Motion -
capture cameras ringing the soundstage track its position and use that data to compute a realistic virtual image displayed on the monitor.
Not exact matches
Captured by Cassini's narrow - angle
camera, five of Saturn's 62 known moons appear together, hovering near the planet's outer
rings.
In this exaggerated - color image, the beams fanning away from the
rings are an artifact of the photographic process, just as a personal
camera sometimes
captures the glare in a snapshot at the beach.
In this rare image taken on July 19, 2013, Cassini's wide angle
camera has
captured Saturn's
rings and our planet Earth and its moon in the same frame.
This view of Saturn's moon Enceladus above the planet's
ring plane was
captured by the narrow - angle
camera of NASA's Cassini spacecraft at a distance of approximately 630,000 miles (1 million kilometres) from the tiny water world.
Two days before its final plunge into Saturn, the Cassini spacecraft turned its
camera toward the
ringed world to take a series of images for a colour mosaic,
capturing a last evocative close - up until a new mission reaches the planet.
Saturn's icy moon Mimas (lower L) is seen while looking toward the sunlit side of the planet's
rings, and was
captured in red light with the Cassini spacecraft wide - angle
camera on July 21, 2016, in this handout image from NASA.
Just imagine having to shift through 70 hours of footage that came from the 5 «HBO»
cameras and then the 2 - 3 film
cameras used to
capture the action taking place outside of the
ring — and that was just for the boxing scenes.
When we see the interviews through Vivian's
camera — whether zooming in on her subjects» wedding
rings or secretly
capturing footage of her subjects after they've told her to stop filming — the view is hilariously over-the-top.
Once you twist the
ring to extend the ink cartridge, everything you write is
captured by the infrared
camera on the pen and stored on the smartpen's built - in memory.