[Don’t press like if you won’t reblog]
When we reach our lowest point…
*THEM*
(Reblogs are better than likes)
The French and their egg
They all could be bright colored cartoon characters xd
random avengers moments ↳ “Avengers Assemble”
Dear Tubbo,
I am taking a moment to recognize acknowledge our rivalry dynamics, which has fueled our competition, and has added a certain excitement to our interactions. As we navigate the world of business and prosperity, I feel the need to remind you of an unshakeable truth: I will always be richer.
Your thirst of conquest id admirable, I admit it. However, it is important to keep in mind that, despite all of your efforts, you will never be able to reach my level. I am at the top of the pyramid, and your place is far below mine.
That being said, I would like to show my respect for your creations and your entrepreneurial initiatives. While you may never rival my wealth and influence, I recognize your talent and determination to build something significant.
Our rivalry is stimulating, I admit. It pushes us to push our limits and to always aim higher. Even as we challenge each other, I can't help but feel a certain admiration for your tenacity and your resilience.
Keep pursuing your objectives with relentlessness, Tubbo, because it is in this rivalry that we find our motivation. But always remember your place in this hierarchy: always below mine.
In anticipation of our next confrontations,
Aypierre
There's something is not really knew about q!Aypierre (apart if you are a regular watcher of his qsmp live), is his soft spot for everything cute (the eggs, the mini cyclopes, plushes...).
Like yesterday; he have would buy the heart bagback for himself cause he find it cute and he was a little disappointed only the eggs could have it on them.
I love that a male CC show this side of his cubitos and doesn't use use it for make fun or make a big point of that. This is just, Q!Aypierre, like the cute things like he like the ingenery, informatic and robotic, take of his daughter, hanging out with his friends and family, being a little gremling and make pranks...
made a dumbest thing for pierres birthday yesterday lmao
https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/opinion/steve-breen/story/2020-02-24/katherine-johnson-nasa-mathematician-dies-at-101
Tumblr has forced me to format these like a shitty slideshow presentation because they don’t allow more than 10 images per post so enjoy this Cringe Compilation of 2019 art by me
Reblogs are so much cooler than likes but it’s cool if you can’t too I Guess
Ko-fi | Ask me about commissions
A quiet, starry night sky might not seem like a very spooky spectacle, but space can be a creepy place! Monsters lurk in the shadowy depths of the universe, sometimes hidden in plain sight. Many of them are invisible to our eyes, so we have to use special telescopes to see them. Read on to discover some of these strange cosmic beasts, but beware — sometimes fact is scarier than fiction.
You know those nightmares where no matter how fast you try to run you never seem to get anywhere? Black holes are a sinister possible version of that dream — especially because they’re real! If you get too close to a black hole, there is no possibility of escape.
Just last year our Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope traced an otherworldly ghost particle back to one of these monster black holes, providing additional insight into the many signals we’re picking up from some of the most feared creatures in the cosmic deep.
But it gets worse. Our Hubble Space Telescope revealed that these things are hidden in the hearts of nearly every galaxy in the universe. That means supermassive black holes lurk in the shadows of the night sky in every direction you look!
This fiendish specter lives in the center of the Milky Way, haunting our galaxy’s supermassive black hole. But it’s not as scary as it looks! Our SOFIA observatory captured streamlines tracing a magnetic field that appears to be luring most of the material quietly into orbit around the black hole. In other galaxies, magnetic fields seem to be feeding material into hungry black holes — beware! Magnetic fields might be the answer to why some black holes are starving while others are feasting.
The universe has bats in the attic! Hubble spotted the shadow of a giant cosmic bat in the Serpens Nebula. Newborn stars like the one at the center of the bat, called HBC 672, are surrounded by disks of material, which are hard to study directly. The shadows they cast, like the bat, can clue scientists in on things like the disk’s size and density. Our solar system formed from the same type of disk of material, but we can only see the end result of planet building here — we want to learn more about the process!
A jack-o-lantern in space?! Our Solar Dynamics Observatory watches the Sun at all times, keeping a close eye on space weather. In October 2014, the observatory captured a chilling image of the Sun with a Halloweenish face!
On Halloween a few years ago, an eerie-looking object known as 2015 TB145 sped across the night sky. Scientists observing it with our Infrared Telescope Facility determined that it was most likely a dead comet. It’s important to study objects like comets and asteroids because they’re dangerous if they cross Earth’s path — just ask the dinosaurs!
Trick-or-treat! Add a piece of glowing cosmic candy to your Halloween haul, courtesy of Hubble! This image shows the Saturn Nebula, formed from the outer layers ejected by a dying star, destined to be recycled into later generations of stars and planets. Our Sun will experience a similar fate in around five billion years.
Massive stars are in for a more fiery fate, as the Witch’s Broom Nebula shows. Hubble’s close-up look reveals wisps of gas — shrapnel leftover from a supernova explosion. Astronomers believe that a couple of supernovae occur each century in galaxies like our own Milky Way.
Supernovae usually herald the death of a star, but on a few occasions astronomers have found “zombie stars” left behind after unusually weak supernovae. Our Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) has even spotted a mysterious glow of high-energy X-rays that could be the “howls” of dead stars as they feed on their neighbors.
The universe is brimming with galaxies, but it’s also speckled with some enormous empty pockets of space, too. These giant ghost towns, called voids, may be some of the largest things in the cosmos, and since the universe is expanding, galaxies are racing even farther away from each other all the time! Be grateful for your place in space — the shadowy patches of the universe are dreadful lonely scenes.
Some forces are a lot spookier than floorboards creaking or a door slamming shut unexpectedly when you’re home alone. Dark energy is a mysterious antigravity pressure that our Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) is going to help us understand. All we know so far is that it’s present everywhere in the cosmos (even in the room with you as you read this) and it controls the fate of the universe, but WFIRST will study hundreds of millions of galaxies to figure out just what dark energy is up to.
Want to learn some fun ways to celebrate Halloween in (NASA) style? Check out this link!
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
Hulk by Nic Klein.