Nov22_01.jpg May 2026

"Nov22_01.jpg" refers to a specific landscape photograph of , a famous mountain in the Mont Blanc massif near Chamonix, France, captured by photographer Jean-François Hagenmuller.

The image is part of the collection and is characterized by a sunset glow on the snowy peaks. Below is a descriptive "piece" inspired by the atmosphere of that photograph: The Crimson Spine of Les Drus Nov22_01.jpg

In this frame, the mountain is no longer just stone and ice—it is a monument to the fleeting. The sharp, vertical geometry of the Petit Dru stands defiant against a sky that is cooling into twilight. There is a profound silence captured here; the kind of stillness found only at high altitudes, where the wind has momentarily held its breath to let the mountain glow. "Nov22_01

The contrast is where the magic lives: the deep, violet-bruised snow of the lower slopes set against the searing orange of the peaks. It’s a reminder that even the most ancient, immovable giants are subject to the transformative power of a single, passing moment of light. The sharp, vertical geometry of the Petit Dru

jpg", such as the one from the GMI Dental clinical archives , or should I dive deeper into the photography of the French Alps ? AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more Banque d'Images - Drus - Lumieres d'Altitude

The day doesn’t end quietly in the Chamonix valley; it ignites. As the sun dips below the horizon, the granite spires of Les Drus catch the final, desperate rays of light, transforming the cold, blue shadows of the Alps into a burning silhouette of copper and rose.

Documentation and Tutorials

LinkageDesigner package contains full fledged reference manual of all defined function. The reference manuals are available in the standard help system of Mathematica and in HTML format. Getting started tutorial explains the basic use cases of LinkageDesigner package.

Reference Manual

Example studies

Inverse kinematic analysis are standard part of robotic and machining simulation. Fig 1. displays a simulation of an robot, whose Tool Center Point moves along a line. Fig 4. displays a 5-axis milling simulation study where the position and orientation of the milling tool was derived from the underlying workpiece geometry.

Linkage synthesis often divided into two part i.)type and ii.) dimensional synthesis. Both synthesis reflect to a desired motion, since the result of the syntesis is a linkage that produce the requested motion. Fig 2. shows a dimensional synthesis problem, when the arm lengths of the boom linkage are copied from the drawing (US Patent US5511932). Fig 3. displays the result of a type and dimensional synthesis of a planar linkage that defines an intermittent linear motion.

Gear trains and gear boxes can be modelled as linkages too. LinkageDesigner supports not only the gear train mechanism but also the generation of the solid geometries of the gears. Fig 5. display the animation study of a module 2 planetary gear with 21-39 sun-planet teeth ratio. Finally Fig 6. display a motion study that was based on a list of gait measurement values.

Nov22_01.jpg
Nov22_01.jpg
Nov22_01.jpg