People

Die angesagtesten Promis bei uns. Die neuesten EXKLUSIVEN Bilder nur für registrierte User!

News

Aktuelles Tagesgeschehen rund um den Globus.

Features

Skurriles, Spassiges und Absurdes aus aller Welt.

Styling

Trends aus Fashion und Design.

Portrait

Premium Portraitfotografie.

Reportage

Stories, Facts und Hintergrund, alles im Bild.

Creative

Auf der Suche nach mehr? Prisma by Dukas.

Dukas Bildagentur
request@dukas.ch
+41 44 298 50 00

Ihre Suche nach:

71 Ergebnis(se) in 0.07 s

  • FEATURE - Sieger des Wettbewerbs "Bestes Bild unseres Planeten"
    DUK10131833_011
    FEATURE - Sieger des Wettbewerbs "Bestes Bild unseres Planeten"
    STORY COPY: What’s the best picture of Earth ever?

    That’s the question NASA’s Earth Observatory is asking in a visually arresting contest they have called Tournament Earth 2020.

    Since 1999, Earth Observatory has published over 16,000 images, so to celebrate their 20th anniversary and the 50th anniversary of Earth Day, they want the public to pick their all-time best image.

    Readers will narrow the field from 32 nominees down to one champion in a five-round knockout-style tournament. Pictures have been chosen under the categories: Past Winners, Home Planet, Land & Ice, and Sea & Sky. These will go head-to-head each week from March 23 to April 28, 2020, when a tournament winner will be announced.

    NASA Earth Observatory is an online publishing outlet for NASA which was created in 1999. It is the principal source of satellite imagery and other scientific information pertaining to the climate and the environment which are being provided by NASA for consumption by the general public.

    The “southern lights” were bright enough to illuminate the ice below.

    On July 15, 2012, the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the Suomi NPP satellite captured this nighttime view of the aurora australis, or “southern lights,” over Antarctica’s Queen Maud Land and the Princess Ragnhild Coast.

    The image was captured by the VIIRS “day-night band,” which detects light in a range of wavelengths from green to near-infrared and uses filtering techniques to observe signals such as city lights, auroras, wildfires, and reflected moonlight. In the case of the image above, the sensor detected the visible auroral light emissions as energetic particles rained down from Earth’s magnetosphere and into the gases of the upper atmosphere. The slightly jagged appearance of the auroral lines is a function of the rapid dance of the energetic particles at the same time that the satellite is moving and the VIIRS sensor is scanning.

    Where: Antarctica
    When: 15 Jul 20

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    DUKAS_43072084_REX
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    MANDATORY CREDIT: /Jesse AllenNASA/Rex Features. Only for use in story about NASA.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jesse Allen/NASA/REX (4103955c)
    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.

    The view of the Holuhraun lava field has been spectacular from the ground and from low-flying aircraft. Infrared imaging makes the view spectacular from space, too.

    On September 6, 2014, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the ongoing eruption. The false-color images combine shortwave infrared, near infrared, and green light (OLI bands 6-5-3).

    Ice and the plume of steam and sulfur dioxide appear cyan and bright blue, while liquid water is navy blue. Bare or rocky ground around the Holuhraun lava field appears in shades of green or brown in this band combination. Fresh lava is bright orange and red.
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    FUL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/peqn

    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    DUKAS_43072087_REX
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    MANDATORY CREDIT: /Jesse AllenNASA/Rex Features. Only for use in story about NASA.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jesse Allen/NASA/REX (4103955b)
    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.

    The view of the Holuhraun lava field has been spectacular from the ground and from low-flying aircraft. Infrared imaging makes the view spectacular from space, too.

    On September 6, 2014, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the ongoing eruption. The false-color images combine shortwave infrared, near infrared, and green light (OLI bands 6-5-3).

    Ice and the plume of steam and sulfur dioxide appear cyan and bright blue, while liquid water is navy blue. Bare or rocky ground around the Holuhraun lava field appears in shades of green or brown in this band combination. Fresh lava is bright orange and red.
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    FUL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/peqn

    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    DUKAS_43072088_REX
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    MANDATORY CREDIT: /Jesse AllenNASA/Rex Features. Only for use in story about NASA.
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jesse Allen/NASA/REX (4103955a)
    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.

    The view of the Holuhraun lava field has been spectacular from the ground and from low-flying aircraft. Infrared imaging makes the view spectacular from space, too.

    On September 6, 2014, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the ongoing eruption. The false-color images combine shortwave infrared, near infrared, and green light (OLI bands 6-5-3).

    Ice and the plume of steam and sulfur dioxide appear cyan and bright blue, while liquid water is navy blue. Bare or rocky ground around the Holuhraun lava field appears in shades of green or brown in this band combination. Fresh lava is bright orange and red.
    NASA: Roiling Flows on Holuhraun Lava Field, Iceland, Sep 2014
    FUL BODY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/peqn

    As an island in the moist, atmospherically turbulent North Atlantic, Iceland is often shrouded in cloud cover and hard to observe from space. And lately, the island is making some of its own cloud cover, as the Earth has split open between the Bardarbunga and Askja volcanoes and spewed lava and hot gas.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_001
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498r)
    Cherry blossom and a tourist sign in Rome
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_002
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498p)
    Peering into gardens in Rome
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_003
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498c)
    The statue of Santa Catharina Da Siena, Rome, captured with infrared lighting
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_004
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498a)
    People waiting to board a bus in Rome
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_005
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498i)
    A beautiful square in Rome, pictured with infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_006
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498j)
    A pathway leading to the Colosseum
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_007
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498b)
    Tourists take a selfie at the ruins in Rome
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_008
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498n)
    A carousel pictured with infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_009
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498o)
    Trees in Rome pictured with infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_010
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498q)
    Pillars in the Vatican
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_011
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498s)
    Rome in Infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_012
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498h)
    Leaves of a palm tree pictured with infrared photography
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_013
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498g)
    Tourists pictured at the iconic Trevi fountain
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_014
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498m)
    A blossom tree pictured with infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_015
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498l)
    Rome in Infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_016
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498f)
    Infrared photography has transformed the scene of a digger in Rome
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_017
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498e)
    A picturesque-looking petrol station in Rome, captured with infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_018
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498k)
    The statue of Alfredo Oriani in Rome
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    DUK10033508_019
    FEATURE - Infrarot: Mal eine andere Sicht auf Rom
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Milán Rácmolnár/REX Shutterstock

    Strictly editorial use only. Only for use in context of story on Milán Rácmolnár's images of Rome with an infrared twist. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission. Strictly no prints
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Milán Rácmolnár/REX/Shutterstock (5821498d)
    A metro sign in Rome, pictured with infrared
    Rome in infrared - Jul 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/smg1

    A photographer has produced a series of beautiful photos of Rome, with an infrared twist...

    Photographer Milán Rácmolnár went on a typical tourist route around the city, visiting Trastevere, the Colosseum, the Trevi fountain and Rome's Spanish steps.

    In order to produce a different take on the typical tourist route, Milan experimented using infrared photography. In the pictures, a beautiful, light-pink haze can be seen.

    Milan said: "I wanted to confront this peculiar look with a subjective tourist's view."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Korea-Konflikt: USA baut Abwehrsystem aus
    DUK10059498_019
    NEWS - Korea-Konflikt: USA baut Abwehrsystem aus
    April 24, 2017 - Uss Carl Vinson, United States of America - A U.S. Navy MH-60R Sea Hawk helicopter fires chaff flares during a training exercise near the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson as it transits the Philippine Sea April 24, 2017. The ship is heading toward South Korea as tensions continue to rise between the U.S. and North Korea (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Korea-Konflikt: USA baut Abwehrsystem aus
    DUK10059498_018
    NEWS - Korea-Konflikt: USA baut Abwehrsystem aus
    April 24, 2017 - Uss Carl Vinson, United States of America - A U.S. Navy MH-60R Sea Hawk helicopter fires chaff flares during a training exercise near the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson as it transits the Philippine Sea April 24, 2017. The ship is heading toward South Korea as tensions continue to rise between the U.S. and North Korea (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    DUK10147179_001
    NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bill Ingalls/UPI/Shutterstock (12659501a)
    Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket launches with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope onboard, on Saturday, December 25, 2021, from the ELA-3 Launch Zone of Europe's Spaceport at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana. The James Webb Space Telescope (sometimes called JWST or Webb) is a large infrared telescope with a 21.3 foot (6.5 meters) primary mirror. The observatory will study every phase of cosmic history-from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe. NASA
    Launch of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope from French Guiana, Kourou - 26 Dec 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    DUK10147179_002
    NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bill Ingalls/UPI/Shutterstock (12659501d)
    Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket launches with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope onboard, on Saturday, December 25, 2021, from the ELA-3 Launch Zone of Europe's Spaceport at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana. The James Webb Space Telescope (sometimes called JWST or Webb) is a large infrared telescope with a 21.3 foot (6.5 meters) primary mirror. The observatory will study every phase of cosmic history-from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe. NASA
    Launch of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope from French Guiana, Kourou - 26 Dec 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    DUK10147179_003
    NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bill Ingalls/UPI/Shutterstock (12659501c)
    Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket launches with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope onboard, on Saturday, December 25, 2021, from the ELA-3 Launch Zone of Europe's Spaceport at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana. The James Webb Space Telescope (sometimes called JWST or Webb) is a large infrared telescope with a 21.3 foot (6.5 meters) primary mirror. The observatory will study every phase of cosmic history-from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe. NASA
    Launch of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope from French Guiana, Kourou - 26 Dec 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    DUK10147179_004
    NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bill Ingalls/UPI/Shutterstock (12659501b)
    Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket launches with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope onboard, on Saturday, December 25, 2021, from the ELA-3 Launch Zone of Europe's Spaceport at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana. The James Webb Space Telescope (sometimes called JWST or Webb) is a large infrared telescope with a 21.3 foot (6.5 meters) primary mirror. The observatory will study every phase of cosmic history-from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe. NASA
    Launch of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope from French Guiana, Kourou - 26 Dec 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    DUK10147179_005
    NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bill Ingalls/UPI/Shutterstock (12659501f)
    Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket launches with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope onboard, on Saturday, December 25, 2021, from the ELA-3 Launch Zone of Europe's Spaceport at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana. The James Webb Space Telescope (sometimes called JWST or Webb) is a large infrared telescope with a 21.3 foot (6.5 meters) primary mirror. The observatory will study every phase of cosmic history-from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe. NASA
    Launch of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope from French Guiana, Kourou - 26 Dec 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    DUK10147179_006
    NEWS - Start des James-Webb-Weltraumteleskops der NASA
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Bill Ingalls/UPI/Shutterstock (12659501e)
    Arianespace's Ariane 5 rocket launches with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope onboard, on Saturday, December 25, 2021, from the ELA-3 Launch Zone of Europe's Spaceport at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana. The James Webb Space Telescope (sometimes called JWST or Webb) is a large infrared telescope with a 21.3 foot (6.5 meters) primary mirror. The observatory will study every phase of cosmic history-from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe. NASA
    Launch of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope from French Guiana, Kourou - 26 Dec 2021

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Das James-Webb-Weltraumteleskop der NASA liefert das bisher umfassendste Infrarotbild des Universums
    DUK10150693_001
    NEWS - Das James-Webb-Weltraumteleskop der NASA liefert das bisher umfassendste Infrarotbild des Universums
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nasa/UPI/Shutterstock (13027006a)
    NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has produced the deepest and sharpest infrared image of the distant universe to date. Known as Webb's First Deep Field, this image of galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 was taken by Webb's Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam), and is a composite made from images at different wavelengths, totaling 12.5 hours - achieving depths at infrared wavelengths beyond the Hubble Space Telescope's deepest fields, which took weeks. The image shows the galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 as it appeared 4.6 billion years ago. NASA/UPI
    NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Delivers Deepest Infrared Image of Universe Yet, Washington, District of Columbia, United States - 11 Jul 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215311_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215314_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215317_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215318_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215320_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215322_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215332_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215336_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215339_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215340_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215343_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215345_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    DUKAS_180215347_BES
    La tenue de la marque de mode britannique Vollebak bloque le piratage et le suivi du téléphone
    Pictures must credit: Vollebak A new high tech outfit is set to keep things private for the wearers by blocking phone hacking and tracking. Using technology developed for US space agency NASA, the Shielding Suit also stops infrared cameras and is said to kill bacteria. The jacket and pants, sold separately, have been created by UK fashion label Vollebak. The outer shell is embedded with pure silver that blocks radio waves and microwaves in the frequency range 0.2GHz to 10GHz – which includes WiFi, Bluetooth, Ku-band satellites and radar systems. It also deflects mid and long wave infrared radiation so it can’t be seen on infrared cameras. Jacket and pants have a phone shielding pocket that works like a Faraday cage – blocking access to any devices, regardless of whether they’re switched on or off. A spokesperson explained: “Long before the Curiosity Rover was sent to Mars to search for signs of life, it had to be tested here on Earth. “So NASA created an electromagnetic shielding tent that was designed to completely block out external electromagnetic radiation during testing… like someone sending a text, turning the microwave on, or chatting with the James Webb telescope.  ? ?“We’ve now taken that technology and converted it into our first Shielding Suit.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    DUKAS_187525766_NUR
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge provides a range of habitats, from saltwater estuaries and freshwater impoundments and marshes to dunes, hardwood hammocks, and scrub. NASA acquires the land in the early 1960s for the development of the Space Center and its non-operational purposes. Until then, and still today, there is little development in the area. (Photo by George Wilson/NurPhoto)

     

  • Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    DUKAS_187525767_NUR
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge provides a range of habitats, from saltwater estuaries and freshwater impoundments and marshes to dunes, hardwood hammocks, and scrub. NASA acquires the land in the early 1960s for the development of the Space Center and its non-operational purposes. Until then, and still today, there is little development in the area. (Photo by George Wilson/NurPhoto)

     

  • Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    DUKAS_187525769_NUR
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge provides a range of habitats, from saltwater estuaries and freshwater impoundments and marshes to dunes, hardwood hammocks, and scrub. NASA acquires the land in the early 1960s for the development of the Space Center and its non-operational purposes. Until then, and still today, there is little development in the area. (Photo by George Wilson/NurPhoto)

     

  • Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    DUKAS_187525878_NUR
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge provides a range of habitats, from saltwater estuaries and freshwater impoundments and marshes to dunes, hardwood hammocks, and scrub. NASA acquires the land in the early 1960s for the development of the Space Center and its non-operational purposes. Until then, and still today, there is little development in the area. (Photo by George Wilson/NurPhoto)

     

  • Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    DUKAS_187525882_NUR
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge
    Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge provides a range of habitats, from saltwater estuaries and freshwater impoundments and marshes to dunes, hardwood hammocks, and scrub. NASA acquires the land in the early 1960s for the development of the Space Center and its non-operational purposes. Until then, and still today, there is little development in the area. (Photo by George Wilson/NurPhoto)

     

  • Nächste Seite