous macro..wow.

  2. Oh, I bet you say that to all the girls…LOL Cool Video! 😉 great shot!

  3. joy of joys, what a great video!

    note of caution to others, like me, on the verge of retiring to bed:
    don’t click the "Ode to Carbon" blogpost link second, whatever you do – i did, and now i’ve forgotten who i am, when i last drank coffee, where i put my pet prions and why i logged into Flickr one last time today.

    however, i might add that what i do understand of the discussion is so ganster yo, so freakin cool dog…

  4. ps – the photo’s title appears to be a blatant attempt at fave-inducing-by-proximal-association… a lovely pic, but no such computational bond between my finger and that lower star symbol just yet… 😉

  5. interesting photo….on a different scale, this image could easily pass for false color or mid-IR satellite imagery of clouds swirling atop a mountain viewed through band combinations that allow moisture features to be easily extracted. complete with the fractal pattern of river networks in the continuous search for lower ground.

  6. There’s another cool angle to the star analogy. When a star like the Sun forms, the precursor protostellar disk has to shed a tremendous amount of angular momentum (otherwise, at the end of the day, the star would be spinning much faster than breakup velocity). The protostar does this by driving spiral waves through the surrounding disk, which transport angular momentum outward.

    The spinning chunks of dry ice are doing much the same thing.

  7. Amazing photo! Thanks for the description and the link to the video


    Seen in Scientist Photographers (?)

  8. thanks y’all. Great visual associations there…

    biotron: you crack me up. =)

  9. Incredible photo. A++ originality. This is definitely eye candy!

  10. Love playing with dry ice and you captured the excitement … awesome!

  11. oh my gosh! what an incredible, amazing, crazycool capture!!!!!!!

  12. Spectacular and very beautiful.

  13. I think its so funny the way people THINK they know what happened billions of years ago.

  14. quite right LGW – i can’t even say with clarity what happened yesterday, although i was at a party with Amy Winehouse, which may explain why!

    it’s so funny the way people THINK they know that time actually exists too – rather than being prepared to consider it as a local illusion, thanks to fundamental asymmetries "in the space of all possible structures of the universe". (Barbour)

    do we have any better estimates as to what – other than stars – created carbon, oxygen and the other heavy elements?

    er…

  15. Wow, this is incredibly beautiful!

  16. Absolutely amazing! Bad, that video is in quciktime format, i donť have this crap installed :(.

  17. Hi, I’m an admin for a group called True Magic, and we’d love to have this added to the group!

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