DaveO Posted July 20, 2015 Share Posted July 20, 2015 Oldfield, D. 2015. Eucalyptus melliodora A. Cunn. ex Schauer (Myrtaceae) Yellow Box. Flowers photographed in visible and ultraviolet light. http://www.ultraviol...ora-yellow-box/SynonymEucalyptus patentiflora Miq.Eucalyptus caerulescens NaudinEucalyptus forsythii MaidenEucalyptus argentea Cordier ex Blakely Maldon, Victoria, Australia7 June 2015Australian Native Wildflower as Garden Specimen CommentEucalyptus melliodora is extremely variable in form, bark and foliage colour and is common and widely distributed from south-eastern Queensland to western Victoria. Visible Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Metz 15 MS-1 flash, 1/200 s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV/IR Cut Filter.Image Reference: DO60451 Ultraviolet Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Nissin Di866 Mark II flash, 1/200s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV-Pass Filter.Image Reference: DO60459 Ultraviolet Induced Visible Fluorescence: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens with Baader UV/IR Cut Filter, Nichia NCSU033A UV-LED with Baader UV-Pass Filter, 30.0 s @ f/16 ISO 400.Image Reference: DO60471 Another set showing the bud cap about to be lost. Visible Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Metz 15 MS-1 flash, 1/200 s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV/IR Cut Filter.Image Reference: DO60715 Ultraviolet Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Nissin Di866 Mark II flash, 1/200s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV-Pass Filter.Image Reference: DO60719 Ultraviolet Induced Visible Fluorescence: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens with Baader UV/IR Cut Filter, Nichia NCSU033A UV-LED with Baader UV-Pass Filter, 30.0 s @ f/16 ISO 400.Image Reference: DO60721 The bud cap was then removed, it was fused to the cap of the smaller un-opened bud behind it. Visible Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Metz 15 MS-1 flash, 1/200 s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV/IR Cut Filter.Image Reference: DO60724 Ultraviolet Light: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens, Nissin Di866 Mark II flash, 1/200s @ f/16 ISO 200, Baader UV-Pass Filter.Image Reference: DO60727 Ultraviolet Induced Visible Fluorescence: Nikon D750 Full Spectrum Modification, Nikon Rayfact PF10545 MF-UV 105 mm f/4.5 lens with Baader UV/IR Cut Filter, Nichia NCSU033A UV-LED with Baader UV-Pass Filter, 30.0 s @ f/16 ISO 400.Image Reference: DO60728 References:Elliott, W.R. and Jones, D.L. Encyclopaedia of Australian Plants suitable for cultivation, Volume 4, 1986, Lothian, p. 145.EUCLID Eucalypts of Australia, Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research, 2006, Third Edition, DVD. Published 20 July 2015 Link to comment
colinbm Posted July 20, 2015 Share Posted July 20, 2015 You are doing very well Dave.Col Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted July 20, 2015 Share Posted July 20, 2015 Dave, some time you must enter one of these fiber-optic effect photos in some scientific photo contest. They are very interesting.Try the Detail slider on Photo Ninja to bring out a bit of structure. Link to comment
DaveO Posted July 21, 2015 Author Share Posted July 21, 2015 Here's a "warts and all" 100% extract for the UVIVFL shot with the bud cap detaching. I have not applied any noise reduction to the file from the camera but I did have the long exposure noise reduction setting turned on in the camera which makes it sit and think for a time equivalent to the exposure (30 s in this case) to remove any hot pixels and other stuff. I'm not sure that these stamens are fluorescing in their own right or just acting as fibre-optics as you suggest. They are effectively glowing tubes of water filled gel so the illumination is from within the "tube" and doesn't have a clearly defined edge as when you take a photograph by reflected light. It's really just like taking a photograph of a neon tube, the fluorescence is a bulk property not a surface effect. Here's the Visible version and the UV one Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted July 21, 2015 Share Posted July 21, 2015 I think the anthers on the end of the stamens would really be fluorescing, Dave. They are outputting the pollen and pollen tends to be fluorescent. My fiber optics remark was only intended to be a description of the appearance and not the actual functionality. Link to comment
DaveO Posted July 22, 2015 Author Share Posted July 22, 2015 I agree with you, I find the pollen is the most fluorescent part of any of my UVIVFL images. I need to increase the "illumination" slider in PN to get a good image usually and I try not to let the pollen burn out and the rest then falls into place as far as luminosity is concerned. So the stamens are often quite dim compared to the pollen. The UV image shows a lot of texture presumably from the cellular structure of the stamens, there also seems to be a blue tinge around the anthers in UV. In the UVIVFL you can clearly seen the two parts of the bud cap looking like a baked cake. According to Euclid there is no operculum scar on the buds meaning that the outer operculum (from the fused sepals) is not shed separately to form the scar, so the two opercula are shed together. The more you look the more you find. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted July 22, 2015 Share Posted July 22, 2015 Yes the Illumination slider is very helpful for certain fotos. Also the Shadows slider. Well, all those PN sliders really - they all work to help tame our unusual fotos. :( You have a good curious mind, Dave. Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now