A college student (meteorology major) engages a future scientist in a weather experiment at an Annual American Meteorological Society WeatherFest. Credit: H. MIchael Mogil
- A college student (meteorology major) engages a future scientist in a weather experiment at an Annual American Meteorological Society WeatherFest.
- This building in downtown Baltimore showcases an incredible array of geometric shapes. In my humble opinion, this is what makes the building more attractive than its sterile neighbors
- I didn’t have my original halo-light pole image available. However, this image, in which an elevated deck serves the same blocking purpose, provide stetsimony to what one can see by “looking up.”
- In December 2011, a light pole served to block the intensity of direct solar lighting. This allowed me to photograph this display of altocumulus clouds.
- Chloe, an 8th grade student from St. Louis, MO is an avid cloud watcher. She shot this image of Kelvin-Helmholtz wave clouds from a location near the Washington Monument (Washington, DC).
- While taking this picture of a luggage sizer at Reno Airport, I managed to intrigue a father and his family about the value of math, simply by being a photographer.
- Sunrise on this chilly December morning proved very colorful in the Washington, DC Virginia suburbs.
- This isn’t an award-winning photograph, by any means, but it does show that with a steady hand and the right camera equipment, it is possible to document the skies above, even in low-light settings.
- Also in another low-light situation, I got lucky. This blue heron just posed for me for several minutes. I took several photographs (many blurred). This one was my most successful effort.
- Speaking of being lucky. One morning, I just caught the motion of the heron out the corner of my eye. I quickly followed the bird’s motion with my camera and captured this striking image. The calm water allowed for maximum reflection.
- Wading birds (like this egret) like to hang around in shallow water. After all, it’s easier to stand, move and capture dinner.
- Our Math Tutoring Center was graced with this double rainbow while I was tutoring a student. Recognizing the appearance of the sun late on a rainy day meant a potential rainbow, I was able to go outside, see the bows and then photograph them.
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