Looks like a cinnamon roll but could actually kill you: Samantha Carter
Looks like they could kill you but is actually a cinnamon roll: Jack O’Neill
Looks like a cinnamon roll and is actually a cinnamon roll: Daniel Jackson
Looks like they could kill you and would actually kill you: Teal’C
The sinnamon roll: Vala Mal Doran
His grandma makes the best cinnamon rolls: Cameron Mitchell
Scolds you for eating too many cinnamon rolls: Janet Fraiser
Got killed from eating too many cinnamon rolls: Jonas Quinn
Doesn't understand the appeal of cinnamon rolls: Thor
Tries to take over Earth, just so they can have all the cinnamon rolls for themselves: Ba'al
I found this very interesting.
From advanced wing designs, through the hypersonic frontier, and onward into the era of composite structures, electronic flight controls, and energy efficient flight, our engineers and researchers have led the way in virtually every aeronautic development. And since 2011, aeronautical innovators from around the country have been working on our Unmanned Aircraft Systems integration in the National Airspace System, or UAS in the NAS, project.
This project was a new type of undertaking that worked to identify, develop, and test the technologies and procedures that will make it possible for unmanned aircraft systems to have routine access to airspace occupied by human piloted aircraft. Since the start, the goal of this unified team was to provide vital research findings through simulations and flight tests to support the development and validation of detect and avoid and command and control technologies necessary for integrating UAS into the NAS.
That interest moved into full-scale testing and evaluation to determine how to best integrate unmanned vehicles into the national airspace and how to come up with standards moving forward. Normally, 44,000 flights safely take off and land here in the U.S., totaling more than 16 million flights per year. With the inclusion of millions of new types of unmanned aircraft, this integration needs to be seamless in order to keep the flying public safe.
Working hand-in-hand, teams collaborated to better understand how these UAS’s would travel in the national airspace by using NASA-developed software in combination with flight tests. Much of this work is centered squarely on technology called detect and avoid. One of the primary safety concerns with these new systems is the inability of remote operators to see and avoid other aircraft. Because unmanned aircraft literally do not have a pilot on board, we have developed concepts allowing safe operation within the national airspace.
In order to better understand how all the systems work together, our team flew a series of tests to gather data to inform the development of minimum operational performance standards for detect and avoid alerting guidance. Over the course of this testing, we gathered an enormous amount of data allowing safe integration for unmanned aircraft into the national airspace. As unmanned aircraft are becoming more ubiquitous in our world - safety, reliability, and proven research must coexist.
Every day new use case scenarios and research opportunities arise based around the hard work accomplished by this incredible workforce. Only time will tell how these new technologies and innovations will shape our world.
Want to learn the many ways that NASA is with you when you fly? Visit nasa.gov/aeronautics.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
I like this! Explains their relationship perfectly! ^_^
McKAY: OK. We think we’ve found a way to uncouple the nanite cells from Elizabeth’s cells. We create a distraction. What were the nanites originally designed to do? DEX: Fight the Wraith. McKAY: Exactly. So that’s what we’ll get them to do now. We think by implanting a small amount of Wraith tissue into Doctor Weir’s body… the nanite cells will essentially attack it. They have to - it’s what they are programmed to do, which will draw them away from Elizabeth’s cells, effectively unbinding them….that’s all we need; momentary distraction to draw them away from her so we can zap ‘em with the E.M. pulse.
Ronon Dex’s patience is tested by #McKayXplanation. Stargate Atlantis 3.06 The Real World
From USGS Volcanoes Twitter: Red spots are the approximate locations of vents feeding lava flowing into the bottom of Halema‘uma‘u crater. The water lake has been replaced with a growing lava lake. The easternmost vent is currently exhibiting fountains up to approximately 50 m (164 ft) high.
Webcams to watch the eruption.
All images from the USGS Volcanoes Twitter and the Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park Twitter.
And how d’you know he’s a he?
In contrast, all my husband and I had to do was sign a form. Our competence to choose the outcome of our embryo was never questioned. There were no mandatory lectures on gestation, no requirement that I be explicitly told that personhood begins at conception or that I view a picture of a day-five embryo. There was no compulsory waiting period for me to reconsider my decision. In fact, no state imposes these restrictions — so common for abortion patients — on patients with frozen embryos. With rare exceptions, the government doesn’t interfere with an IVF patient’s choices except to resolve disagreements between couples. The disparity between how the law treats abortion patients and IVF patients reveals an ugly truth about abortion restrictions: that they are often less about protecting life than about controlling women’s bodies. Both IVF and abortion involve the destruction of fertilized eggs that could potentially develop into people. But only abortion concerns women who have had sex that they don’t want to lead to childbirth. Abortion restrictions use unwanted pregnancy as a punishment for “irresponsible sex” and remind women of the consequences of being unchaste: If you didn’t want to endure a mandatory vaginal ultrasound , you shouldn’t have had sex in the first place .
Fertility clinics destroy embryos all the time. Why aren’t conservatives after them?
(via azspot)
Think I broke my hand I hit reblog so fast
(via artedish)
That kitten is just too cute
HOW ADORABLE IS THIS KITTY
He does look good!
I’m into Brazilian jiu jitsu, and there’s a big jiu jitsu community here, which I like a lot.
I loved that scene! John we love you just the way you are!
for the ask game: N - Name three things you wish you saw more or in your main fandom (or a fandom of choice).
I answered this for SGA already but I always want more SGA! So I will give 3 more: more scenes with John and Lorne doing the day-to-day running of Atlantis, CO/XO stuff <3; more Rodney ranting at his minions. :D more Teyla and Elizabeth discussing the difficulties of Leadership!
Thanks for the ask, my friend!
i encourage you to go to your favourite writer’s ao3 page and comment on an older fic, because i can assure you that it will make their day. It can mean so much to see your work doesn’t disappear into the void to be never seen again after a day of people interacting with it. Just, if you have the time, go comment on an older work
(pls reblog this to try and get as much writers a bit of appreciation)
Sharing my love of birds, dragons, sharks, space and all things Stargate!
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