Bothersome beast, comforting friend
🪼

Andulka
NASA
ojovivo
d e v o n
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
todays bird

roma★
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dirt enthusiast

Discoholic 🪩

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Claire Keane
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
KIROKAZE

JBB: An Artblog!
wallacepolsom
Xuebing Du

oozey mess
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@is0noe
Bothersome beast, comforting friend
Really? I'm allowed to cast lightning magics?
blink blink… they’re gossiping
new years resolutions
5 ibuprofen 2 garlic
Try my recipe boy
Potion of Wreck My Stomach
Immensely powerful thrift shop find, google drive to follow
22,000 ANIMATED GIFS
from ~2001, plus a few text-to-speech thingies i couldnt use on modern hardware, and more
Campo Imperatore e la sua Via Lattea Abruzzo Italy
In Motion: Uranus and Moons : What’s that moving across the sky? A planet just a bit too faint to see with the unaided eye: Uranus. The gas giant out past Saturn was tracked earlier this month near opposition – when it was closest to Earth and at its brightest. The featured video captured by the Bayfordbury Observatory in Hertfordshire, UK is a four-hour time-lapse showing Uranus with its four largest moons in tow: Titania, Oberon, Umbriel and Ariel. Uranus’ apparent motion past background stars is really dominated by Earth’s own orbital motion around our Sun. The cross seen centered on Uranus is called a diffraction spike and is caused by light diffracting around the four arms that hold one of the telescope’s mirrors in place. The rotation of the diffraction spikes is not caused by the rotation of Uranus but, essentially, by the rotation of the Earth. During the next few months Uranus itself will be visible with binoculars, but, as always, to see its moons will require a telescope. via NASA
@schreibfederlaerm left this scene in the notes on my last mardjinn comic and I HAD TO DRAW IT so ty to her!! 💖
(IDs in alt and under cut)
Comet PanSTARRS
Hubble has captured the most detailed image to date of the open star cluster NGC 265 in the Small Magellanic Cloud. The brilliant open star cluster, NGC 265, is located about 200,000 light-years away and is roughly 65 light-years across.
Credit: European Space Agency & NASA
the best comment about the new photos of James Webb
Cartwheel Galaxy by NASAWEBB
ON THIS DAY: The rings of glorious Saturn, observed by the Voyager 2 space probe, August 17, 1981.
Falcon 9 Rocket "Nebula" illuminated by the setting sun l David Rini