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Shaputuanöwik

Bryce Collage posted on Jul 20, 2010
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Description


Bryce Art Collage The lovely draculaz robot and gendragon spaceship Thanks Magik

Comments (69)


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flaviok

3:11PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Fascinante, fantástica criação e realização meu amigo, aplausos (5)

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anitalee

3:11PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Nice work

)

Madbat

3:15PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

I like the layout design and color scheme!

)

Hubert

3:18PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Nice collage and moody scenes.

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mickeyrony

3:21PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Any title. Réal. But I like this make me smile. Well done and thanks mile ((5 + +)) Tout un titre .Réal . Mais j'aime bien cela me fais sourire . Bravo encore et mile mercis ((5++))

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angelafair

3:29PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

very NICE!

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CarolSassy

3:32PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Poor robot. They didn't even leave him company. lol q-: Both great views! (:

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tamburro

3:38PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Fantastic works my friend, great colors!!!!

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mikeerson

3:38PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Middle picture I like best... last week on yahoo they were saying they had to shut down a chineese airport because of a ufo, there were pictures on the net showing lights similar to this ship that had light rays coming from it down to the ground, it would of been a nice EXTRA touch to this image that is cool just as well with out the FX but I thought I'd mention it to ya.

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flavia49

3:40PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

splendid renders!!

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kftate

3:42PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Wonderful images and fantastic colors! Excellent done!!

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mininessie

3:43PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

fantastic!

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tryky5carla

3:48PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

EXCELLENT BRYCE, GREAT COLOR PALETTE, SUPERB COLLAGE !!!!!!!!

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claude19

4:13PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

celui de droite a ma préférence ! Belles couleurs !

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kbrog

4:15PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Fantastic collage! He looks so lonely standing there. :)

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Star4mation

4:30PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Super POV on these three images Magik :)

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sandra46

4:32PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

FANTASTIC WORK

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evielouise

4:33PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

now this is creative and you sure are having lots of ideas for the robot: he does look lonely though lol:: excellent!~

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cosmoz

4:47PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Votre un grand artiste avec Bryce! J'aime beaucoup cela un collage coloré! Une pièce ULTRA Sci-fi ...

Hobbyist

5:18PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Beautiful.. love the three versions.

)

mgtcs

5:26PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Beautiful image Magik, great perspective my friend, loved it!

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alessimarco

5:40PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Superb collage!

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magnus073

6:20PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Magik, c'est un collage fantastique vous avez créé mon ami. Les effets spéciaux sont magnifiques.

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MOSKETON

6:25PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

gran control del horario. genial.

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willpee

6:43PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Great collage !!

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jmb007

6:47PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

superbe travail!!

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MagikUnicorn

7:08PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

SPACE NEWS --- SPACE NEWS While orbiting Saturn for the last six years, NASA's Cassini spacecraft has kept a close eye on the collisions and disturbances in the gas giant's rings. They provide the only nearby natural laboratory for scientists to see the processes that must have occurred in our early solar system, as planets and moons coalesced out of disks of debris. New images from Cassini show icy particles in Saturn's F ring clumping into giant snowballs as the moon Prometheus makes multiple swings by the ring. The gravitational pull of the moon sloshes ring material around, creating wake channels that trigger the formation of objects as large as 20 kilometers (12 miles) in diameter. "Scientists have never seen objects actually form before," said Carl Murray, a Cassini imaging team member based at Queen Mary, University of London. "We now have direct evidence of that process and the rowdy dance between the moons and bits of space debris." Murray discussed the findings today (July 20, 2010) at the Committee on Space Research meeting in Bremen, Germany, and they are published online by the journal Astrophysical Journal Letters on July 14, 2010. A new animation based on imaging data shows how one of the moons interacts with the F ring and creates dense, sticky areas of ring material. Saturn's thin, kinky F ring was discovered by NASA's Pioneer 11 spacecraft in 1979. Prometheus and Pandora, the small "shepherding" moons on either side of the F ring, were discovered a year later by NASA's Voyager 1. In the years since, the F ring has rarely looked the same twice, and scientists have been watching the impish behavior of the two shepherding moons for clues. Prometheus, the larger and closer to Saturn of the two moons, appears to be the primary source of the disturbances. At its longest, the potato-shaped moon is 148 kilometers (92 miles) across. It cruises around Saturn at a speed slightly greater than the speed of the much smaller F ring particles, but in an orbit that is just offset. As a result of its faster motion, Prometheus laps the F ring particles and stirs up particles in the same segment once in about every 68 days. "Some of these objects will get ripped apart the next time Prometheus whips around," Murray said. "But some escape. Every time they survive an encounter, they can grow and become more and more stable." Cassini scientists using the ultraviolet imaging spectrograph previously detected thickened blobs near the F ring by noting when starlight was partially blocked. These objects may be related to the clumps seen by Murray and colleagues. The newly-found F ring objects appear dense enough to have what scientists call "self-gravity." That means they can attract more particles to themselves and snowball in size as ring particles bounce around in Prometheus's wake, Murray said. The objects could be about as dense as Prometheus, though only about one-fourteenth as dense as Earth. What gives the F ring snowballs a particularly good chance of survival is their special location in the Saturn system. The F ring resides at a balancing point between the tidal force of Saturn trying to break objects apart and self-gravity pulling objects together. One current theory suggests that the F ring may be only a million years old, but gets replenished every few million years by moonlets drifting outward from the main rings. However, the giant snowballs that form and break up probably have lifetimes of only a few months. The new findings could also help explain the origin of a mysterious object about 5 to 10 kilometers (3 to 6 miles) in diameter that Cassini scientists spotted in 2004 and have provisionally dubbed S/2004 S 6. This object occasionally bumps into the F ring and produces jets of debris. "The new analysis fills in some blanks in our solar system's history, giving us clues about how it transformed from floating bits of dust to dense bodies," said Linda Spilker, Cassini project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "The F ring peels back some of the mystery and continues to surprise us."

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RodS

7:11PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Cool work! I like it a lot!

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Faemike55

7:21PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

Middle one is the best of the three Nice work

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scifibabe

8:02PM | Tue, 20 July 2010

I like the middle one best. Great selection thought. Very cool.


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