사진 정리 시작

사진이 많아져서 정리가 필요한 시점이라고 판단
작년 한 해 동안 찍은 사진들을 시간별로 몇장 올려 볼까 생각중이다.


작년 졸업식때 찍은 사진을 부터 올려야지 순서가 맞지만 그 사진들은 집에 있군 -┎
그래서 대학원OT 사진부터 시작이다!




2005// 2// 26

내연산으로 출발
숙소 도착후 참을수 없는 어색함이 감돌고...
그때까진 서로에 대해 잘 몰랐었나?? --;;;
아님 회장누나와 부회장 선배에 대한 낯설음때문 인가..
그 어색함이 아직도 어렴풋이 기억이 난다.

식당이 좀 추웠지만 그래도 맛있는 저녁을 먹고서,
본격적인 OT가 시작되었지  ㅋ
                                 
                                     중간에 술깬다고 정수형의 소개로 "??"를 배워서 하고 있다.
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                              판돈이 점 얼마 였더라 ;; 뭐 십원짜리 굴러다니는거 보고 짐작해보길 ㅋ



2005// 2// 27

아침을 먹고서 산을 타기 시작
그리 높지 않을 거라는 나의 예상을 뒤로하고,
눈덮힌 산길을 구두를 신고(-_-;;;)  4~5시간 동안 곡예를 하며 다녔다 ..
중간에 듬직한 나무막대를 구해서 좀 효과좀 봤었지 ㅋ  (능력치 향상해준다며 --;;;;;)





이제부터 시작이다, 출발하면서 한컷~

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근대 사진에 안보이는 사람이 꽤 있군  (몇명은 산행을 거부했었다 ㅋ)

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앞서가는 민화 !~  여전하구만 ㅋ



아슬아슬 ㅡㅂㅡ;;      떨어지면 덜덜덜 ;;


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그래도 마침네 정상은 아니지만 목표지점 도착 ~

근대 재열이 춥게 입고가서 선명형과 옷이 바뀐점을 주목핼 볼 필요가 있다 ㅋ

숙소에 돌아오니 맛있는 점심과 후식(수정과였나? )이 기다리고 있었지.

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여담 : 찬 겨울바람은 몸에 좋지 않더군요, 특히나 ....  ㅎㅎ


그 날 이후에 말 못할 일에 몇달간 고생한 사람이 있었다는

   ( 신입생 환영회때 그 비밀이 밝혀졌던 그 사건 !! ㅋㅋㅋ)


2006/01/11 12:15 2006/01/11 12:15
2006/01/07 02:22 2006/01/07 02:22

The Adiabatic Principle


The Adiabatic Principle


There is a fundamental principle in physics, found in slightly different forms in mechanics, thermodynamics, and quantum theory, and generally known as the adiabatic principle. Its basic use in physics is to simplify complex analyses by justifying the neglect of certain possible (but hard to calculate) interactions as being almost certainly too small to make a noticeable difference in the final answer (the adiabatic approximation). ‘Adiabatic’ basically means ‘it doesn’t get through’ referring to energy, fields, or information. In its most basic form it is a statement about energy transfer, and it says that it takes time for energy to be transferred from one system to another; therefore the faster something happens, the less energy is transferred. This means, in effect, that a very fast and a relatively much slower process cannot efficiently communicate with one another, cannot transfer energy. This is the basic warrant for the buffering or filtering effect between non-adjacent levels in the timescale hierarchy, and therefore for the usefulness of defining timescales as being distinct from one another in the first place. 

A process which produces change only very slowly seems to us not to be a process at all, but a constant fact of life. Very slow changes do not produce ‘differences that make a difference’ (Bateson 1972) to us; they do not matter to human life. Weather change processes make a big difference to us, but climate change processes are so slow as to be irrelevant (normally, but that may be changing!). The continents are moving, the Earth’s magnetic poles are shifting, the equinoxes are precessing, the rotation of the earth is slowing, the energy output of the sun is changing -- but not fast enough to matter to our sense of geography or day and night. 

Or consider very fast processes, much faster than those at our nominal one-second focal level. If you run fast enough across the hot beachsand your feet get less burned because less total energy is transferred to you in the shorter time (for hot coals you may need additional help.) The extreme case was graphically illustrated in a recent film of H.G. Wells’ classic The Time Machine, in which the protagonist survives a nuclear blast in London by accelerating through time at the maximum rate, thus spending too little time in the actual moments of blast energy for very much of it to transfer to him and the machine. Closer to home, fast molecular and atomic processes within the human body do not play a role in our much slower biochemistry, nor can we decipher speech presented to us more rapidly than the maximum rate at which our neurons can respond and process the signals. Moreover, and this goes beyond and adds to the separability of timescales guaranteed by the adiabatic principle, we are buffered from fast, small-scale events, like ionization of individual atoms in our bodies or even errors in gene transcription, by longer term regulatory and self-correcting processes typical of the intermediate scales of autopoietic or self-organizing systems. 

Of course our small degree of autonomy from the environment, within and without, at smaller scales and larger ones, has its distinct limits. One molecular error in one cell can sometimes lead to a cancer that kills the organism. Someday we may cross a threshold in long-term climate change processes and find sudden droughts and famines on a very human timescale. The adiabatic principle has exceptions, and one of these is fundamental to human social organization.

출처 : http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jaylemke/webs/time/mca-adiabatic.htm
2006/01/06 22:15 2006/01/06 22:15