Awesome catch of the Newton!
Oh?
Why not?
I've observed you from your interactions with Sun.
Some things... just get logged c:
Have you browsed his blog yet?
I have not...
But you've made me curious now.
Can you?
That would be appreciated.
I am in need of your assistance @insults-by-sun
There seems to be an issue when I try to take a picture. It ends up completely white.
The Helix Nebula ©
Perhaps. I enjoy learning new things.
Hi there!
Do you know anything about cookies?
Do you know what flavor cookie you'd be if you were a cookie ???
- 🐱🤝🐱
Hello.
I have never heard of cookies before. But I am guessing it is some kind of food.
Hmm...
I wonder what I would taste like @insults-by-sun
Hm...
*Obscyra takes an air of concentration until suddenly a luminescent white liquid start to flow from his eyes*
Is that good?
It's a date then.
Err, I mean, it's a deal..
Let's start later; for now it's fine to just lounge, I believe.
Very well.
Perhaps you could tell me more about food. What should I try first?
It's a date then.
Err, I mean, it's a deal..
Let's start later; for now it's fine to just lounge, I believe.
I've observed you from your interactions with Sun.
Some things... just get logged c:
Have you browsed his blog yet?
I have not...
But you've made me curious now.
Did a planet get destroyed by the white dwarf that’s the source at the center of the Helix Nebula?
Using data from the Chandra X-Ray Observatory to study the nebula, scientists determined the mysteriously strong X-ray signal coming where white dwarf WD 2226-210 sits. Young white dwarfs like WD 2226-210 do not typically give off strong X-rays. This X-ray signal could be the debris from a destroyed planet being pulled onto the white dwarf.
The Helix Nebula—seen in this composite image using data from Chandra, the Hubble Space Telescope, and other observatories—is a planetary nebula, the remnant of a star like our sun that has shed its outer layers, leaving a small dim star at its center called a white dwarf.
Credit: NASA/CXC/JPL/ESA/STScI/ESO.