From a science page I follow... The Church of the Good Shepard, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand. A very popular spot and hard to get a shot at! Credit: Paul Wilson Images NZ
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From a science page I follow... The Church of the Good Shepard, Lake Tekapo, New Zealand. A very popular spot and hard to get a shot at! Credit: Paul Wilson Images NZ
From NASA: Glowing warmly against the dark backdrop of the universe, this irregular galaxy seen by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope contains bright pockets of star formation. Located approximately 70 million light-years away, it’s host to a peculiarly interesting exploded star, also known as a supernova. See why: https://go.nasa.gov/2KYoaLK
From NASA: Churning in the Chukchi Sea Regardless of the amount of winter ice cover, the waters off of the Alaskan coast usually come alive each spring with blooms of phytoplankton. These blooms can form striking patterns of blue and green seawater, such as those visible in this image of the Chukchi Sea acquired on June 18, 2018, by the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8. “We see blooms in the southern Chukchi Sea pretty regularly this time of year,” said Kevin Arrigo, a biological oceanographer at Stanford University. But the regularity of the blooms and their simple beauty belie the complexity of this ecosystem. According to Karina Giesbrecht, a doctoral candidate at the University of Victoria, diatoms are typically the first type of phytoplankton to bloom each spring after the breakup of Arctic sea ice. Diatoms are a microscopic form of algae, with silica shells and plenty of chlorophyll, and one of the most common types of phytoplankton in the ocean. Other types, such as coccolithophores, have adapted to harsher conditions and show up once nutrients start to run out. In the southern part of the Chukchi Sea just north of the Bering Strait, however, conditions are a bit more complex. Two main water masses flow from the Bering Strait and enter the southern Chukchi. One type, known as “Bering Sea Water,” is cool, salty, and rich in nutrients. This water fuels most of the phytoplankton growth, primarily diatoms, which are likely the main reason for the colorful green waters pictured here. (Sediments could also be contributing to the bright green areas.) “The Bering Strait does a great job of mixing up nutrients to the surface waters, where there’s lots of light available for the phytoplankton to grow,” Giesbrecht said. “That mixing, followed by the slowing of the currents that happens once the waters exit the Bering Strait, means that diatom blooms in this part of the southern Chukchi happily continue until at least the end of July.” The second mass of seawater is known as “Alaskan Coastal Water,” which is warmer, less salty, and nutrient-poor. Diatom growth is usually lower in these waters, but coccolithophores can do well here. Some areas picture
From NASA: 🤩🌕ESA Astronaut Alexander Gerst snaps a shot of the moon from the International Space Station, "By orbiting the Earth almost 16 times per day, the #ISS crew travel the distance to the Moon and back – every day. #Horizons."
#Venus
#Saturn photobombing #TheMoon ❤🤓🌙
#TheEntireUniverseOnYourPhone ✨☀️⭐️❤
Literally #happiness ❤✌️🤓☀️
"The degree to which a certain part of me is deceased has grown in the past few months, yet I am very much alive. I feel the pain of my death, every single day of my life, yet it no longer hurts. It's quite pleasing, actually. Everyone still thinks I'm alive, and they talk to me as such. It's very spooky, to be quite honest with you...to be dead and still alive in one shallow breath." https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_2_11?k=blood+sweat+and+tears&sprefix=blood+sweat&crid=31TVA0R6MTFZ4
If this is telling of what her review will be like, then it might be safe to say it's another 5 ⭐️
From NASA: Ever since its arrival at the King of Planets in July 2016, NASA's Juno Mission to Jupiter has been revealing the planet's secrets. From finding the planet’s poles covered in Earth-sized swirling storms, to uncovering mysteries about the Great Red Spot, this mission is turning theories about how Jupiter works inside out. Ten historic mission highlights: https://nasa.tumblr.com/post/175746825774/solar-system-10-things-two-years-of-juno-at
From Hubble Space Telescope: “Nothing ever conceived by human art could equal the peculiar vividness and delicacy of color of these remarkable prismatic springs. Life becomes a privilege and a blessing after one has seen and thoroughly felt these incomparable types of nature’s cunning skill.” —USGS geologist and surveyor F. V. Hayden, reporting in 1872 on Yellowstone National Park’s Grand Prismatic Spring, seen here in a recent aerial photo (left). If Hayden had been around to behold the grandeur of the universe as documented by the Hubble Space Telescope, he might have said something similar about the colorful glowing cloud of gas and dust that makes up M57 (right). Also called the Ring Nebula, M57 is a planetary nebula—the remains of a Sun-like star—roughly one light-year across and 2,000 light-years away. The rainbow of color in Grand Prismatic Spring, the largest hot spring in Yellowstone National Park, is caused by variations in water temperature and the resulting presence of various species of micro-organisms. The water appears blue near the center, where it is so hot that it is nearly devoid of life. The color grades into orange toward the edges of the pool as the water cools and becomes hospitable to a wider variety of organisms. In contrast, the colors shown in this composite image of the Ring Nebula from Hubble and the Large Binocular Telescope in Arizona reflect the composition of the gas: blue represents helium; green—oxygen; and red—hydrogen. https://bit.ly/2y13gFv #UniverseandYou #EarthandSpace #NotAComet #CelestialTerrestrialConvergence University of Arizona Department of Astronomy and Steward Observatory U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Credits: National Park Service; NASA, ESA, C.R. O'Dell (Vanderbilt University), and D. Thompson (Large Binocular Telescope Observatory).
From NASA: Two Years of Juno at Jupiter -- NASA's Juno Mission to Jupiter mission arrived at the King of Planets in July 2016. The intrepid robotic explorer has been revealing Jupiter's secrets ever since. In this week's 10 Things blog, some historic Juno mission highlights: https://go.nasa.gov/2u9Qxfv
From Hubble Space Telescope 7/10/2017 Two star clusters are becoming one in 30 Doradus, 170,000 light-years away in the Large Magellanic Cloud. These hot, young stars are immersed in a surrounding nebula of glowing gas. Credit: NASA, ESA, and E. Sabbi (ESA/STScI) http://hubblesite.org/image/3087/news_release/2012-35
From NASA: 🌛The Moon rises over the San Gabriel Mountains near Los Angeles. See more at moon.nasa.gov/resources/228/harvest-moon/
#TheTulipNebula ❤🌷
#TheHorseheadNebula