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panerai luminor marina replica records the timing of one stage of the Tour de France
I asked Pascal Rossier, Head of Sports Operations and Services to explain how such a small distance could be measured. He explained to me that we don't measure distance but time. Time is the essence of the Tour. The cyclist who covers the most distance in the fastest time is the winner. If the distance is known, the only thing that must be measured is the time. However, I was not used to the idea of a time scale, especially when looking at a photo showing a finish line where you can clearly see wheels and bicycles going forward.
"What we use to finish the photo is not only a timing device but also a photograph device. Imagine looking through a small gap between two shutters on your windows and seeing a cyclist pass by.Best Replica Watches
You won't see the entire bike at any point. Instead, you will see each bike that passes through the slit. The mind will then piece it together to make a bicycle. This is how we create the photo-finish image. It is composed of up to 10,000 frames per seconds of what is happening on the finish line. The image is then merged together to create a horizontal axis image that we can move around and zoom in. Rossier said that it looks like one image, but actually consists of many'slices.
The high-resolution camera captures a segment every 0.0001 seconds, so Kittel and Boasson Hagen were separated by an eternity. Time is a problem. It seems like the commentators could have taken more before declaring it a tie.
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Photo of the stage's finish
Impressions of Time
Philosophers will be familiar with the fact that time can be fidgety. Time is not what it seems. Although I can't say I fully grasped the concept at school, I did begin to understand it during the final 10km.Cartier Replica Watches
After warming up until we reached the 10km mark, we decided to give it our best until we reached the final kilometre, or "flamme rouge," as it is called.
To take the lead, I set out to ride as fast as possible. Although the first three kilometres were easy, the final 3km that separated me from the finish seemed difficult and took a lot of time. Tony Martin, a German cyclist who has been crowned four-time world champion in time trials, asked me if he felt the same sense of passing time while riding. He replied, "Not really." "If you feel power on your bike, that is all you can really feel. You're not alone when you ride. You realize that you can't ride alone if your legs are weak.