Star Streams of Comet Atlas

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@no-space-no-time
Star Streams of Comet Atlas
The rings of Saturn. Voyager 2 - 1981
northern lights photographed from space
There's something magical about old pictures of stars
Andromeda Galaxy, 1925 Around The Pleiades, 1932 Cygnus Wall, 1910 North America Nebula, c. 1920
A visual explanation of why stars fall on Earth. Details of The Augsburg Book of Miracles, an illuminated manuscript made in Augsburg in Germany in the 16th century, anonymous author-ess.
It came from outer space, Aryo Toh Djojo (because)
#Turn around bright eyes
(Marcus Yam via Getty Images)
Should we look to the skies and perhaps be reminded that in that infinity, none of these earthly things matter? Perhaps. But today there is no escaping the here and now. I can’t look up
Coldest Star Found—No Hotter Than Fresh Coffee
According to a new study, a star discovered 75 light-years away is no warmer than a freshly brewed cup of coffee.
Dubbed CFBDSIR 1458 10b, the star is what’s called a brown dwarf. These oddball objects are often called failed stars, because they have starlike heat and chemical properties but don’t have enough mass for the crush of gravity to ignite nuclear fusion at their cores.
With surface temperatures hovering around 206 degrees F (97 degrees C), the newfound star is the coldest brown dwarf seen to date.
Keep reading.
cold and pretty like me
Goodbye, Starman
A filament photo of the sun captured with an inverted color field. Photo: Jim Lafferty
The planet Saturn, August 11, 1981, imaged by Voyager 2 from a range of 14.7 million kilometers (9.1 million miles). You can also see the moons Dione (right) and Enceladus. (NASA)