Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Photography -2

 Professor Levoy goes very in depth into camera optics here:

Digital Photography


and I have posted explorations in optics in the Observing and Recording LabBook:


Observing and Recording

I will skip all that and start exploring the particular camera apps that I use.

My Moto g Power shipped with the standard Motorola Camera (version 10.0.47.40). At face, it's a point-and-shoot (everything is automatic mode) camera, unless.....unless you choose the Pro mode, in which case you suddenly have all the adjustments.....aperture, ISO, mid focus, white balance and contrast. In other words, Pro mode is manual mode for the Moto Camera 

The mode select bar is at the bottom just above the shutter release. There are a very satisfying number of modes to choose from.

One of its big strengths is an easy to get to slow motion video mode. It uses the primary camera only and there are not many controls available, but there doesn't really need to be.

You can select 1x or 2x. And it gives you a bar that lets you decide what section of the video will be slow. Here's that fan again.


It's simple and easy.

The birds here have learned a lot of tricks for dealing with the high winds. Here's a sparrow demonstrating some aerobatics. I heightened the contrast and darkened the scene to bring out it's image.



The video mode provides more control (but not slow motion) and has some unexpected tricks. For instance, it's an easy way to stop motion since you can use your editor to excise a still frame out of a video. Like this lightning strike.

 



You can select the flash and the microphone for sound. Moto Camera has FHD (Full High Definition), and unlike slow motion, you can use any of the three cameras.

Full High Definition is basically video with 1080 pixel resolution. The FHD icon allows you to switch from 30 frames per second to 60 frames per second, which can give a little crispness to a video  In the following video of Juneteenth fireworks, I begin with regular video. Around 14, I zoom to about 6x, then around 33, I switch from 30 fps to 60 fps.



The last item on the Mode bar (just above the shutter release) is "More". If you poke that, you'll see some special effect modes including two for video: Time Lapse and Dual Capture.

Time lapse is the opposite of slow motion. It speeds up the action. If you want to take a video of a flower opening, you can put the camera on a tripod, focus on the bud, and set the camera for Time Lapse.

In Time Lapse mode, there is a button to the right of the camera selector (above the shutter release, that opens a slider that will let you change the speed of the action.

Dual Capture will make a video with both the front and back cameras at the same time.


The Photo mode in the Moto Camera is basically the automatic mode discussed in Photography - 1, and, honestly, it does a great job of automatically adjusting exposure, field of view, and such which is why just about all the photographs in this blog have been taken in Photo mode.

It allows you to select which camera is used, whether to use the flash, photo aspect ratio, a time delay for the shutter, and a filter for the resulting photograph. In the settings, you can also include a time, date, location, camera, or Motorola logo stamp to include in the lower margin of the photograph.

The Portrait mode is completely automatic (you can select the flash) except that you can open a slider to adjust the depth of focus. In the following series, note that the yucca blossoms are clear at different distances from the camera 


On the Moto Camera, the manual mode is called Pro. Opening the Pro mode gives you a bar over the shutter release that lets you adjust the manual focus, white balance (tone temperature,), aperture, ISO, and contrast, and it also shows a histogram.

The histogram is a guide for tones in the photograph. The horizontal axis is brightness of pixels. The vertical axis is the number of pixels at a specific tone level. A dark photograph will show a histogram with most of the values to the left.


A light photograph will show tones clustering to the right.


 Night vision mode uses an algorithm to take a quick sequence of photographs of the same scene with the same exposure. Then it aligns them and cleans up the results. I was quite surprised at how well it  does in low light surroundings. It's not infrared. It does require some light to make images.




Also, contrast is important. Too much light in one area of a photograph will blot out details in another. I wanted to emphasize the soap tree yuccas against the dusk in the bottom photo. The top photo was a darker scene, so more ground details are visible 

With the Panorama mode, you can stand in one place, turn slowly, and obtain a photograph of 360° of a scene. If you want to include less than 360°, you can interrupt the scan by pressing the shutter release button.


Bitter Lakes National Wildlife Reserve 


The Chihuahuan desert 360°

The Scan mode allows you to capture a document image as a pdf. It automatically senses the borders and provides appropriate exposure and focus. It's sorta extra for me since I have two dedicated scanner apps on my phone 

The Photo Booth Mode provides a burst of a series of selfies. It also provides some options for modifying the portraits such as slimming, altering the size of the eyes subtly, changing the tone, etc 

These cameras are fun to play with and, frankly, that's the best way to learn how to use them  Of the six camera apps on my phone, the one that came with the phone, the Moto Camera, is the most convenient. It can be set up to take photos from the lock screen, with a tap anywhere on the screen, or when the camera detects a smile or your palm in the front camera. You can also set the phone up so that the camera opens when you twist your wrist holding the camera.

Likely, the resident camera on your phone will be similar. It may offer some special trucks so be sure to explore it.


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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Roswell: Highway 285 to Berrendo Road - Education and sports

 

Berrendo Elementary School

I walk by this school two or three days a week. It's the elementary school for the Berrendo district. There is also a middle school east of Main Street and North of East Pine Lodge Road that I haven't seen. 


According to the Roswell City website, Roswell has four high schools, four middle schools and twelve elementary schools. The high schools have options for traditional classes, college bound curricula, or advanced placement. I'll be visiting some of these schools in my explorations (actually, I've already been by Goddard High School to check out their rockets). There are also three Christian schools.

In higher education, there are the New Mexico Military Institute and the Eastern New Mexico University. There is also the Roswell Job Corps Center.

As bad as people talk about New Mexico schools, I have noticed that students and faculty members in these schools seem to enjoy being there. The Roswell schools have more fine art programs than any other schools in the state.

There are far too many sports programs in Roswell,  either in schools and out, sponsored by the community and independent. I will be talking about some as I explore the town. For instance I've already seen two golf courses and more than one big sports complexes.


This is the desert. The nearest sizable towns (Ruidoso and Carlsbad) are 75 miles away. People need something to do. And people are out doing things here. I I never get to ignore car or foot traffic when I walk.


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Photography - 1

 Although point-and-shoot photography, provided by my smartphones, have served me well in the past, occasionally, I need to have more control and my study of biology has brought that forward, especially here in the desert where the intense light adds an extra factor and need for adjusting exposure.

So I decided to take Professor Marc Levoy's online digital photography course (Digital Photography). And I'm learning quite a lot.

Exposure, the amount of light reaching the photographic element affecting the brightness of the image, is a subtle balance of shutter speed, lens aperture, and ISO which is a measure of the sensors sensitivity to the light.

The trick is that each control involves a different trade off.

For instance, the longer the shutter remains open, the more motion you will catch and the more the subject will blur, which is an effect that you might want occasionally, but not usually.



These two scenes show what progressive shutter speeds will do to brightness.


If you expand the photos above, you can see that the dog is more blurred in the brighter (top) photo.

You can really see the trade off of motion blur and brightness in the photographs of the ceiling fan below  Only the shutter speeds were changed between photos.




Aperture width controls brightness but it also controls depth of field, the area a distance away from the lens where subjects are sharp. Only my Photon camera allows the virtual aperture to be changed and the differences aren't great, so that might be why the other apps don't provide the option.



Top right f/1 clockwise by steps to f/16. Expand each photo and you can see a difference in the sharpness of leaf veins 

ISO is the last element of exposure. It was originally a measure developed by the International Organization for Standards to describe how "fast" a photographic film was, that is, how sensitive it was to light. Since sensitivity was related to the graininess of the photographic emulsion used, it also was associated with the graininess of the image produced. That translated well into digital photography 

For a CCD, (photographic sensor) each pixel can be amplified to increase its sensitivity to light. That amplification also introduces noise. Enlarge the following photographs and note the "graininess" of the images.



An ISO of 100 is the image as it is produced by the sensor without any amplification. ProShot will adjust ISO from 100 to 19200 and those values are shown in steps above. The top left image has an ISO of 100 and the sequence gets brighter to the lower right. But enlarge the lower right image to see how grainy it looks, so there's a trade off. And you might want that graininess. I sorta like it 

Autofocus (automatic mode) adjusts everything for you and usually does a good job except for some special effects. You can even adjust depth of field in automatic mode on some cameras (like ProShot and Photon) by tapping on the part of a scene you want to have the focus.

Bracketing is a useful tool for planning a picture. It gives you a number of successive shots of the same scene with progressive exposures. The following shows three exposures differing by 2.2 stops.



So, before I go on to my second photography blog, let me tell you what Professor Levoy says about choosing a camera 

If you have the money, get an SLR (or DSLR) or MIL, not a point-and-shoot. 

Don't worry about megapixels, most cameras have too many.

Don't worry about brand or body 

Worry about lenses. Variable zooms are nice but consider the quality.

Avoid large focal ranges because they tend to be "soft".

Maximum aperture (lower f-stops) is good 

Some accessories you might want: 

50 mm f/1.8 "prime" (fixed focal length) lens for low light work

A good, light tripod isn't too expensive, and you might want a table tripod 

An external flash can be used to advantage. You can control where the light goes....and the shadows 

Video capability.


Now, that said:

Bryan Peterson's Understanding Photography Fieldguide is subtitled How to shoot great photographs with any camera, and for fieldwork I take it as gospel. For professional work, spend the money. 


Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Roswell: Highway 285 to Berrendo Road - Arts and culture

 People in other parts of the country do not generally consider Roswell a high culture city and it's certainly not a beacon of culture, but being a college town, it shouldn't be too surprising that there is art and culture here. In fact, the city makes it a point to provide cultural activities for residents' enjoyment, and they tend to be popular 

There isn't a lot of high art in North Roswell but there are some attractive pieces like this sculpture....



at the Silva Law Firm.

There are eight museums in Roswell displaying things from aliens to less mysterious space science to modern art. I will be checking those out as I continue exploring the town (A couple of them are closed for repair after last years disastrous floods )

There are also some interesting statues and other monuments in other parts of town.

I also look forward to visiting the visitor center and public library in the center of town 


There have been quite a few stellar individuals who have lived and worked in or near Roswell 

Wikipedia lists 21 prominent people who lived a significant amount of time in Roswell (in alphabetical order). They are:

Robert O. Anderson (1917-2007) American businessman, art collector, and philanthropist. Born in Chicago and died in Roswell. The Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art is named after him. He is the founder of the Atlantic Richfield Company. In his time he was the largest landowner in the U.S. with over 2000 square miles of property in Texas and New Mexico 

Bobby Baldock (1936 - ) United States circuit judge of the United States Court of Appels for the tenth circuit. He was born in Oklahoma 

Tom Brookshier (1932-3010) American football player, coach, and sportscaster. Born in Roswell, he died in Pennsylvania. His football career ended with the Philadelphia Eagles with a knee injury. He went on to be a popular sportscaster.

John Chissum (1824-1884) rancher and cattle barron. He owned the Jingle Bob Ranch about five miles west of Roswell.

Louise Holland Coe (1894-1985) first woman elected to New Mexico Senate and first woman to run for the Congress in the U.S. Born in Texas and died in Roswell.

Max Coll (1932- ) 15 term New Mexico Representative.

Ray Crawford (1915-1996) American fighter and test pilot, race car driver and businessman. 

John Denver (1943-1997)  born Henry John Deutschendorf Jr., although he is definitely remembered as a Coloradoan (who wrote one of the two official state songs: Rocky Mountain High) who lived in Aspen, he was born in Roswell and is remembered fondly.

Pat Garrett (1850-1908) Among other things, the sheriff of Lincoln County, New Mexico who was famous for killing Billy the Kid.

Robert H. Goddard (1882-1945) Although he was born in Massachusetts, he did most of his work inventing liquid fuel rockets around Roswell, New Mexico. His rocket designs led to those that carried people into space and to the moon.

Susan Graham (1960 -) operatic mezzo-soprano. She was born in Roswell, but didn't stay here long. She has encouraged the popularity of French and contemporary American songs 

J. J. Hagerman (1838-1909) industrialist and operated mines, railroads, and corporate farms. He moved to the Roswell area in 1892, buying the Chissum Jingle Bob Ranch. He donated part of the land currently occupied by the New Mexico Military Institute. He was born near Port Hope in upper Canada but moved to the western United States due to contracted tuberculosis. But he lived in Europe for the last years of his life and died in Milan, Italy.

James F. Hinkle (1862-1951) Roswell mayor, New Mexico State senator, and New Mexico governor.

Nancy Lopez (1957- ) LPGA tour golfer. Won 48 LPGA tour events, including three major championships. She was born in California but went to Goddard High School in Roswell.

Jody McCrea (1934-2009) Actor. Born in Los Angeles but died in Roswell. He retired from films in 1972 and became a rancher in Roswell.

Gerina Piller (1985- ) LPGA professional golfer. Born in Roswell, she attended college and currently lives in Texas.

Priscilla Presley (1945- ) Business woman and actress. Wife of Elvis Presley. Born in New York, Her father, Paul Beaulieu, was stationed at Roswell Air Force Base during her childhood. During that time she attended Valley View Elementary School.

Clinton Puckett (1926-2002) 6th Sargent Major of the Marine Corps. He serves in World War II, the Vietnam War, and Korea and received the Navy Cross for extreme heroism in Korea. He was born in Waurika, Oklahoma, grew up in Roswell and died in Washington, D.C. His Wikipedia article has a copy of his decoration describing the event for which he was awarded.....movie material.

Clinton Puckett Navy Cross citation

James Riseley (1898-1992) a decorated officer of the United States Marine Corps, he was born in New York and lived the last part of his life in Roswell.

Jason Lawrence Geiger (1974- ) also known professionally as Austin St. John is an actor, popularly the first Red Power Ranger, Jason Kee Scott.

I hate being so brief with these people. They're real people with fascinating lives (like everyone), but this is a blog with some space restrictions (I can study or I can write blogs). Each has their own Wikipedia article and I recommend that you check out the historical people of your area. Also check out local memorials and their back stories. If you move around much, you're going to see statues of boll weevils, and apples, and peaches......and what is Lady Liberty doing in Alabama?!

Monday, June 1, 2026

Cells and extending perception: some tools of biology - 2

 Both field work and laboratory exercises involve imaging, especially if there's a blog involved. Fortunately, modern smartphones provide several camera options.

My smartphone is a Motorola Moto g Power with three cameras. There are two back cameras (the ones on the side opposite the screen), and one front camera (the one used for selfies).


My field kit (fits nicely into my backpack)

Life happens across all scales of a biome and imaging has to keep up with the scale 

The molecules that make up the basis of life are just regular compounds like salt (sodium chloride) and water extending up to huge molecules like proteins and genetic molecules. They exist at the nanometer scale. A nanometer is a thousandth of a micrometer, which is a thousandth of a millimeter, which is a thousandth of a meter. It's smaller than the wavelength of visible light, so we can't use a light microscope to see it. 

Electron wavelengths are on the order of 20 nanometers down to (under acceleration) picometers (a picometer is a thousandth of a nanometer). We can use electrons in electron microscopes to see molecules.


Pleolipoviral virion (HRPV-6)
Tatiana A. Demina, Hanna M. Oksanen

From Electron Microscope, Wikipedia article 

But electron microscopes are expensive and absolutely not portable so any image at the nanoscale here will be from public domain images.

I catch up at the micrometer scale. 

My smartphone, a Motorola Moto g Power, has three built in cameras. For most of my past photography, point-and-shoot did pretty much what I wanted but biology is requiring a little more ... finesse. So I'm taking a course in photography, a series of lectures by Marc Levoy, professor emeritus of computer science at Stanford University. (Digital Photography )  Early on he recommends avoiding phone cameras but for reasons of expense and portability, I ain't gonna. 

Actually, I am very impressed with the advances in phone cameras from my last to my current phone. 

There are many (!) camera apps available to optimize the cameras in smartphones. They work some different from professional cameras. To approximate the same control over images, they have to use some advanced algorithms to simulate them.

In addition to the camera app that came with the phone, a fairly no frills point-and-shoot digital camera with options in the settings menu, I selected three other general purpose apps and two for managing exterior cameras like camcorders and a bore scope.

Why collect camera apps? Because they each have their own strengths and weaknesses. Don't feel limited by my selection, but the ones I use are:

OpenCamera. By Mark Harman. A fairly unassuming camera, with a lot under the hood including a choice of metadata to a display as stamps on the photographs.

Proton, by Hinnka. This is a strong simulation of a professional DSLR down to dial selectors. Both it and the next offer extensive control of exposure, color, special effects, and style with in-camera editing of images 

ProShot, by Rise Up Games, is also an excellent simulation of a pro DSLR camera  I used ProShot for most of the photo micrographs in the first part of this blog (this is part 2).

Microscopy and photomicroscopy operate in the micrometer range, perfectly doable for visible light. Most small organisms, bacteria, protozoa, many medical parasites, molds and yeasts, fall into that range.

The micrometer is such a common unit in biology that it's often just shortened to "micron" and the nanometer is sometimes called a "millimicron" (less so than in the past).

Single cells are usually colorless which makes them hard to see with visible light so stains and other tricks (polarized light, fluorescence, dark field microscopy, etc ) are used to make them visible. Stains are dyes that attach to or dissolve in or react with certain parts of cells. For instance, lipid soluble dyes will preferentially color the lipid membranes of cells while water soluble dyes will go to the watery interiors. The indicators commonly used in analytical chemistry may dye different parts of cells that have different chemical properties differently. For instance, a pH indicator will dye acid and base elements different colors 

Even food colors will bring out the nuclei in cells.



Cheek epithelium cells


I have two clip-on microscopes as featured in the last part of this blog. The more powerful one will resolve cells but isn't quite strong enough to clearly view structures within the cells smaller than a nucleus or large vacuole.

The less powerful microscope is more portable and easier to use in the field but is fine for tiny details like grains of sand, small crystals, tiny flowers, small insects and other invertebrates.

The camera apps have functions that can sharpen microscopic images and enhance contrast.

Macrophotography involves close up photographs of detail, and usually operates in the millimeter range. Most smartphones today have at least a standard back camera and a camera with a macro lens. Some have wide field cameras. Mine doesn't but I do have a clip-on wide field kens 

On one of my treks into town, I noticed a mossy looking (actually not a moss but a succulent) plant covered spot of the ground. Interested in the tiny white flecks, I switched to my micro camera, got close and took this photograph.


Rattlesnake weed (Euphorbia albomarginata)

These tiny, exquisite blossoms were barely a millimeter across.

The first exposure I had to the idea of "bellyflowers" was from a documentary long ago by the Moody Institute of Science about researchers in Death Valley. In the desert (like where I now live), it's often a good survival trait to be small and close to the ground, so many desert flowers are produced by ground covers and are tiny 

"Standard" photography is also important in biology because the centimeter to decameter range is where we live. I saw this fellow on a trip back from town one day and he stayed long enough for me to get a picture.


Osprey

 The advantage of "regular" photography is that I almost always have my smartphone with me but I only have my photographic paraphernalia if I plan to have it.

I'm also impressed by the stabilization offered by current phone cameras. The trick of waiting until the shutter button has been poked and the camera motion has settled down is good, but my newest phone has OIS, "optical image stabilization". If I twitch in one direction when I press the shitter release, the camera senses it and twitches the camera kens in the opposite direction, canceling the blur 

Telephotography carries my photography into the range from here to as far as my eyes can see. Capturing images of skittish or dangerous animals from afar or surveying ecosystems is valuable in ecology and conservation 


Jupiter

Grackle in the tree top

Clip-on telephoto lenses are not expensive and are of fairly good quality. Mine is a Pusokei 22x telephoto lens .

The bird came out great.....Jupiter, not so much. Telephoto can only go so far in capturing astronomical images. For that, you need a telescope and that is outside my range for this blog. Biology, in general, though, goes on to the stars in it's search for answers to the questions of where life on Earth came from and if there might be other life in other parts of the universe and what it might be like. That is the purview of exobiology.

I was excited when I noticed that my last phone had "night vision". I figured "infrared camera" but was a little disappointed when I found that it wasn't. On the other hand, I've started fooling around with it on my new camera and am changing my mind.


Night vision has to have some light to work. I tried it in our pitch black garage and couldn't see anything, but given half a chance, it can use what light is available to produce some pretty awesome images 

It's a software adaptation of digital cameras. They take several quick photographs, superimpose them, and then clean up blurry edges. 

As macular degeneration has pretty much destroyed my night vision, I have found that I can use my phone's night vision to navigate dark dates.

It seems that most phone cameras are now equipped with night vision.

The banner for this blog was hand stitched but modern digital cameras have a feature called "panorama". You stand in one spot and rotate and your camera will nicely stitch the whole scene together for you.




Bitter Lakes National Wildlife Refuge

The Chihuahuan desert 

The other side of the smartphone camera is the video. Most phone cameras are also video cameras and, what's more, they have video editors 

I went out on a stormy night to capture about 2 minutes of distant lightning. The result was too long to insert into a Blogger blog so I trimmed it down some to get this.



Now, it's difficult to catch action precisely in a photograph. You can use apps like motion detectors to trigger a camera. Some cameras even come with motion detectors, but there is an easier way ....just make a video and extract what you want.


When reviewing the video above, I spotted a strike that I wanted a photograph of so I cut the following out and cleaned it up some.



This is the extracted scene but I felt like the blue made details a little harder to see so I shifted it a little more to the red to get this.


The most common admonition I've seen in courses on photography is "take lots of pictures". Much of photography is feeling. Volume gives you a chance to learn the features of your camera and a feeling for composition and, generally, what works 

I don't have Professor Levoy's objection to smartphone cameras so, whether you have a film or digital camera or a smartphone, go out and take lots of pictures!