They Never Look At Me With The Telescope

They Never Look At Me With The Telescope

They never look at me with the telescope

More Posts from Nauticastro and Others

4 years ago

How the media depicts the Apollo 11 mission:

How The Media Depicts The Apollo 11 Mission:

Actual quotes from the Apollo 11 mission:

How The Media Depicts The Apollo 11 Mission:
How The Media Depicts The Apollo 11 Mission:
How The Media Depicts The Apollo 11 Mission:
How The Media Depicts The Apollo 11 Mission:
How The Media Depicts The Apollo 11 Mission:
5 years ago

The Risk of Apollo: Astronauts Swap Harrowing Tales from NASA's Moon Shots

The Risk Of Apollo: Astronauts Swap Harrowing Tales From NASA's Moon Shots

Buzz Aldrin tells a great story of how he and Neil were almost stranded on the surface of the moon because of a broken circuit breaker.

Follow this link to the video @ https://www.space.com

4 years ago
Source
Source
Source

source

3 years ago
Countries That Meet The Requirements Of The 2016 Paris Agreement

Countries that meet the requirements of the 2016 Paris Agreement

3 years ago
Views Of Earth And Intrepid, Apollo 12, 14 Nov 1969.
Views Of Earth And Intrepid, Apollo 12, 14 Nov 1969.
Views Of Earth And Intrepid, Apollo 12, 14 Nov 1969.

Views of Earth and Intrepid, Apollo 12, 14 Nov 1969.

4 years ago
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids
What Hollywood Gets Wrong (and Right!) About Protecting The Earth From Asteroids

What Hollywood gets wrong (and right!) about protecting the Earth from asteroids

In the 1998 movie, “Armageddon,” an asteroid the width of Texas is about to hit Earth. The heroes who stop it in just the nick of time are a group of orange-suited Americans, all men.

Life isn’t always like the movies.

Not that an asteroid couldn’t slam into Earth, mind you. Asteroids — mostly tiny ones — pass by our planet virtually every second. But the people charged with stopping the big ones aren’t reaching for their spacesuits with mere hours to spare.

And spoiler alert: They also aren’t all men.

“I would say the number one question I get when I tell people what I work on, is ‘Oh, like ‘Armageddon?’’ And it’s nothing like ‘Armageddon,’” says Lawrence Livermore National Lab physicist Kirsten Howley, whose day job includes defending our planet from asteroids.

Howley doesn’t have an orange jumpsuit at hand, but her job is serious business. She and her team of planetary defenders specialize in how we might deflect an asteroid that poses a threat to Earth.

Read more

5 years ago
Australia Vs Pluto

Australia vs Pluto

via reddit

3 years ago
Cologne Commentary On Space Law.

Cologne Commentary on Space Law.

5 years ago
From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

From Earthrise to the black hole: astronomy’s most famous images.

Photographs from history that capture humanity’s exploration of the heavens.

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

20 July 1969

One of the most iconic views of Earth, taken from the Apollo 11 spacecraft as it orbited the moon. Describing the scene, the astronaut Neil Armstrong said: ‘It suddenly struck me that that tiny pea, pretty and blue, was the Earth. I put up my thumb and shut one eye, and my thumb blotted out the planet Earth. I didn’t feel like a giant. I felt very, very small’ | This caption was updated on 11 April 2019 to correct the date the picture was taken, photograph: Nasa.

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

21 July 1969

Buzz Aldrin, the lunar module pilot for the first moon landing, poses on the lunar surface. The footprints of the astronauts are clearly visible in the soil. Neil Armstrong took the picture with a 70mm Hasselblad lunar surface camera Photograph: American Photo Archive/Alamy

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

25 February 1979

This dramatic view of Jupiter’s great red spot and its surroundings was obtained by the Voyager 1 space probe

Photograph: JPL/Nasa/UIG/Getty Images

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

14 February 1990

Often referred to as ‘the pale blue dot’ image, this picture was taken when Voyager 1 was 4bn miles (6.4bn km) from Earth and 32 degrees above the ecliptic plane. Earth is a mere point of light, just 0.12 pixels in size when viewed from that distance. The fuzzy light is scattered sunlight because Earth was close to the sun (from the perspective of Voyager)

Photograph: JPL/Nasa

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

6 January 2004

The first colour image of Mars taken by the panoramic camera on the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit. It was the sharpest photograph ever taken on the surface of the planet

Photograph: JPL/Nasa/AP

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

25 September 2012

Called the eXtreme Deep Field, or XDF, this photo was assembled by combining 10 years of Hubble space telescope photographs taken of a patch of sky at the centre of the original Hubble Ultra Deep Field. By collecting faint light over many hours of observation, the telescope revealed thousands of galaxies, both nearby and very distant, making it the deepest image of the universe ever taken at that time

Photograph: Hubble space telescope/Nasa/ESA

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

24 July 2015

A combination of images captured by the New Horizons space probe, with enhanced colours to show differences in the composition and texture of Pluto’s surface

Photograph: AP

From Earthrise To The Black Hole: Astronomy’s Most Famous Images.

10 April 2019

The first image of a black hole, captured by the Event Horizon telescope (EHT) – a planet-scale array of eight ground-based radio telescopes forged through international collaboration. The shadow of a black hole seen here is the closest we can come to an image of the black hole itself, a completely dark object from which light cannot escape

Photograph: EHT Collaboration/UCL


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nauticastro - the overview effect
the overview effect

mostly void, partly stars. main blog sadclowncentral

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