Dionysus: What if I press the brake and gas at the same time?
Hermes: The car takes a screenshot.
Apollo: For the last time, get the fuck out.

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@historicalspacemyths
Dionysus: What if I press the brake and gas at the same time?
Hermes: The car takes a screenshot.
Apollo: For the last time, get the fuck out.
Hestia: We call this a "traumatic event".
Hestia, looking at Hermes: Not a "bro moment".
Hestia, looking at Apollo: Not a "major L".
Hestia, looking at Dionysus: Not an "oof lmao"
âfuck you my child is completely fineâ
your child is going through a greek mythology phase.
Ready for a virtual adventure through the Orion Nebula?
Suspended in space, the stars that reside in the Orion Nebula are scattered throughout a dramatic dust-and-gas landscape of plateaus, mountains, and valleys that are reminiscent of the Grand Canyon. This visualization uses visible and infrared views, combining images from the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope to create a three-dimensional visualization.
Learn more about Hubbleâs celebration of Nebula November and see new nebula images, here.
You can also keep up with Hubble on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Flickr!
Visualization credits: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers, G. Bacon, Z. Levay, J. DePasquale, L. Hustak, L. Frattare, M. Robberto, M. Gennaro (STScI), R. Hurt (Caltech/IPAC), M. Kornmesser (ESA); Acknowledgement: A. Fujii, R. Gendler
Light and Glory over Crete : The month was July, the place was the Greek island of Crete, and the sky was spectacular. Of course there were the usual stars like Polaris, Vega, and Antares â and that common asterism everyone knows: the Big Dipper. But this sky was just getting started. The band of the Milky Way Galaxy stunned as it arched across the night like a bridge made of stars and dust but dotted with red nebula like candy. The planets Saturn and Jupiter were so bright you wanted to stop people on the beach and point them out. The air glowed like a rainbow â but what really grabbed the glory was a comet. Just above the northern horizon, Comet NEOWISE spread its tails like nothing you had ever seen before or might ever see again. Staring in amazement, there was only one thing to do: take a picture. via NASA
siblings âą
This is my favorite picture of the Greek Gods
#2, Brute?
I made the ugliest noise.
Itâs not even March. Itâs literally more than 6 months till the ides of March. Why.
TODAY
its the da a a a ay
Astronaut readjusts to life back on Earth
> Donât give him a baby for a while.
HE GRABS THE CUP BUT THEN HE DROPS THE PEN 0.0003 SECONDS LATER
AND HE LOOKS UP AT THE CEILING INSTEAD OF AT THE GROUND WHEN HE CANâT FIND THEM
I CANâT STOP LAUGHING HE JUST DROPS IT
ITâS NOT FUNNY ITâS VERY LOGICAL THAT HE WOULD HAVE ADJUSTED TO LIVING LIFE WHILE HE WAS IN SPACE BECAUSE ITâS DIFFERENT FROM EARTH BUTÂ I CANâT FUCKING BREATHE
*THUNK*
i love it so much every time i see it
âugh stupid gravityâÂ
IM FUXKING CSHAKING
I havenât seen this post on my dash in *years* bless this
Bless, this is absolutely amazing
I love this. Itâs so gestural and heâs so exasperated about gravity.
The perfect comedic timing of the NASA logo.
We must remember the library of Baghdad and Cordoba
Remember. The library of Alexandria always made copies of all thier texts and sent them out to other libraries. So we didnât actually lose that much with the sacking of the library of Alexandria because copies existed elsewhere. The library of Baghdad was thrown into to river when Ghengis Khan invaded. As far as Iâm aware, most works stored there were unique. Carthage also had a significant library that was obliterated along with the rest of the city by the romans. We know very little about the Carthage culture as a result.
See the Closest Ever Images of the Sun
Solar Orbiter just released its first scientific data â including the closest images ever taken of the Sun.
Launched on February 9, 2020, Solar Orbiter is a collaboration between the European Space Agency and NASA, designed to study the Sun up close. Solar Orbiter completed its first close pass of the Sun on June 15, flying within 48 million miles of the Sunâs surface.
This is already closer to the Sun than any other spacecraft has taken pictures (our Parker Solar Probe mission has flown closer, but it doesnât take pictures of the Sun). And over the next seven years, Solar Orbiter will inch even closer to the Sun while tilting its orbit above the plane of the planets, to peek at the Sunâs north and south poles, which have never been imaged before.
Hereâs some of what Solar Orbiter has seen so far.
The Sun up close
Solar Orbiterâs Extreme Ultraviolet Imager, or EUI, sees the Sun in wavelengths of extreme ultraviolet light that are invisible to our eyes.
EUI captured images showing âcampfiresâ dotting the Sun. These miniature bright spots are over a million times smaller than normal solar flares. They may be the nanoflares, or tiny explosions, long thought to help heat the Sunâs outer atmosphere, or corona, to its temperature 300 times hotter than the Sunâs surface. It will take more data to know for sure, but one thingâs certain: In EUIâs images, these campfires are all over the Sun.
The Polar and Helioseismic Imager, or PHI, maps the Sunâs magnetic field in a variety of ways. These images show several of the measurements PHI makes, including the magnetic field strength and direction and the speed of flow of solar material.
PHI will have its heyday later in the mission, as Solar Orbiter gradually tilts its orbit to 24 degrees above the plane of the planets, giving it a never-before-seen view of the poles. But its first images reveal the busy magnetic field on the solar surface.
Studying space
Solar Orbiterâs instruments donât just focus on the Sun itself â it also carries instruments that study the space around the Sun and surrounding the spacecraft.
The Solar and Heliospheric Imager, or SoloHi, looks out the side of the Solar Orbiter spacecraft to see the solar wind, dust, and cosmic rays that fill the space between the Sun and the planets. SoloHi captured the relatively faint light reflecting off interplanetary dust known as the zodiacal light, the bright blob of light in the right of the image. Compared to the Sun, the zodiacal light is extremely dim â to see it, SoloHi had to reduce incoming sunlight by a trillion times. The straight bright feature on the very edge of the image is a baffle illuminated by reflections from the spacecraftâs solar array.
This first data release highlights Solar Orbiterâs images, but its in situ instruments also revealed some of their first measurements. The Solar Wind Analyser, or SWA instrument, made the first dedicated measurements of heavy ions â carbon, oxygen, silicon, and iron â in the solar wind from the inner heliosphere.
Read more about Solar Orbiterâs first data and see all the images on ESAâs website.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
We were right the sun is yellow
Stupid is timeless.
Iâm that lady whoâs just FEELING it
tbh cables were like that and safety precautions werenât hard set in yet
Oh wow this is horrifying
Holy shit
Random Mormon persecution facts no one asked for
It was made legal to kill Mormons in 1838 after a group of men (who knew they were a religion) told the governor they were a terrorist group. The order wasnât removed until June of 1976
The president of the church was tar and feathered for being Mormon
If people in your town knew you were Mormon in a non-Mormon town, you were treated exactly the same as a black person at the time (before the civil war)
Mormons were kicked out of the US, and suffered the same trials and problems as the people on the oregan trail, except they didnât have any resources because most people denied them service and supplies
Mormons consider themselves to be christen because they believe in Jesus Christ, but many other christens deny them the title
In 2010 the Gilbert, AZ temple was under construction when people came and spray painted slurs on the walls, so they had to restart. This isnât the first time theyâve had to restart building a temple because of persecution
Joseph Smith was thrown in prison and tried for treason after leaving country borders to escape the persecution
He and His brother were arrested and thrown into Liberty Jail where they were murdered. Hyrum was shot in the face, and Joseph was shot multiple times and fell through the window before falling to his death
Mormon persecution still exists, and people hate other people for their religions. That is not okay. People should not be persecuted just because theyâre Muslim, buhddist, atheist, Jewish, ect.
Nor should they be persecuted for race, sex, sexuality, gender identity, nationality, ethnicity ect.
Poor Prometheus
Remember when Herc & Meg canonically went to see Oedipus on their first date lol
So fun myth fact since I havenât seen it mentioned;
Megaras father was Creon, King of Thebes. Who was the brother of Jocasta. Her and Oedipus were cousins.
Their first date was going to go see her familyâs drama being aired out on stage.
Ooooo
Felix and Marzia are Hades and Persephone