Posted 29 July 2010 - 04:02 PM
When I was a machine-tender on a new high-speed paper machine, we had some very intense strobes combined with high-speed video equipment to diagnose sheet-breaks. This was almost 30 years ago, and the system was named Instar. The recording system was in a gasketed white fiberglass enclosure mounted on a 2-wheeled dolly. It was the most ungainly outfit, but it helped us solve mysterious sheet-breaks. IIR, a second of live capture could take several minutes to play back.
One really nasty "mystery" was breaks at the size press (a two-roll press where starch was applied to the paper to help stabilize the paper dimensionally in changing moisture situations). It seems that we had condensation forming on the false ceiling 'way overhead, and the camera system caught a drop of water falling onto the sheet just before it hit the press. Instant sheet-break! Have a sheet break on a high-speed paper machine and you can start counting off your losses in tens of thousands until you clean everything up and resume production.
The ether of general relativity therefore differs from that of classical mechanics or the special theory of relativity respectively, in so far as it is not 'absolute', but is determined in its locally variable properties by ponderable matter.
Albert Einstein, "On the Ether", 1924
Gear:
6" f:8 Astro-Physics APO on AP 706 mount
80mm f:5.6 Vernonscope APO used as finder/guider/stand-alone
Celestron Comet Catcher
Orion 8x30 monocular
Nikon 7x50 binoculars
Canon 30D w/ kit lens and 100-400 mm L
2nd Canon 30D with 28-135 mm