Dancer's Cartwheel, 1940. At a photography fair in Chicago, Kodak introduced Edgerton's Kodatron strobe with a demonstration of its ability to record rapid movement. At1/3,000 of a second, the flash stopped the dancer's momentum in the middle of her seem


Dancer's Cartwheel, 1940. At a photography fair in Chicago, Kodak introduced Edgerton's Kodatron strobe with a demonstration of its ability to record rapid movement. At1/3,000 of a second, the flash stopped the dancer's momentum in the middle of her seemingly impossible move. The art of high-speed photography records these kinds of fast-moving objects, documenting things that are normally invisible to the human eye. Scientists use high-speed photographs to study physical movement, measuring phenomena like surface tension and gravitational effects.


Size: 3893px × 3096px
Photo credit: © Photo Researchers / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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