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  • 21
    hours
    ago

    Portraits of a queen: When the monarch becomes the subject

    National Portrait Gallery, London

    'Lightness of Being' by Chris Levine, 2004.

    By Peter Jeary, NBC News

    LONDON – She is the most photographed woman in the world and no monarch has been more depicted in portraits.

    Her image is everywhere – from our English bank bills and postage stamps to countless photographs in newspapers and magazines. While not a royalist, I never tire of looking at pictures of Queen Elizabeth II, but I cannot tell you why.

    Until now.


    National Portrait Gallery, London

    Queen Elizabeth II by Hiroshi Sugimoto, 1999.

    Paul Woodhouse, curator of 'The Queen: Art and Image', an exhibition that recently opened at London's National Portrait Gallery, told me my fascination was shared by many.

    "What we all try to do is understand the enigma," he said. "It's a paradox. We have all these images of her, but for most of us, we actually know very little about the queen."

    And it's true. By looking at a range of different images and listening to her occasional public statements, I hope to glean a little more about the woman, the great-grandmother, the human being behind the icon.

    An early visitor to the exhibition, Gareth Jones, from Camden in London, agrees.

    "You think you know things about her," he said. "But it's not until you see it laid-out like this that you start to appreciate the life she has led over sixty years. It's powerful."

    Fit for a queen: 60 years of style

    Jones, a self-described fan of the queen, found one work particularly revealing.

    Looking at Chris Levine's 2004 holographic photograph 'Lightness of Being' was like "intruding on a private moment, as the queen closes her eyes, almost in meditation," he said.

    National Portrait Gallery, London

    Queen Elizabeth II, by Pietro Annigoni, 1969.

    Yvonne Bennett, from Sevenoaks, outside of London, was captivated by the same image.

    "I could stand and look at it all day," she said.

    Among the dozens of varied pictures, photographs and mixed media in the exhibition, one portrait stands out.  Amid the Pop Art, punk art and high art depictions, Hiroshi Sugimoto's 1999 portrait feels wrong and out of place.

    One visitor wondered why it lacked the warmth of other pictures. We then discovered that the photograph is of a waxwork, and not the monarch herself.

    Queen Elizabeth II's lunch for world monarchs sparks controversy

    There was a tangible difference between that portrait and, for example, a much earlier, highly formal painting by Pietro Annigoni, dating from 1954-5, the early years of her reign.

    In the Annigoni, the young queen is noble and remote, like an empress, but also very human.

    While the exhibit tells a story of a changing monarchy, it is also obvious that the queen has carefully controlled her image over the years.

    NBC News

    Kim Dong-Yoo's mosaic 'Elizabeth vs Diana', left, is made up of hundreds of tiny images of Princess Diana. A close-up view is shown at right.

    "But when you compare portraits from one decade with another, you start to understand the preoccupations of the time, and then you appreciate that the queen has had to face some very dark times,” said Bridget Findlay of Portsmouth. 

    Video: Queen seen as inspiration at Jubilee parade

    Findlay’s favorite was a reflection of those dark times: 'Elizabeth vs Diana' is a mosaic of the queen's head created from tiny images of Princess Diana, her erstwhile daughter-in-law who died in a car crash in 1997 after an embarrassingly public split with Prince Charles.

    "It's simply startling," Findlay said.  "I never expected to see that and it took me a while to work out what it was."

    The Queen makes her first televised Christmas broadcast on Dec. 25,1957.

    Kim Dong-Yoo's 2007 mosaic – one of several works that would be seen as irreverent if not almost disrespectful – is confirmation that this is not an official exhibition sanctioned by Buckingham Palace. Instead, curator Paul Moorhouse called it a celebration for a diamond jubilee.

    If I had to choose one image that summed up the exhibit for me, it would be a small, rather insignificant newspaper photograph of a family gathered around a TV set watching the queen's first televised Christmas message broadcast in 1957.

    She speaks while we, the observers, look and listen. Six decades on, are we any closer to knowing the most depicted woman in history?

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • UN nuclear chief: Deal reached with Iran over suspected weapons program
    • Death of Lockerbie bomber al-Megrahi 'doesn't close the book'
    • 'Massacre': At least 90 killed as bomber targets military parade rehearsal in Yemen
    • Pakistan blocks Twitter -- but fails to stop tweets
    • US student dies after going swimming at Scottish beach

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    63 comments

    I find this one of the more repugnant remnants of a bygone era. For 60 years a woman who did nothing but be born into a family has been worshiped like a god. Her every whim satisfied , protocol just to look at her and be in her presence. The billions she has and the property. And she has had it for  …

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    Explore related topics: london, queen, national-portrait-gallery, uk, featured, elizabeth, jubilee, pete-jeary, the-queen-art-and-image
  • 21
    hours
    ago

    SpaceX rocket begins milestone mission to space station

    Michael R. Brown / Reuters

    The SpaceX Falcon 9 test rocket lifts off from Space Launch Complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on May 22, 2012.

    Space.com reports from CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A private space capsule called Dragon soared into the predawn sky Tuesday, riding a pillar of flame like its beastly namesake on a history-making trip to the International Space Station.

    The unmanned capsule, built by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk's SpaceX venture, is the first non-governmental spacecraft to launch to the space station, ushering in a new era of partnership between the public and private spaceflight programs. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Pierre Ducharme / Reuters

    The rocket blasted off on Tuesday for a mission designed to be the first commercial flight to the International Space Station. The mock shuttle Explorer, in the foreground, had been on display at the Kennedy Space Center Complex, and will be moved to the Johnson Space Center in Houston this week in order to make room for the arrival of Space Shuttle Atlantis.

    John Raoux / AP

    The lift-off is seen in a long-exposure photo.

    An unmanned rocket owned by privately held Space Exploration Technologies blasted off from Cape Canaveral on a mission designed to be the first commercial flight to the International Space Station. Msbnc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Slideshow: Month in Space: A blaze of glory

    NASA/SDO/AIA

    Click through a solar eruption, the final odyssey of the shuttle Discovery and other outer-space highlights from April 2012.

    Launch slideshow

     

    5 comments

    Yep, we'll be riding to the space station in a private vehicle piloted by a foreigner. And if you're from out of town and don't know the shortest route, the fare goes up.

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    Explore related topics: space, rocket, spacex, featured, dragon, commercial-spaceflight
  • 2
    days
    ago

    Your 2012 eclipse photos - it's not too late to share

    Brady Flanery via Instagram

    A beautiful photo of the eclipse over north Texas.

    By Jon Sweeney

    We asked witnesses of this year's rare annular solar eclipse to hashtag their photos with #eclipse2012 and our readers delivered. Now the spectacle is over and we wanted to share some of our favorites. If you haven't had the chance to add your favorite, it's not too late. Submit images below, or tag photos #eclipsemsnbc in Instagram or Twitter. Don't forget to tell us where you shot the picture.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Click on each photo to get a closer look, and come back throughout the day, because we're adding images as we see them.

    In Albuquerque, N.M., the rare event was met with starry-eyed awe as the moon passed in front of the sun creating a 'ring of fire' in the sky. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: us-news, eclipse, featured, tech-science, your-photos
  • 6
    days
    ago

    Holocaust survivors celebrate belated bar mitzvah

    David Buimovitch / AFP - Getty Images

    Holocaust survivors wearing 'Talit' (prayer shawls) and 'Tefilin' (phylacteries), sit in a synagogue during a Bar Mitzvah ceremony on May 17, 2012 in Ashkelon, Israel.

    Six Holocaust survivors who were unable as children to celebrate the bar mitzvah, the Jewish rite of passage that marks a boy's 13th birthday, were finally able to mark their coming of age in a ceremony in the Israeli city of Ashkelon on Thursday.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    David Buimovitch / AFP - Getty Images

    David Buimovitch / AFP - Getty Images

    A Holocaust survivor whose number tattoo is still visible puts on the 'Tefilin' during the ceremony.

     

    8 comments

    Mazel Tov!

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    Explore related topics: israel, middle-east, religion, holocaust, jewish, world-news, featured, bar-mitzvah
  • 7
    days
    ago

    Scientists read a galaxy's entrails

    ESO

    The galaxy Centaurus A (NGC 5128) is pictured in this image, taken with by the Wide Field Imager attached to the MPG/ESO 2.2-meter telescope at the European Southern Observatory's La Silla Observatory in Chile. With a total exposure time of more than 50 hours, this could be deepest view of Centaurus A ever created.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Astronomers are taking a long, deep look at one of the best-known galaxies beyond our own Milky Way, to learn more about what happened when it gobbled up another agglomeration of stars that got too close.

    The entrails of the gobbled galaxy are prominent in this view of Centaurus A, a galaxy about 12 million light-years away in the constellation Centaurus. The bright haze of stars is the typical signature of an elliptical galaxy, but the dark, swirling band of dust around the center is a tip-off that the "A" in Centaurus A stands for "atypical."


    Scientists believe the band represents the dusty leftovers of the galaxy that has been consumed in a gravitationally driven merger. Flashes of fresh hot stars can be seen along the edges of the band. It's thought that an energetic black hole, 100 million times as massive as our sun, is blasting out strong radio emissions from the center of the haze.

    Much of this has been seen before, in previous images of Centaurus A. But today's image, captured by the Wide Field Imager on the European Southern Observatory's MPG/ESO 2.2-meter telescope in Chile, reveals extra details. That's because the camera exposure lasted for more than 50 hours, making this one of the deepest views of Centaurus A ever produced.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    One reddish filament of material is visible above the left edge of the dark band. A fainter filament can be made out near the upper left corner of the picture. These filaments, hotbeds for infant stars, appear to line up with radio-emitting jets that are being spewed out from the central black hole. Such features can help astronomers reconstruct how Centaurus A gobbled a galaxy in the first place, and how the remains are being digested. Further studies, involving ESO's ALMA Observatory, will shed additional light on the scene.

    A video from the European Southern Observatory zooms in on telescope views of Centaurus A, a giant cannibal galaxy.

    More about the gobbling galaxy:

    • Hubble spies a firestorm of starbirth
    • Giant galaxy caught in mid-gobble
    • Snapshot reveals a black hole's jets
    • Cosmic collision probably spawned huge galaxy
    • Scientists find 'normal' black hole in Centaurus A

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    19 comments

    Alan, that title made me laugh out loud. Thanks for the great posts, as always.

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    Explore related topics: space, galaxy, images, featured, cosmic-log, tech-science
  • 15
    May
    2012
    5:46pm, EDT

    Saturn's moons make waves in rings

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / SSI

    The Saturnian moon Daphnis and Pan stir ripples in the giant planet's rings due to their gravitational effect. Five-mile-wide Daphnis (lower left) is perturbing particles in Saturn's A ring, while 17-mile-wide Pan (upper right) has kicked up dark wakes in the ring propagating toward the middle of the image. This picture was taken in visible light by the Cassini spacecraft's narrow-angle camera on June 3, 2010, at a distance of about 329,000 miles from Saturn.

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    This image from NASA's Cassini orbiter shows why Daphnis and Pan are known as "shepherd moons": The gravitational influence of those tiny satellites help keep Saturn's giant rings in line, creating subtle ripples and waves in the process.

    Five-mile-wide Daphnis, at lower left, makes its circuit around Saturn in the Keeler Gap, an open space in the planet's A ring. As it passes through, it perturbs the particles along both sides of the gap, sculpting the edges. To learn more about Daphnis' influence and watch a movie showing the shepherd at work, check out this Web page from the Cassini mission's imaging team.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    Meanwhile, 17-mile-wide Pan performs a similar function in the A ring's Encke Gap at upper right. You can see the dark waves left in the moon's wake by its gravitational influence on the icy particles in the disk. The images on this Web page provide additional perspectives on Pan. Such effects, documented in detail during Cassini's eight years in the Saturnian system, explain why Daphnis was named after a shepherd in Greek mythology, while Pan was named after the god of shepherds.

    More about Saturn's moons and rings:

    • Saturn moons star in dark drama
    • Spot the specks of Saturn's moons
    • Video: Guided tour of Saturn's rings
    • Slideshow: Greatest hits from Cassini

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    11 comments

    If Congress (the opposite of progress) would only boost NASAs funding, we would be able to see many more of the wonders right in our cosmic backyard. These flagship missions are incredible!

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    Explore related topics: space, images, saturn, featured, cassini, cosmic-log, tech-science
  • 14
    May
    2012
    10:09am, EDT

    Photographers join together to raise money for a fallen colleague

    Kate Brooks

    Dec. 2001: Pakistani militants are held in a makeshift prison after being captured for illegally entering Afghanistan. The Afghan authorities later released them on a Ramadan amnesty. This photo is one of several prints donated for a Christie's auction to raise funds of the family of photographer Anton Hammerl.

    Unai Aranzadi

    Freelance photographer Anton Hammerl working near Brega, Libya, April 1, 2011.

    By Phaedra Singelis, msnbc.com

    A little over a year ago, on April 5, 2011, South African photographer Anton Hammerl was killed in Libya, shot by forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi during the fight for Brega, a key oil town on the coast. His body has still not been recovered.

    It was initially reported that Hammerl was captured and was being held by the Libyan government along with fellow journalists James Foley, Manu Brabo and Clare Morgana Gillis, who witnessed the shooting but weren’t able to report his death for 44 days while they were held captive.

    Foley and Gillis, who have both returned to Libya in search of his remains, believe they have traced his body in a mass grave, though it has not been positively identified or returned to his family. Due to the current chaos surrounding the current Libyan government and the tens of thousands still missing, getting DNA testing is complicated, but they hope that, with the support of the South African government, they will prevail and bring his body home.

    As a freelance photographer, Hammerl didn’t have the support of a publication behind him and didn’t have a life insurance policy. He leaves behind his wife, Penny Sukhraj, and three children, Aurora, 11, Neo, 8, and baby Hiro, 1.

    To help the family, a group of international journalists have organized a silent auction of contemporary photojournalism prints to be held at Christie’s on May 15 in New York City. It is the first sale at Christie’s to feature contemporary photojournalism exclusively.

    Lynsey Addario / VII

    A Bhutanese man walks through a forest in Rethung Gonpa village outside of Trashigang, in east Bhutan, August 8, 2007.

    Several lots of limited-edition, signed prints by some of the world’s leading photographers, such as Platon, David Hume Kennerly, David Alan Harvey, Bruce Davidson and Sebastião Salgado, will be offered. Some of the prints, which can be viewed online ahead of the auction, come with additional donations, such as a book or a meeting with the photographer. New York Times photographer Fred Conrad is auctioning off a portrait sitting along with a print.

    Foley and Gillis helped organize the auction with the support of photojournalist David Brabyn based on an idea from Peter Bouckaert of Human Rights Watch. “Anton’s death, unlike Tim (Hetherington) and Chris (Hondros), leaves behind two young children,” Bouckaert wrote on Facebook. “I am wondering if we can’t organize a common print auction where various photographers donate a favorite print.”

    Larry Fink

    Philadelphia, 1990

    With the help of Brabyn, they solicited photographers and built a website. But, deciding that wasn’t enough, they decided to approach a top auction house, eventually gaining the support of Christie’s auctioneer and senior vice president Lydia Fenet. CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour will host the event and Hammerl’s widow will be in attendance. Those who cannot attend can submit an absentee bid or place a telephone bid. Additionally, there are ways to adopt a print, become a sponsor or make a donation.

    In addition to providing support for his family, the organization hopes to raise awareness about the dangers facing an increasing number of freelance journalists who work in perilous situations without the backing of a major news organization.

    Economic pressures and changes in the media landscape in recent years have resulted in fewer staff positions and an increase in journalists going it alone. In addition, assignments in areas of conflict have become more dangerous, in part due to increased anger at Western nations. The Newseum lists 70 journalists that lost their lives in 2011, and so far this year 21 more have died. According to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, 179 journalists were detained in 2011, a 20 percent increase over 2010 and the highest level since 1990. Hammerl’s name, along with 69 other journalists killed in 2011, will be added to the Journalists Memorial at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., during a ceremony on Monday, May 14.

     

    Ed Kashi / VII

    A young Kurdish boy enjoys some play time with found objects in his home in Kirkuk, Iraq on June 6, 2005. The boy's home is a camp for internally displaced Kurds at a former Kirkuk football stadium. After the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and the liberation of Iraq in 2003, many Kurds who had been forcibly removed from Kirkuk during Saddam's program of Arabization returned. There were no homes for them, so they set up camps in abandoned buildings, the football stadium and tents on the outskirts of this embattled city.

    Some of the photographers who donated prints spoke to msnbc.com about why they donated and described the dangers journalists have been facing in recent years.

    Ed Kashi, a New York-based freelance photographer and filmmaker represented by the VII Photo Agency, covers social and political issues and often works in hazardous locations. Winner of numerous awards and exhibited worldwide, Kashi has also produced seven books.

    Kashi says his print donation is a “reflection of his support for the brotherhood/sisterhood of the people who do this kind of work” and an acknowledgement of how much more dangerous it has become. “Just today (May 4, 2012), three journalists were killed in Mexico,” he said. He ascribes the growing toll in part to warfare where there is no front line and therefore no protection offered by being with one side or the other, In addition, he says, there is a growing perception, particularly in Muslim countries, that Western journalists are not neutral actors, thus creating a more treacherous and unpredictable atmosphere.

    Rather than working on spec, Kashi is often on assignment for publications such as National Geographic, which, he says, offers a journalist more security in the sense that it strengthens their “network of communication” should something happen. He says, though, that being willing to take risks is the “nature of the beast,” whether on assignment for a publication or not.

    For journalists who want to work on these kinds of stories, Kashi offers some advice: Build a strong network and line of communication. Set a specific time period to check in and communicate if you’re going to be delayed. Take a rigorous set of precautions, have a plan to get out and listen to your fixers and other people you are working with locally.

    Ron Haviv / VII

    A displaced Muslim girl takes up shelter at a destroyed mosque after fleeing a government offensive against the Tamil Tigers in Nanathan, Sri Lanka, September 2007.

    Ron Haviv, a New York-based freelancer and co-founder of the VII Photo Agency, has made a career covering conflict and humanitarian crises around the world. He has been on assignment for such publications as Fortune, The New Yorker, Paris Match and Time magazine, and has published books on Haiti, Afghanistan and the Balkans.

    Though Haviv never met Hammerl, he says he has been touched personally and professionally by his death and the increasing dangers journalists have been facing, describing the “powerful bond” among those who put their lives at risk.  Competition, he says, isn’t as important as getting the story out, and often they share food, logistics, and information.

    Haviv says that since the War on Terror began after 9/11, journalists’ deaths and injuries have been “eye-opening events for those more established photographers” like himself. The deaths of Anton Hammerl, Tim Hetherington, Chris Hondros, Remi Ochlik, Marie Colvin and Anthony Shadid in the last year also have created a new problem: Editors have pulled back coverage and have been reluctant to put photojournalists on assignment where they would become responsible for their safety.

    Though Haviv hasn’t stopped covering conflicts, recent events have made him more thoughtful about his methods. Early in his career he took a more “haphazard” approach, but is now planning on taking a refresher class in trauma first aid, among other precautions. Despite having covered the Balkan wars, where over 50 journalists were killed from 1991-1995, Haviv says the evolving dangers facing journalists today have taken things to a “whole new level.”

    Joao Silva

    Iraq: Kurmashia Marsh: February 18, 2004: A Marsh Arab poles his canoe through Kirmashiya Marsh in southern Iraq.

    Joao Silva, has been covering conflict since the violent uprising in South Africa in the 1990s as part of what is known as the “Bang Bang Club.” He met Hammerl during this time while they were both working at The Star, one of the most prestigious daily newspapers in South Africa.

    Silva was nearly killed in 2010 and lost both his legs when he stepped on a mine while accompanying soldiers on patrol in Afghanistan. “We’ve taken a big hit,” he says of the conflict photographers’ community, but he doesn’t think they should stop covering the stories. “We are the messenger,” he said. “If we’re not there, who will be?

    “We have a responsibility as journalists to be there. We have a role and a responsibility to society.”

    Silva was injured while on contract for The New York Times, but was not covered as a staff member. Soon after, though, the Times put him on staff and fought to keep him in the military hospital system, where he was cared for at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. “I was one of the lucky ones,” he says, “but Anton was a freelancer, and he didn’t have that support.”

    Joao Silva

    Malawi: Blantyre: June 29, 2005: At a prison in Malawi, inmates sleep on the floor, so tightly packed that they turn only when a designated prisoner wakes them to do so en masse.

    Silva hopes the auction will raise a lot of money. He donated two prints; one was taken in 2004 in Iraq and is one of the more peaceful images he made covering the conflict. It shows how Marsh Arabs reclaimed their way of life after Saddam Hussein was toppled from power. The other is from a Malawian prison in 2005 and depicts inhumane conditions. Silva said the scene reminded him of stories of the conditions aboard slave ships.  Read Silva’s talk at the Bronx Documentary Center about his experience.

    Donate or find out more about the auction at FriendsofAnton.org

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    6 comments

    These courageous photojournalists deserve the respect and gratitude of all for their dauntless dedication to their profession which serves as an antidote to the subterfuge and deceit of those in power by showing images/stories of what is really happening in the world.

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    Explore related topics: media, photography, world-news, us-news, featured, christies, anton-hammerl, print-auction
  • 11
    May
    2012
    3:21pm, EDT

    The World at Night finds beauty in darkness and light

    Slideshow: The World at Night 2012

    Christoph Otawa / The World at Night

    Experience the wonders of the night sky in a slideshow that features the winners of the 2012 "Earth & Sky" contest, presented by The World at Night.

    Launch slideshow

    By Alan Boyle

    Follow @b0yle




    Light pollution never looked so good: The World at Night's annual photography contest highlights the beauties of the night sky, but it also highlights the challenges posed by humanity's efforts to light up the night.

    This year's winners reveal how artificial lighting can add another dimension to the natural wonders of the stars and planets — or spoil the view forever. Hundreds of pictures were sent in from about 50 countries, including exotic locales such as the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia, the national parks of Reunion Island and the savannas of South Africa, said Babak Tafreshi, the founder and leader of The World at Night. "We received a lot of submissions from Asian countries this year, especially China, India, Iran and Indonesia," the Iranian-born astrophotographer said in an email exchange.


    He said the message of The World at Night is definitely getting out: "In general, it looks as if TWAN's aim of reclaiming the natural beauty of the night sky and promoting nightscape photography is reaching a growing audience worldwide, while the activities by amateur and professional astronomers and environmentalists to increase awareness on the light pollution issue is truly getting a lot of public attention."

    This year's contest is limited to images taken since the beginning of 2011, but that leaves a lot to choose from — including pictures of Comet Lovejoy, the spectacular "Christmas Comet" that wowed skywatchers in the southern hemisphere, as well as the stunning auroral images that have cropped up over the past few months. Both those phenomena are represented in today's top-10 roundup from TWAN.

    Tafreshi drew attention to two potential perils facing astrophotographers nowadays: light pollution and photo fakery. He noted that the increasing glare of city lights was "not just an astronomer's problem," but also "a major waste of energy, and like any other form of pollution, it disrupts ecosystems and has adverse health effects."

    "Today, most city skies are virtually empty of stars," he said in his email. "About two-thirds of the human population today lives under light-polluted skies, not dark enough to see the Milky Way. Seeing a real dark sky is a must-see experience in the life of each of us, moments that you will not forget in your entire life."

    Tafreshi also said there's a fast-rising concern about images that may not be telling the truth about the earth and sky.

    "Unfortunately, a majority of photographers who are interested in nightscape photography are less familiar with astronomy, and the natural look and color of the night sky," he said. "So many landscape astrophotos today are intensely saturated, unnaturally contrasted, and sometimes with totally wrong colors of the sky. We had stunning compositions and amazing landscapes at night, some made by famous photographers, which were ruled out of the contest simply because they were 'overcooked' in processing."

    Follow @CosmicLog

    You can rely on TWAN's prize-winning pictures to show the true glories of the night sky, along with the glow of the world below. Check out our slideshow, and read more of Tafreshi's observations in the comment space below.

    More astronomy slideshows:

    • The World at Night 2011
    • Cosmic Log archive of auroral imagery
    • All-time top 10 astronomy pictures from APOD
    • Month in Space Pictures | Year in Space Pictures 2011

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    25 comments

    Babak had a lot to say about the pictures and his "The World at Night" project, and I thought the best way to pass it along would be in this comment space. I also want to express my gratitude to him and all the TWAN photographers for sharing their work. Here are edited excerpts from Babak's email: C …

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    Explore related topics: space, images, featured, astrophotography, cosmic-log, tech-science, twan
  • 11
    May
    2012
    7:08am, EDT

    World War II Kittyhawk fighter found in Sahara, shedding light on pilot's fate

    Jakub Perka

    The discovery of the Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawk in the Sahara Desert was described by one military historian as "the aviation equivalent of Tutankhamun's Tomb."

    By Michele Neubert, NBC News, and Ian Johnston, msnbc.com

    A remarkably well-preserved fighter plane that crashed in the Sahara Desert during World War II has been found 70 years later, shedding new light on the pilot's struggle to survive.

    The American-made Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawk was discovered by a Polish oil worker, Jakub Perka, who was exploring the desert in Egypt, The Telegraph newspaper reported. It was about 200 miles from the nearest town.


    It is believed that the pilot, Dennis Copping, 24, ran into trouble while flying in 1942 but still managed to land the plane on the sands, the paper said.

    Military historian Andy Saunders said that the British flight sergeant "must have survived the crash" because a photograph of the plane showed a parachute had been put up on the side of the plane, apparently as a form of shelter, The Telegraph reported.

    "The radio and batteries were out of the plane, and it looks like he tried to get it working. If he died at the side of the plane, his remains would have been found," Saunders added. "Once he had crashed there, nobody was going to come and get him. It is more likely he tried to walk out of the desert but ended up walking to his death. It is too hideous to contemplate."

    He said the discovery was "the aviation equivalent of Tutankhamun's tomb."

    Air enthusiasts excited
    The Vintage Wings of Canada website speculated that the plane had a mechanical problem, ran out of fuel or that the pilot simply got lost.

    The website said there seemed to be a growing consensus that the plane's serial number was ET 574, based on what could be made out from photographs. If this is confirmed, the website said it was possible that Canadian flying ace James "Stocky" Edwards had previously flown the fighter.

    Jakub Perka

    The plane's cockpit is in remarkable though dusty condition.

    Journalist sacked for defying censors to report German WWII surrender gets apology

    "To say we, at Vintage Wings, are excited by this find is an understatement," the website said.

    It expressed concern the plane had been "seriously vandalized -- a travesty the whole aviation world seems unable to stop."

    Parades commemorate Soviet victory in World War II

    Michael Creane of the Royal Air Force Museum in London, U.K., told NBC News that it was "incredible" the plane had not been submerged by the shifting sands of the desert.

    He said the museum was "hell-bent" on bringing the aircraft to the facility, although he said there were "lots of hoops to jump through."

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy camp axed
    • WWII fighter plane found preserved in Sahara Desert
    • Egypt's first TV presidential debate thrills viewers
    • 88,000-mile voyage? Plastic card found after 33 years
    • Hell-raising holy men: Boozy monks caught gambling
    • Sources: Spy who uncovered underwear bomb plot is a Brit
    • Video: Murder and corruption scandal rocks China
    • Move over, Al Roker! Prince Charles becomes weatherman

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    405 comments

    I clicked on the link because it said "jet fighter." The only "jets" in WWII were German, and at the end of the war. Way to go again, MSNBC.

    Show more
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  • 10
    May
    2012
    10:51am, EDT

    Woman leaps to her death as housing disputes surge in China

    GRAPHIC WARNING: This post contains a graphic image that some viewers may find disturbing. 

    Reuters

    Xian Xiyong cries after his mother, Li Jie'e, jumped off a building and died at a demolition site in Yangji village in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, China on May 10, 2012.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Demolition workers look at a building being taken down in Yangji village on March 21, 2012, the same day that Li Jie'e's home was reportedly destroyed.

    By David R Arnott, msnbc.com

    A Chinese woman leapt to her death on Thursday in apparent despair over the demolition of her home. Li Jie'e's house in Guangzhou had been knocked down on March 21, according to local media reports cited by Reuters. 

    Li had been a resident of Yangji, a former village that has been swallowed up by the rapid expansion of Guangzhou, China's third-largest city with a population of over 12 million. In March, PhotoBlog reported on the desperate protests of another Yangji woman whose home had been destroyed to make way for new developments.

    Hundreds of miles away in the city of Zhaotong, meanwhile, another woman was reported to have blown herself up on Thursday in a protest over the demolition of her house. The blast at a local government office killed the woman and two others.

    Disputes over land rights are the leading cause of surging unrest across China, according to a study cited by Bloomberg News.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Reuters

    Xian, center, the husband of Li Jie'e, accompanied by his son Xiyong, right, pushes his wife's body on a transport stretcher as another relative, left, burns incense in Yangji village on May 10, 2012.

     

    8 comments

    Sad,sad.sad.

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    Explore related topics: human-rights, china, asia, suicide, housing, world-news, featured, guangzhou, yangji, forced-eviction, li-jie-e
  • 10
    May
    2012
    7:52am, EDT

    Orthodox Jews celebrate Lag Ba'omer in Israel and New York

    Oded Balilty / AP

    Ultra-Orthodox Jews stand next to bonfires during Lag Ba'omer celebrations to commemorate the end of a plague said to have decimated Jews in Roman times, in Bnei Brak, Israel, on May 9, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Lag Ba'omer marks the end of a plague that killed thousands of Jewish scholars in ancient times, as well as the anniversary of the death of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, who had rebelled against Roman rule and is believed to be the author of the Zohar, the core text of Kabbalah mysticism. Holiday traditions include lighting bonfires and cutting the hair of three-year-old boys for the first time. 

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Song, dance, costumes and wine at the Jewish festival of Purim
    • The wedding of Chananya and Nechama

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Mike Segar / Reuters

    A young boy watches a bonfire burn as Orthodox Jews of the Satmar Hassidim dance and celebrate the Jewish holiday of Lag Ba'omer in the village of Kiryas Joel, Orange County, New York, on May 9, 2012.

    Ammar Awad / Reuters

    Ultra-Orthodox Jewish boys sit in front of girls and women as they look at a bonfire lit on the Jewish holiday of Lag Ba'omer in Jerusalem's Mea Shearim neighborhood on May 9, 2012.

    Ariel Schalit / AP

    A man cuts a boy's hair next to the grave of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai during Lag Ba'omer celebrations at Mt. Meron in northern Israel, on May 10, 2012.

    Mike Segar / Reuters

    Men of the Orthodox Jewish Satmar Hassidim crowd the steps of a synagogue (backround) as women of the sect stand in a separate area (front) as they celebrate Lag Ba'omer in the village of Kiryas Joel, New York, on May 9, 2012.

    Nir Elias / Reuters

    An ultra-Orthodox woman prays during traditional festivities for Lag Ba'omer near the grave of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai on Mount Meron in northern Israel on May 10, 2012.

     

    15 comments

    Very interesting. Thanks, cnn, for some coverage of a people that in fact HAS contributed greatly in a very positive way to the history and culture of the entire world.

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    Explore related topics: israel, new-york, middle-east, religion, jewish, featured, festivals, ultra-orthodox, lag-ba-omer
  • 9
    May
    2012
    10:19am, EDT

    Parades commemorate Soviet victory in World War II

    Anatoly Maltsev / EPA

    ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA: Members of military-historical clubs wearing Soviet World War II-era uniforms dance at the Warsaw train station in St.Petersburg on May 9, 2012, marking Victory Day celebrations.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images

    KIEV, UKRAINE: A boy climbs on a World War II monument at an open air museum in Kiev on May 9, 2012.

    Natalia Kolesnikova / AFP - Getty Images

    MOSCOW, RUSSIA: Russia's newly-inaugurated President Vladimir Putin and new Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev watch a Victory Day parade at Red Square on May 9, 2012.

    Maxim Shipenkov / EPA

    MOSCOW, RUSSIA: Russian WWII veterans drink during celebrations marking the 67th anniversary of victory over Germany on May 9, 2012.

    Reuters reports — President Vladimir Putin, speaking in Moscow's Red Square with military generals at his side, said he would promote Russia's might on the world stage in a patriotic speech on Wednesday glorifying the Soviet victory over Germany in World War Two.

    Two days after being sworn in for a six-year term that has drawn protests against his return to the Kremlin, Putin used the address to troops and war veterans at the annual military parade on Red Square to reinforce appeals for national unity.

    400 protesters arrested hours before Putin's return to Russian presidency

    "Russia consistently follows a policy of strengthening global security and we have a great moral right to stand up determinedly for our positions because our country suffered the blow of Nazism," Putin said on a podium flanked by military chiefs bristling with medals under the Kremlin's red walls. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Abir Sultan / EPA

    JERUSALEM, ISRAEL: Relatives of Israeli veterans who fought against the Nazis wear Soviet uniforms as they march in Jerusalem on May 9, 2012.

    ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA: People meet the 'Victory train, a vintage locomotive with members of a historical military club aboard, at Varshavsky railway station on May 9, 2012.

    Ilmars Znotins / AFP - Getty Images

    RIGA, LATVIA: A boy wearing an old military hat looks on as his father makes tea at the World War II monument in Riga on May 9, 2012.

     

    102 comments

    Hey just a refresher, Stalin killed more people than Hitler did.

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    Explore related topics: russia, europe, world-war-ii, soviet-union, conflict, world-news, featured
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Jon Sweeney

Multimedia producer for MSNBC.com, father of three, and newly transplanted to the Pacific Northwest.

Alan Boyle

Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

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