For A Minute, Just For A Minute, You Made It Feel Like Home. Maren And Lee In Bones And All (2022)

For A Minute, Just For A Minute, You Made It Feel Like Home. Maren And Lee In Bones And All (2022)
For A Minute, Just For A Minute, You Made It Feel Like Home. Maren And Lee In Bones And All (2022)
For A Minute, Just For A Minute, You Made It Feel Like Home. Maren And Lee In Bones And All (2022)
For A Minute, Just For A Minute, You Made It Feel Like Home. Maren And Lee In Bones And All (2022)
For A Minute, Just For A Minute, You Made It Feel Like Home. Maren And Lee In Bones And All (2022)

For a minute, just for a minute, you made it feel like home. Maren and Lee in Bones and All (2022)

More Posts from Luhuhul and Others

2 years ago
Shout Out To ❤️ Girls Covered In Blood ❤️
Shout Out To ❤️ Girls Covered In Blood ❤️
Shout Out To ❤️ Girls Covered In Blood ❤️
Shout Out To ❤️ Girls Covered In Blood ❤️

shout out to ❤️ girls covered in blood ❤️

Neon demon / The end of the fucking world/ Last night in Soho / Ready or not

4 years ago
Wildflowers In Fog, Mount Rainier By Lazgrapher
Wildflowers In Fog, Mount Rainier By Lazgrapher
Wildflowers In Fog, Mount Rainier By Lazgrapher
Wildflowers In Fog, Mount Rainier By Lazgrapher

Wildflowers in Fog, Mount Rainier by Lazgrapher

1 year ago
Hunts Mesa, Utah By Jeroen Fransen
Hunts Mesa, Utah By Jeroen Fransen
Hunts Mesa, Utah By Jeroen Fransen
Hunts Mesa, Utah By Jeroen Fransen
Hunts Mesa, Utah By Jeroen Fransen

Hunts Mesa, Utah by Jeroen Fransen

6 years ago
Soft  ♡
Soft  ♡
Soft  ♡
Soft  ♡

soft  ♡

6 years ago
First Color Pouring (of Course Twenty One Pilots Inspired)
First Color Pouring (of Course Twenty One Pilots Inspired)
First Color Pouring (of Course Twenty One Pilots Inspired)
First Color Pouring (of Course Twenty One Pilots Inspired)

First color pouring (of course twenty one pilots inspired)

Click on it for better quality

6 years ago

Haaaaa

Declan said that Mexico City’s show was the biggest show he has done outside England so he played a new song to say thank you 👏🏼😍🙌🏻 Here’s a little part of that song called BE AN ASTRONAUT 👩‍🚀

4 years ago

Have You Ever Seen An Eclipse From Space? Check It Out

On June 21, 2020 an annular solar eclipse passed over parts of Asia and Africa. Eclipses happen when the Moon lines up just right between the Sun and Earth, allowing it to block out part or all of the Sun’s bright face and cast a shadow on Earth. 

Have You Ever Seen An Eclipse From Space? Check It Out

On that day, the International Space Station was orbiting over Kazakhstan and into China when this picture of the solar eclipse shadowing a portion of the Asian continent was captured by an external high definition camera. In the left foreground, is the H-II Transfer Vehicle-9 from Japan.

Have You Ever Seen An Eclipse From Space? Check It Out

Here is another angle as seen from the orbital lab. In the left foreground, is the Progress 74 resupply ship from Russia.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

6 years ago
While Recording The Italian Tv Show “Odeon” In 1977. Pics By Piero Togni
While Recording The Italian Tv Show “Odeon” In 1977. Pics By Piero Togni
While Recording The Italian Tv Show “Odeon” In 1977. Pics By Piero Togni
While Recording The Italian Tv Show “Odeon” In 1977. Pics By Piero Togni
While Recording The Italian Tv Show “Odeon” In 1977. Pics By Piero Togni

While recording the italian tv show “Odeon” in 1977. Pics by Piero Togni

6 years ago

Black Holes are NICER Than You Think!

We’re learning more every day about black holes thanks to one of the instruments aboard the International Space Station! Our Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) instrument is keeping an eye on some of the most mysterious cosmic phenomena.

image

We’re going to talk about some of the amazing new things NICER is showing us about black holes. But first, let’s talk about black holes — how do they work, and where do they come from? There are two important types of black holes we’ll talk about here: stellar and supermassive. Stellar mass black holes are three to dozens of times as massive as our Sun while supermassive black holes can be billions of times as massive!

image

Stellar black holes begin with a bang — literally! They are one of the possible objects left over after a large star dies in a supernova explosion. Scientists think there are as many as a billion stellar mass black holes in our Milky Way galaxy alone!

Supermassive black holes have remained rather mysterious in comparison. Data suggest that supermassive black holes could be created when multiple black holes merge and make a bigger one. Or that these black holes formed during the early stages of galaxy formation, born when massive clouds of gas collapsed billions of years ago. There is very strong evidence that a supermassive black hole lies at the center of all large galaxies, as in our Milky Way.

image

Imagine an object 10 times more massive than the Sun squeezed into a sphere approximately the diameter of New York City — or cramming a billion trillion people into a car! These two examples give a sense of how incredibly compact and dense black holes can be.

Because so much stuff is squished into such a relatively small volume, a black hole’s gravity is strong enough that nothing — not even light — can escape from it. But if light can’t escape a dark fate when it encounters a black hole, how can we “see” black holes?

image

Scientists can’t observe black holes directly, because light can’t escape to bring us information about what’s going on inside them. Instead, they detect the presence of black holes indirectly — by looking for their effects on the cosmic objects around them. We see stars orbiting something massive but invisible to our telescopes, or even disappearing entirely!

When a star approaches a black hole’s event horizon — the point of no return — it’s torn apart. A technical term for this is “spaghettification” — we’re not kidding! Cosmic objects that go through the process of spaghettification become vertically stretched and horizontally compressed into thin, long shapes like noodles.

image

Scientists can also look for accretion disks when searching for black holes. These disks are relatively flat sheets of gas and dust that surround a cosmic object such as a star or black hole. The material in the disk swirls around and around, until it falls into the black hole. And because of the friction created by the constant movement, the material becomes super hot and emits light, including X-rays.  

At last — light! Different wavelengths of light coming from accretion disks are something we can see with our instruments. This reveals important information about black holes, even though we can’t see them directly.

image

So what has NICER helped us learn about black holes? One of the objects this instrument has studied during its time aboard the International Space Station is the ever-so-forgettably-named black hole GRS 1915+105, which lies nearly 36,000 light-years — or 200 million billion miles — away, in the direction of the constellation Aquila.

Scientists have found disk winds — fast streams of gas created by heat or pressure — near this black hole. Disk winds are pretty peculiar, and we still have a lot of questions about them. Where do they come from? And do they change the shape of the accretion disk?

image

It’s been difficult to answer these questions, but NICER is more sensitive than previous missions designed to return similar science data. Plus NICER often looks at GRS 1915+105 so it can see changes over time.

NICER’s observations of GRS 1915+105 have provided astronomers a prime example of disk wind patterns, allowing scientists to construct models that can help us better understand how accretion disks and their outflows around black holes work.

image

NICER has also collected data on a stellar mass black hole with another long name — MAXI J1535-571 (we can call it J1535 for short) — adding to information provided by NuSTAR, Chandra, and MAXI. Even though these are all X-ray detectors, their observations tell us something slightly different about J1535, complementing each other’s data!

This rapidly spinning black hole is part of a binary system, slurping material off its partner, a star. A thin halo of hot gas above the disk illuminates the accretion disk and causes it to glow in X-ray light, which reveals still more information about the shape, temperature, and even the chemical content of the disk. And it turns out that J1535’s disk may be warped!

image

Image courtesy of NRAO/AUI and Artist: John Kagaya (Hoshi No Techou)

This isn’t the first time we have seen evidence for a warped disk, but J1535’s disk can help us learn more about stellar black holes in binary systems, such as how they feed off their companions and how the accretion disks around black holes are structured.

NICER primarily studies neutron stars — it’s in the name! These are lighter-weight relatives of black holes that can be formed when stars explode. But NICER is also changing what we know about many types of X-ray sources. Thanks to NICER’s efforts, we are one step closer to a complete picture of black holes. And hey, that’s pretty nice!

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

4 years ago
Piet Mondrian - Farm Near Duivendrecht, In The Evening. 1916

Piet Mondrian - Farm Near Duivendrecht, in the Evening. 1916

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luhuhul - Everlasting
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