Ah yes #Firefly! It's a terrific show~ such a shame no second season but make sure you see the movie once you've seen all the episodes!
Northern lights and sunrise as captured by Scott Kelly aboard the ISS.
carrots are for sharing
Cute little buggy! "Crossbreeding a spider and a car results into this new automotive species 😝 [made by swincar.fr]"
The planet Earth on August 21, 1965, photographed on day one of the Gemini 5 mission.
(NASA/University of Arizona)
(4 April 1968) — The Apollo 6 Spacecraft 020 Command Module is hoisted aboard the USS Okinawa.
There are two types of comet tails: dust and gas ion.
A dust tail contains small, solid particles that are about the same size found in cigarette smoke. This tail forms because sunlight pushes on these small particles, gently shoving them away from the comet’s nucleus. Because the pressure from sunlight is relatively weak, the dust particles end up forming a diffuse, curved tail.
A gas ion tail forms when ultraviolet sunlight rips one or more electrons from gas atoms in the coma, making them into ions (a process called ionization). The solar wind then carries these ions straight outward away from the Sun. The resulting tail is straighter and narrower. Both types of tails may extend millions of kilometers into space. As a comet heads away from the Sun, its tail dissipates, its coma disappears, and the matter contained in its nucleus freezes into a rock-like material.
Comets lose a lot of mass when they go by the Sun. A lot: some shed hundreds of tons of material per second. That’s actually a small fraction of the mass of a comet, but given time, and lots of solar passes, it adds up. Every comet we see is slowly dissolving in space. Eventually even the mighty Comet Halley will be gone, broken down into a swarm of rocks, gravel, and dust once its gas is gone.
Savage fish 😂