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Pair of moon dogs Partial Moon dog seen from Hillspeak, Shimla, Lower Himalayas.. A moon dog (or moondog) or mock moon, also called a paraselene [1] (plural paraselenae) in meteorology, is an atmospheric optical phenomenon that consists of a bright spot to one or both sides of the Moon.
A combat encounter in Shin Megami Tensei V, which includes a gameplay menu (left) and player character information (right) as part of the heads-up display. Shin Megami Tensei V is a role-playing video game in which the player controls the Nahobino, a fusion of human and demon who explores the post-apocalyptic realm of Da'at. The Da'at is fully ...
Kazuma Kaneko (金子 一馬, Kaneko Kazuma, born September 20, 1964) is a Japanese video game artist and designer for Japanese video game company Atlus.Kaneko is best known for his work in the Megami Tensei series of video games, acting as a character designer across multiple games.
A crisp parhelic circle (horizontal line) over South Pole Station. Photo: John Bortniak, NOAA, January 1979. A halo display observed over the South Pole. Featured in the photo are several distinct phenomena: A parhelic circle (horizontal line), a 22° halo (circle) with two sundogs (bright spots), and an upper tangent arc.
TO-262: [24] Also called I2PAK: SMT package similar to the D2PAK but with longer leads for SMT or TH mounting; TO-263: [24] Also called D2PAK: SMT package similar to the TO-220 without the extended tab and mounting hole; TO-274: [24] Also called Super-247: SMT package similar to the TO-247 without the mounting hole
Parylene was discovered in 1947 by Michael Szwarc as one of the thermal decomposition products of para-xylene H 3 C − C 6 H 4 − CH 3 above 1000 °C. Szwarc identified para-xylylene as the precursor by observing that reaction with iodine yielded para-xylylene di-iodide as the only product.
In image processing and computer vision, anisotropic diffusion, also called Perona–Malik diffusion, is a technique aiming at reducing image noise without removing significant parts of the image content, typically edges, lines or other details that are important for the interpretation of the image.
Due to its apparent circular shape and nearly identical location in the sky, the supralateral arc is often mistaken for the 46° halo, which does form a complete circle around the sun at approximately the same distance, but which is much rarer and fainter.