Because Iâm a nerd⌠My watercolours and the chemical formulas for their pigments
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Because Iâm a nerd⌠My watercolours and the chemical formulas for their pigments
Jupiter and its four main Galilean moons
"Our ancestors worshipped the Sun, and they were not that foolish. It makes sense to revere the Sun and the stars, for we are their children.â - Carl Sagan
February marked five years of operation for NASAâs Solar Dynamics Observatory and to celebrate the SDO team released some mind-blowing footage. The observatory acquired 200 million+ images over the years that show an unprecedentedly clear picture of how massive explosions on the Sun grow and erupt. I borrowed a few seconds of the footage to create this Vine but there is a lot more to see. Watch all the footage on NASA Goddardâs YouTube channel.
Music credit: Boards of Canada- âWhite Cyclosaâ
Beam me up, jelly! While it looks like a tiny spaceship taking off, this comb jellyâs rainbow lights are produced by diffraction, much like sunlight glancing off a CD. More active than most jellies, Beroe forskalii often folds over itself, earning it the common name of âoven mitt jelly.â Check out these otherworldly jellies in our Open Sea galleryÂ
Saturnâs hexagon is a persisting six sided cloud pattern around the north pole of the planet. It is created by a band of upper-atmospheric winds, and the sides of it are about 13,800 km (8,600 mi) long, which is longer than the Earthâs diameter. Thereâs a hurricane swirling within the hexagon.
(Images by the Cassini spacecraft)
X-rays of a Hammerhead Shark (Source)
Spectacular rendering of the solar system to scale
Ode to Apollo 11 and the joy of discovery
This astronautâs view of Earth.
09 February 2015
Making and Mending
This striking picture shows the delicate blood vessels and lining of a mouseâs heart as the animal grows in the womb. Itâs a complex process requiring cells to organise themselves into arteries, veins and finer tubes called capillaries that supply blood and energy to the heart itself, as well as the four muscular chambers forming the pump that pushes blood round the body. Researchers have discovered that some animals, including mice and zebrafish, have the potential to repair their own hearts if they get damaged or diseased, using similar processes that happen when the heart first grows. By understanding how this happens, and seeing if the same repair mechanisms can be triggered in humans, we might be able to repair our broken hearts one day.
Written by Kat Arney
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Image by Sarah Ivins
University College London Copyright held by original author Runner Up in the British Heart Foundationâs Reflections of Research Image Competition
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M77 Canadian-French-Hawaii Telescope/Hubble Space Telescope by Andre vd Hoeven on Flickr.
Neri Oxmanâs Bacteria-Infested Spacesuits Are Grown, Not Designed
Hubble Space Telescope image of supernova 1994D in galaxy NGC 4526.
Credit: NASA/ESA, The Hubble Key Project Team and The High-Z Supernova Search Team
Apollo 11 first stage separation take the 31 seconds out of your life and watch this through
NASAâs Most Shocking Image
This image is a 1.5⌠*BILLION* pixel photograph of the Andromeda Galaxy.
To view the image in all its glory go here.
NASA is the coolest thing thatâs ever happened.
alltogetherterrible oh gosh
I zoomed in and I was like âyeah rightâ while it loaded and then my jaw actually droppedÂ
holy shit
i mean i knew theoretically what this was supposed to look like, but i didnât actually expect to see it
but then when i zoomed in, all the noise turned into ACTUAL STARS, that you can see individually
good job, NASA
HOLY FUCK
The Veil Nebula is a cloud of heated ionized gas and dust in the constellation Cygnus, and makes up the visible portion of the Cygnus Loop, a large but faint supernova remnant, which exploded 5,000-8,000 years ago.Â
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, ESO