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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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Discoholic 🪩

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@pandaizzey
lesnoj.veresk
Today’s tomato harvest (with my neighbor’s cat watching)
The energy of this video >>>🎸🎻🎼
That “AH PERROOOO” you can hear in the beginning means they have fully accepted him into the band btw.
Hello Mr gaiman. If hypothetically I was to start writing a screenplay- how would I begin to go about this? Do you write it chronologically? And when you're done where does it go, and do you print it out or write it on Word, or is there a special writers program only telly people know about? I've made hundreds of notes and short narrative descriptions but I guess I have no idea how to put my ideas into a script format, maybe you'd be able to advise? Have a great day!
I use a program called Final Draft. There are others. (Here's a bunch of free ones: https://www.careersinfilm.com/best-free-screenwriting-software/) I the d to write it scene by scene.
the first episode of ghost files is just shane sitting on the floor putting the spirit box back together like ikea furniture
shoutout to wearewatcher for not denying anything and thereby making this infinitely funnier
so i just realized… in spiderverse, the whole “leap of faith” thing really takes a different meaning when you remember miles didn’t really have a problem taking a leap in the beginning of the movie. he had to psych himself up for it, but he did try. he heard mj’s speech and read some comics, and he jumped off that building to test his mettle. but he failed and crashed to the sidewalk, hard, ended up breaking the goober. that’s what causes him to lose faith in himself and makes him think he “can’t do this” without peter parker: he has tried, and he messed it up.
when you remember that, peter b telling him that being spider-man is “a leap of faith” isn’t a lesson about miles needing to find his courage in the first place, it becomes a lesson about finding the strength to try something again after you’ve failed it already. or in the movie’s words, it becomes a lesson about “getting back up.”
FALA CHEN as YING LI Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021)
Milky way over the lavender fields in Misato town.
Akita, Japan.
every stitch, depicted and demonstrated
This database holds a ton of useful materials for embroidery! many different types of stitches in various difficulties, all incredibly useful!
@wastelesscrafts does that look useful?
[ID: an embroidery database showing 24 stitches of the chain stitch family (chain stitch, whipped chain stitch, double chain stitch, magic chain stitch, lazy daisy, Russian chain stitch, long tailed daisy, feathered chain stitch, Basque stitch, petal chain stitch, reverse chain stitch, heavy chain stitch) and the blanket stitch family (blanket stitch, buttonhole stitch, whipped buttonhole, double blanket stitch, closed blanket stitch, crossed blanket, buttonhole wheel, buttonhole wheel cup, rosette of thorns, buttonhole bar, barb stitch, mirrored blanket).]
That’s an amazing resource! Thanks for the tag.
On Time
https://linktr.ee/grantdraws
Most powerful wizard
quotes taken from the source
(the 4th one is Bumpus wanting dinner, friends can back me up on this)
come back to me most perfect of comics
wee
I got a message from a follower on Insta who got the “wee” kitten tattooed on their forearm and i have never felt more honored
Black Holes Dine on Stellar Treats!
See that tiny blob of light, circled in red? Doesn’t look like much, does it? But that blob represents a feast big enough to feed a black hole around 30 million times the mass of our Sun! Scientists call these kinds of stellar meals tidal disruption events, and they’re some of the most dramatic happenings in the cosmos.
Sometimes, an unlucky star strays too close to a black hole. The black hole’s gravity pulls on the star, causing it to stretch in one direction and squeeze in another. Then the star pulls apart into a stream of gas. This is a tidal disruption event. (If you’re worried about this happening to our Sun – don’t. The nearest black hole we know about is over 1,000 light-years away. And black holes aren’t wild space vacuums. They don’t go zipping around sucking up random stars and planets. So we’re pretty safe from tidal disruption events!)
The trailing part of the stream gets flung out of the system. The rest of the gas loops back around the black hole, forming a disk. The material circling in the disk slowly drifts inward toward the black hole’s event horizon, the point at which nothing – not even light – can escape. The black hole consumes the gas and dust in its disk over many years.
Sometimes the black hole only munches on a passing star – we call this a partial tidal disruption event. The star loses some of its gas, but its own gravity pulls it back into shape before it passes the black hole again. Eventually, the black hole will have nibbled away enough material that the star can’t reform and gets destroyed.
We study tidal disruptions, both the full feasts and the partial snacks, using many kinds of telescopes. Usually, these events are spotted by ground-based telescopes like the Zwicky Transient Facility and the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae network.
They alert other ground- and space-based telescopes – like our Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory (illustrated above) and the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton – to follow up and collect more data using different wavelengths, from visible light to X-rays. Even our planet-hunting Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite has observed a few of these destructive wonders!
We’re also studying disruptions using multimessenger astronomy, where scientists use the information carried by light, particles, and space-time ripples to learn more about cosmic objects and occurrences.
But tidal disruptions are super rare. They only happen once every 10,000 to 100,000 years in a galaxy the size of our own Milky Way. Astronomers have only observed a few dozen events so far. By comparison, supernovae – the explosive deaths of stars – happen every 100 years or so in a galaxy like ours.
That’s why scientists make their own tidal disruptions using supercomputers, like the ones shown in the video here. Supercomputers allow researchers to build realistic models of stars. They can also include all of the physical effects they’d experience whipping ‘round a black hole, even those from Einstein’s theory of general relativity. They can alter features like how close the stars get and how massive the black holes are to see how it affects what happens to the stars. These simulations will help astronomers build better pictures of the events they observe in the night sky.
Keep up with what’s happening in the universe and how we study it by following NASA Universe on Twitter and Facebook.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space!
Physicist Proposes To Boyfriend Using Hexagonal Mirror
Ben Bartlett, a physics PhD student, proposed to his boyfriend of eight years by using a hexagonal mirror array to reflect the light from the setting sun onto the ground to spell MARRY ME?
king shit
My GOD that is some nerdy romance. I LOVE IT.
The stunning Veil Nebula was created after a star about 20 times the mass of the Sun lived fast and died young – exploding in a cataclysmic release of energy known as a supernova.
In a violent stellar explosion roughly 10,000 years ago, shockwaves and debris created this staggeringly beautiful trail through space. The picture above shows a mosaic of six Hubble Space Telescope pictures, a small area roughly two light-years across, and only a tiny fraction of the nebula's vast 110 light-year structure.
To learn more about Hubble’s celebration of Nebula November and see new nebula images, visit our space telescope's nebula page.
You can also keep up with Hubble on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Flickr!
Image credits: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Spread your cosmic wings 🦋
The Butterfly Nebula, created by a dying star, was captured by the Hubble Space Telescope in this spectacular image. Observations were taken over a more complete spectrum of light, helping researchers better understand the “wings'' of gas bursting out from its center. The nebula’s dying central star has become exceptionally hot, shining ultraviolet light brightly over the butterfly’s wings and causing the gas to glow.
Learn more about Hubble’s celebration of Nebula November and see new nebula images, here.
You can also keep up with Hubble on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Flickr!
Image credits: NASA, ESA, and J. Kastner (RIT)
These three towers are only a small portion of the massive Eagle Nebula.
Known as the “Pillars of Creation,” the beautiful tendrils of cosmic dust and gas are giving birth to new stars, buried within their spires. This iconic image only shows a stretch of about four or five light-years … while the whole nebula itself spans about 70 by 55 light-years.
Learn more about Hubble’s celebration of Nebula November and see new nebula images, here.
You can also keep up with Hubble on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Flickr!
Image credits: NASA, ESA and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)