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it should stand out from among other pictures... it should also be a recent one... it's for my project... thanks...

2007-01-10 23:39:50 · 11 answers · asked by switchick4u 1 in Science & Mathematics Physics

um.. i kind of ave to take the picture myself... and it's due next tuesday... so it has to be easy but it also has to stand out at the same time... help!!! thanks...

2007-01-11 00:53:45 · update #1

11 answers

Take a picture of a group of break dancers busy in a complex performance. If you can edit it an add the effects of movement and clearup their smiling faces, that would be a good example of use of complex physics without even knowing it and how this lack of knowledge still makes us happy.

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Just added:

Take a picture of a toddler who is learning to stand up and walk.

and take this picture from floor level so that the camera is looking upward towards the todler. This way the baby will look like a huge achievement that he/she has done.

2007-01-11 00:06:24 · answer #1 · answered by AnSID 3 · 0 1

In New York, it is apparent that the buildings and the bridges in and around the city are engineering marvels. The Brooklyn Bridge is a marvel of the suspension-type bridge, and has stood for about 150 yrs, past the horse-and-wagon age and into the truck and auto age. All these constructions, which exemplify the
type of civilization we are so proud of, show physics principles of
gravity and gravity nullifying and gravity-basing. The succession
of "skyscrapers," starting with Flatiron bldg (23rd st.) and Empire state, and eventuating in World Trade Ctr (retrospect), all show
physics principles that are recognized by science.

2007-01-16 15:25:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Poin t your camera completely at random. Press the shutter. No matter what you take a picture of, even total blackness, you will have taken a photo thaqt has everything to do with physics. Physics is all-encompassing and totally unavoidable. That's a REALLY easy assignment.

2007-01-10 23:53:23 · answer #3 · answered by poorcocoboiboi 6 · 0 1

Do you have to take the picture yourself?

If not, you may want to consider the picture of a synchrotron, which is a particle accelerator used in research. It looks pretty cool, and is very much related to a lot of physics/chem/pharmaceutical/medical research in quantum, x ray and molecular analysis areas.

Check out the link below, or type in Australian synchrotron in google images.

2007-01-10 23:53:49 · answer #4 · answered by koala_paradise 3 · 0 1

a phase change
fill half a cup with a colored water solution (e. g. cherry juice, or Kool Aid), and pour sunflower oil on it. Let it rest for some hours on a suitably colored background, and when oil and juice have separated, take your picture. It will stand out because it's colorful, and it demonstrates some basic physical properties of both liquids (oil floats on water because it has a lower density, and oil is not soluble in water because it has non-polar molecukes and water has polar molecules).

2007-01-10 23:55:25 · answer #5 · answered by Rumtscho 3 · 0 1

A simple pendulum swinging is a great symbol of physics, after all Newton and Galileo both used it to get ideas for their laws of inertia and motion with most of mechanical physics is still based on today.

2007-01-17 08:04:00 · answer #6 · answered by phyteacher 2 · 0 1

You can take the picture of a land from which heat is coming out showing land breeze,etc.

2007-01-10 23:50:13 · answer #7 · answered by Justfochange.cent 3 · 0 1

Aeronautics......picture of a jet going straight up, or space shuttle going up, bi-plane doing a loop....anything with a g-factor!

2007-01-10 23:55:47 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Take a picture of anything ,from salt shakers to a couch

2007-01-10 23:51:51 · answer #9 · answered by All Peaches an cream 2 · 0 1

take the pict. of a mercury barometer

2007-01-10 23:48:57 · answer #10 · answered by aryan will rock you 1 · 0 1

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