HAPPY FEBRUARY!Wyoming is just starting to see some days in the high 40s. Most of the snow has melted around the house, though the mountains are still white and beautiful. On the writing front, Mik…
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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HAPPY FEBRUARY!Wyoming is just starting to see some days in the high 40s. Most of the snow has melted around the house, though the mountains are still white and beautiful. On the writing front, Mik…
“The historical detail and vivid descriptions make this a fascinating and compelling read.” –Romantic Times BookReviewsI’m excited to see the FIRST HARDCOVER ever of my book, IT WAKES I…
Happy September! It’s a quiet beautiful day here in Wyoming. The aspens and cottonwoods just have their first touches of yellow, heralding the arrival of autumn a bit early, but it’s bee…
We are delighted...
Hello Everyone,Yes, it’s been a stressful day today. Fans have been notifying us from around the world that their orders for RECKONING (coming in October) and THE ICE ORPHAN (coming in Novemb…
Fourth Quadrant – W. Michael Gear – Wolfpack HC $28.00 – 9781639773015 – 5/2022 This book continues the story begun in Dissolution following the outcome of an international banking collapse and cor…
(via RUSSIAN ATTACK ON BANKS...)
Hello! It’s a beautiful day in northern Wyoming, sunny and in the forties, which is amazing for January.We are delighted by this first review for FOURTH QUADRANT, the sequel to the bestsellin…
Three Ways to Travel at (Nearly) the Speed of Light
One hundred years ago, Einstein’s theory of general relativity was supported by the results of a solar eclipse experiment. Even before that, Einstein had developed the theory of special relativity — a way of understanding how light travels through space.
Particles of light — photons — travel through a vacuum at a constant pace of more than 670 million miles per hour.
All across space, from black holes to our near-Earth environment, particles are being accelerated to incredible speeds — some even reaching 99.9% the speed of light! By studying these super fast particles, we can learn more about our galactic neighborhood.
Here are three ways particles can accelerate:
1) Electromagnetic Fields!
Electromagnetic fields are the same forces that keep magnets on your fridge! The two components — electric and magnetic fields — work together to whisk particles at super fast speeds throughout the universe. In the right conditions, electromagnetic fields can accelerate particles at near-light-speed.
We can harness electric fields to accelerate particles to similar speeds on Earth! Particle accelerators, like the Large Hadron Collider and Fermilab, use pulsed electromagnetic fields to smash together particles and produce collisions with immense amounts of energy. These experiments help scientists understand the Big Bang and how it shaped the universe!
2) Magnetic Explosions!
Magnetic fields are everywhere in space, encircling Earth and spanning the solar system. When these magnetic fields run into each other, they can become tangled. When the tension between the crossed lines becomes too great, the lines explosively snap and realign in a process known as magnetic reconnection. Scientists suspect this is one way that particles — for example, the solar wind, which is the constant stream of charged particles from the Sun — are sped up to super fast speeds.
When magnetic reconnection occurs on the side of Earth facing away from the Sun, the particles can be hurled into Earth’s upper atmosphere where they spark the auroras.
3) Wave-Particle Interactions!
Particles can be accelerated by interactions with electromagnetic waves, called wave-particle interactions. When electromagnetic waves collide, their fields can become compressed. Charged particles bounce back and forth between the waves, like a ball bouncing between two merging walls. These types of interactions are constantly occurring in near-Earth space and are responsible for damaging electronics on spacecraft and satellites in space.
Wave-particle interactions might also be responsible for accelerating some cosmic rays from outside our solar system. After a supernova explosion, a hot, dense shell of compressed gas called a blast wave is ejected away from the stellar core. Wave-particle interactions in these bubbles can launch high-energy cosmic rays at 99.6% the speed of light.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
In this photo, President Truman salutes members of the 442nd Color Guard on the Ellipse in Washington, DC, in July of 1946.
The 442nd Regimental Combat Team fought primarily in the European Theater. The unit was mostly composed of Japanese Americans, many with families in internment camps.
About 14,000 men served in the 442nd, and were awarded 9,486 Purple Hearts, seven Presidential Unit Citations, and 21 Medals of Honor.
📸 https://catalog.archives.gov/id/199389
Marble relief of a horseman, Metropolitan Museum of Art: Greek and Roman Art
Rogers Fund, 1907 Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY Medium: Marble, Parian ?
THE SHANGHAI BABY
The Second Sino-Japanese War began in July 1937. Japan announced they were going to bomb the Shanghai’s Whampoo River. On August 28, 1937, and news teams gathered to capture the event.
The bombers didn’t hit the Chinese defenses. They hit the city’s train station—which housed 1,800 civilians waiting for evacuation, mostly women and children. The Japanese aircrews had mistaken them for troops. In total, 1,500 died.
The photographer, H.S. Wong, saw a man rescuing children from the tracks. The man placed the first young child on the platform edge before returning to help another—and that is the picture Wong took.
SOURCE
The remains of an ancient Egyptian princess named Ahmose Meryet Amon who died 3,500 years ago. The princess died in her 40s. She was entombed at the Deir el-Bahri royal mortuary temple on the west bank of the Nile, opposite to the city of Luxor.
The princess’s mummified body is among those now housed at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.Recent scans of 52 of the museum’s mummies revealed almost half of the dead have clogged arteries—including the princess. In fact, she is now the earliest known sufferer of coronary atherosclerosis, a condition caused by a buildup of arterial plaque, which can lead to heart attack or stroke. (Source)
Portrait of a Man, 1630, Frans Hals
Medium: oil,canvas
https://www.wikiart.org/en/frans-hals/portrait-of-a-man-1630
Egyptian Lotus Ring
Decorated with lotus flowers and baguettes. Made of Gold, lapis, turquoise and carnelian. New Kingdom, ca. 1550-1292 BC. Now in the Louvre.
Saint Francis in Prayer, 1610, Caravaggio
Medium: oil,canvas
Great writers are the saints for the godless.
Anita Brookner (via ariestess)
The Ghent Altar (detail), 1432, Jan van Eyck
Medium: oil,wood