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More Posts from Delightfulskywalker and Others

7 years ago

21082017

delightfulskywalker - 🥀
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5 years ago
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!
The Mandalorian Chapter Posters. Finally Completed!

The Mandalorian chapter posters. Finally completed! <3

Prints | Smartphone Wallpapers

7 years ago

First car in space!

Last night, Tesla Roadster went into orbit and became the fastest car in the universe:

First Car In Space!

If it was pulled over by space-police, they would have charged Elon a speeding ticket of exceeding 40'555 km per hour!

First Car In Space!

The surrealism of the situation is truly mind-blowing:

First Car In Space!

Highly amusing is the phrase “DO NOT PANIC” on the car’s dashboard, taken from the excellent book series “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”:

First Car In Space!

Elon even shoved a copy of the book and a towel into the glove box so that the space-suited manequin would have something fun to read on his infinite journeys!

First Car In Space!

Inside the car, there’s a sign “made on earth by humans”, in case aliens ever catch it adrift in space and take it apart for clues:

First Car In Space!

The car was supposed to fly towards Mars orbit, but they’ve overshot it so now it’s heading into the Asteroid Belt orbit:

First Car In Space!

Especially interesting is the fact that we’re witnessing sci-fi of 1979 come to Life. In the Heavy Metal movie, Soft Landing segment, which Elon must have seen when he was 11 years old there’s this scene:

First Car In Space!

Same scene, but in the Heavy metal magazine:

First Car In Space!

What a magical time to be alive!

First Car In Space!
5 years ago

Research

What would aliens think about research? By that, I mean the research of treacherous things, like volcanoes. Humans can send in drones to get samples or survey an environment, but sometimes, and especially in the times when research methods weren’t as advanced as today (or at times of space travel).

For example, Isaac Newton stuck a needle in his eye and poked around to study how humans perceive colors. (He did learn a lot but… eugh.) Sir Humphrey Davy generated chemical reactions and inhaled (potentially dangerous) gaseous products to note what happened. One scientist tried heart catheterization on himself when he couldn’t get approval to try it on a human.

Maybe aliens would think that humans were pretty dumb for doing all that, but it was early on, and these guys have learned better now.

Oh, no. There is currently a lava lake in Antarctica that occasionally spews a fall of fire now and then. Scientists go to that lake, in the freezing cold, with the risk of lava bombs spewing at them, to take measurements and make observations of the area. Sure, there are sensors too, but scientists still go to physically visit the area for data.

Scientists will go into submarines to study the deep ocean, a place with little or no sunlight and strange, possibly dangerous creatures. In addition, the pressure underneath all that water is immense. If a problem happened and the submarine was damaged, results could very easily be fatal.

Speaking of nature, there are scientists who will go into rainforests to meet 9possibly hostile) natives living within, or to learn more about animal behavior. It’s very risky work. There is a constant threat of predator attacks. The plants could kill you if you don’t pay enough attention. You could very easily catch a disease from the wildlife and fall gravely ill.

And what about space travel? Humans stuck themselves on rockets loaded with fuel and tried to get outside of the atmosphere. Sure, they ran tests and simulations, but no one knew for certain if it would really work. Some rockets exploded, killing the astronauts within. It was a very real possibility for anyone in a rocket but humans kept trying anyway.

Sure, humans take every safety precaution they can think of. Sure, they spend lots of time, energy, and resources to keep fellow humans as safe as possible. They still knowingly place themselves in possibly extremely dangerous situations for the sake of science. How strange is that?

7 years ago
Mark Hamill, New York, 1980

Mark Hamill, New York, 1980

4 years ago
STAR WARS REBELS (2017) | THE MANDALORIAN (2019-)
STAR WARS REBELS (2017) | THE MANDALORIAN (2019-)
STAR WARS REBELS (2017) | THE MANDALORIAN (2019-)
STAR WARS REBELS (2017) | THE MANDALORIAN (2019-)
STAR WARS REBELS (2017) | THE MANDALORIAN (2019-)
STAR WARS REBELS (2017) | THE MANDALORIAN (2019-)

STAR WARS REBELS (2017) | THE MANDALORIAN (2019-)


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6 years ago
Odin’s Children
Odin’s Children
Odin’s Children

Odin’s Children

7 years ago

Characteristics of the moons of Saturn

Saturn has 62 natural satellites. Here are some features of some of its moons, with mountains, valleys, and striking marks on their surfaces, often marked by asteroid bombardments causing small, huge craters.

image

Iapetus -  Equatorial ridge

Iapetus’s equatorial ridge was discovered when the Cassini spacecraft imaged Iapetus on 31 December 2004. Peaks in the ridge rise more than 20 km above the surrounding plains, making them some of the tallest mountains in the Solar System. The ridge forms a complex system including isolated peaks, segments of more than 200 km and sections with three near parallel ridges. 

image

Tethys - Odysseus crater

Odysseus is the largest crater on Saturn’s moon Tethys. It is 445 km across, more than 2/5 of the moon’s diameter, and is one of the largest craters in the Solar System.

image

Tethys - Ithaca Chasma

Ithaca Chasma is a valley (graben) on Saturn’s moon Tethys, named after the island of Ithaca, in Greece. It is up to 100 km wide, 3 to 5 km deep and 2,000 km long, running approximately three-quarters of the way around Tethys’ circumference, making it one of the longer valleys in the Solar System. Ithaca Chasma is approximately concentric with Odysseus crater. 

image

Tethys - Red arcs

Unusual arc-shaped, reddish streaks cut across the surface of Saturn’s ice-rich moon Tethys in this enhanced-color mosaic. The red streaks are narrow, curved lines on the moon’s surface, only a few miles (or kilometers) wide but several hundred miles (or kilometers) long.

image

Rhea - Inktomi crater

Inktomi, also known as The Splat, is a prominent rayed impact crater 47.2 kilometres (29.3 mi) in diameter located in the southern hemisphere of Saturn’s moon Rhea.

image

Mimas - Herschel Crater

Herschel is a huge crater in the leading hemisphere of the Saturnian moon Mimas, on the equator at 100° longitude. It is so large that astronomers have expressed surprise that Mimas was not shattered by the impact that caused it. It measures 139 kilometres (86 miles) across, almost one third the diameter of Mimas. If there were a crater of an equivalent scale on Earth it would be over 4,000 km (2,500 mi) in diameter – wider than Canada – with walls over 200 km (120 mi) high.

image

Enceladus - Surface with fractures

Close up of one of the ‘tiger stripes” or fissures called Baghdad Sulcus. Both heat and occasional geysers issue from this formidable crack. Some of the material coating the landscape may be snow condensed from vapor. This closeup of the surface of Enceladus on November 21, 2009, viewed from approximately 1,260 miles (2,028 kilometers) away. 

image

Dione - Contrasts

This image from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft shows a part of Dione’s surface that is covered by linear, curving features, called chasmata. One possibility is that this stress pattern may be related to Dione’s orbital evolution and the effect of tidal stresses over time. This view looks toward the trailing hemisphere of Dione. 

Learn more: Iapetus, Tethys, Rhea, Mimas, Enceladus and Dione.

Images: NASA/JPL-Caltech

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"Hope is like the sun. If you only believe it when you see it, you'll never make it through the night." -Princess Leia

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