untitled by rosemary* on Flickr.
Doggy lips kind of creep me out. (via imgur)
ISTP: laughs out loud when the protagonist dies
ESTP: dubs over the characters in dumb voices
INTP: keeps telling people trivia they've read about the casting process for the film
ENTP: eats 80% of the available popcorn and ruins dramatic moments with witty comments
INFP: secretly roots for the bad guy because he has the most interesting backstory
ENFP: battles with ENTP over the remaining 20% of the popcorn
ISFP: secretly looks around to see people's reactions to their favorite scene
ESFP: keeps chatting with their friends on the phone, occasionally looks up to the movie and asks what's happening
ISFJ: couldn't care less about the protagonist dying, tears up when the dog dies
ESFJ: keeps telling ENTP and ESTP to stop ruining the movie
ISTJ: patiently explains ESFP what's going on each time they ask
ESTJ: has given up trying to watch the movie, instead starts pointing out things saying "that wouldn't really happen"
INTJ: somehow manages to focus on the movie despite the ruckus around them, sees the end twist from miles ahead
ENTJ: argues with ESTJ claiming the things they point out could really happen
INFJ: openly roots for the bad guy because he has the most interesting backstory
ENFJ: asks which movie they should watch next, is disappointed when everyone's had enough and leaves
Wip of my very last parrot piece
• any target • churches in texas • abandoned 7/11’s • your bedroom at 5 am • hospitals at midnight • warehouses that smell like dust • lighthouses with lights that don’t work anymore • empty parking lots • ponds and lakes in suburban neighborhoods • rooftops in the early morning • inside a dark cabinet
I am ready for misty mornings, warm coffee, leggings, and oversized sweaters. I am ready for Autumn’s chilling hug and breezy embrace.
You don’t have to know a whole lot about science to know that black holes typically suck things in, not spew things out. But NASA just spotted something mighty strange at the supermassive black hole Markarian 335.
Two of NASA’s space telescopes, including the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR), miraculously observed a black hole’s corona “launched” away from the supermassive black hole. Then a massive pulse of X-ray energy spewed out. So, what exactly happened? That’s what scientists are trying to figure out now.
“This is the first time we have been able to link the launching of the corona to a flare,” Dan Wilkins, of Saint Mary’s University, said. “This will help us understand how supermassive black holes power some of the brightest objects in the universe.”
NuSTAR’s principal investigator, Fiona Harrison, noted that the nature of the energetic source is “mysterious,” but added that the ability to actually record the event should provide some clues about the black hole’s size and structure, along with (hopefully) some fresh intel on how black holes function. Luckily for us, this black hole is still 324 million light-years away.
So, no matter what strange things it’s doing, it shouldn’t have any effect on our corner of the universe.
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