cpt-langosta: onion-souls: snarcadegannon: squirtlesquad-rebellion: perkachow: remmoran-kynvahl: mamasam: tonyabbot: scary-monsters-and-davesprite: lonelyinsomniac: samsaranmusing: Orbital path of asteroid near miss in 2002. Yah, that’s how close we came to nuclear winter and possible total destruction. A visitor. It’s like it’s trying so hard to hit us and it just can’t do it All I can imagine is every …

decepticonsensual: gallusrostromegalus: jewishdragon: frosttrix: bigscaryd: animatedamerican: rainaramsay: argumate: gdanskcityofficial: collapsedsquid: argumate: If space travel doesn’t involve sea shanties then I think we’ll have missed an opportunity. You see though, for sea travel you want big strong people who are capable of managing rigging.  For space travel you want small low-mass people who are technically educated, …

jumpingjacktrash: teratocybernetics: momothefiddler: momothefiddler: transagenda: codeawayhaley: According to the laws of physics, a planet in the shape of a doughnut (toroid) could exist. Physicist Anders Sandberg says that such planets would have very short nights and days, an arid outer equator, twilight polar regions, moons in strange orbits and regions with very different gravity and …

loverscarvings: ohstarstuff: Sharpest View of the Andromeda Galaxy, Ever. The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured the sharpest and biggest image ever taken of the Andromeda galaxy — a whopping 69,536 x 22,230 pixels. The enormous image is the biggest Hubble image ever released and shows over 100 million stars and thousands of star clusters embedded in …

we-are-star-stuff: A picture of every celestial body that robots have landed on and photographed In chronological order:Moon – 1966 June 2ndVenus – 1975 June 8thMars – 1976 July 20thTitan – 2005 January 14thItokawa – 2005 November 20th67P (Churyumov Gerasimenko) – 2014 November 12 Source: we-are-star-stuff

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