Since it's #nationalbirdday I'd like to highlight the Andean Condor (Vultur gryphus). With a wingspan of up to ten feet and excellent vision, one of the places it can be found is Cerro Pachón, Chile - home to other large things with excellent vision.
(Andean Condor photo by The Rainforest Alliance)
(Cerro Pachón photo by International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/R. Rutten)
Small but important: The Daniel K. Inoyue Solar Telescope's heat-stop. The heat-stop is a liquid-cooled aperture which reduces the light from the 4m primary mirror to a very narrow beam to protect the secondary mirror and instruments from excessive heat. Failure of the cooling system automatically shuts down the telescope by deploying covers over the primary and secondary mirrors, and closing the dome.
(photo by NSO/NSF/AURA)
Reading about Oceanix, a prototype floating community that's planned for Busan. One of the more frustrating things about ideas like this is that it sells the notion as long as you throw enough clean technology at the problem, there doesn't have be any decrease in the standard of living. On our current chaotic climate course, where resources are dwindling and life support systems failing, it doesn't work like that.
(image by Oceanix)
Fun fact: Homes that were in the way of the planned telescopes and buildings were moved to other locations and got new owners, instead of being demolished.
(photo by NRAO/AUI/NSF)
Things that stick with you for some reason: In the 90s there was an ad for Waste Management that featured one of its trucks driving past an ornate iron and glass canopy at night, and as a kid I wondered where that was because of how picturesque it looked. Fast forward to today and the same structure appeared in an article about Seattle. A little digging and I learned that it's the Pioneer Square Pergola. So mystery finally solved.
(photo from pioneersquare.org)
A safety engineer doing his part to make the world a slightly better place. Bigfoot, multiverse, space plane, and telescope enthusiast. Adrift.