Did they seriously just add Commander Riker’s weird ass sit to Destiny?
Ghost: Fuck you. Guardian, gasping in shock and covering Ghost’s “mouth”: Ma’am I am so sorry I have no idea where he learned that word. Ghost: I know more swear words than you.
More like ghastly and CORVID garments 🎃🕸
You can help me make more comics by following me on Webtoon! 🍭
It's been a stressful week and a half. On top of that, depression flare. It's a bad one this time around....
Can you do something with a pig and a dog? I feel like they would be such a cute pair of friends.
they meet up every saturday
DESTINY 2: THE WITCH QUEEN | 22.2.22
This rare sight is a super-bright, massive Wolf-Rayet star. Calling forth the ephemeral nature of cherry blossoms, the Wolf-Rayet phase is a fleeting stage that only some stars go through soon before they explode.
The star, WR 124, is 15,000 light-years away in the constellation Sagittarius. It is 30 times the mass of the Sun and has shed 10 Suns worth of material – so far. As the ejected gas moves away from the star and cools, cosmic dust forms and glows in the infrared light detectable by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope.
The origin of cosmic dust that can survive a supernova blast is of great interest to astronomers for multiple reasons. Dust shelters forming stars, gathers together to help form planets, and serves as a platform for molecules to form and clump together, including the building blocks of life on Earth.
Stars like WR 124 also help astronomers understand the early history of the universe. Similar dying stars first seeded the young universe with heavy elements forged in their cores – elements that are now common in the current era, including on Earth.
The James Webb Space Telescope opens up new possibilities for studying details in cosmic dust, which is best observed in infrared wavelengths of light. Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera balances the brightness of WR 124’s stellar core and the knotty details in the fainter surrounding gas. The telescope’s Mid-Infrared Instrument reveals the clumpy structure of the gas and dust nebula of the ejected material now surrounding the star.
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i don’t expect this to be very widely known but here in vancouver we’ve had a barge stuck on shore since mid november
we’re going on day 25 of barge simpson not moving a damn inch and i for one hope it never moves
In this image, NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, Expedition 32 flight engineer, appears to touch the bright Sun during the mission's third spacewalk outside the International Space Station. Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Aki Hoshide is visible in the reflection of Williams' helmet visor.
Today, April 12, is the International Day of Human Space Flight—marking Yuri Gagarin's first flight in 1961, and the first space shuttle launch in 1981.
As we honor global collaboration in exploration, we're moving forward to the Moon & Mars under the Artemis Accords.
Sign up to send your name around the Moon aboard Artemis I at go.nasa.gov/wearegoing.
Information security professional for a major firm. Overall geek and gamer. Lover of all things Sighthounds. My immune system hates me, along with the occasional attempted suffocation done thanks to my lungs. On top of that, working through severe depression and anxiety plus a side of ADHD. I'm a broken human being.
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