Well it’s Friday- and for many- it has been testing week. Great job, you made it!
Um trabalho primoroso de Ivan Mizanzuk. Histórias reais sobre pessoas reais.
Linda peça em Sashiko!!
Self-drafted Godzilla based on the wood cut from Three Fish Studios. Lots of half stitch and sashiko. by thefutureisfeline
Outubro
Primavera no hemisfério sul
Cores e perfumes
Alegram
Os dias ensolarados
Iluminam os meus olhos
Saudade dos meus amores.
@maejemison fist black woman in space and principle of the 100 Year Starship Project. #WomeninScienceBook #scientificliteracy #happyblackhistorymonth #blackhistoryshouldbecelebratedallyearlong
Físico teórico Stephen Hawking morre aos 76 anos http://pt.euronews.com/2018/03/14/fisico-teorico-stephen-hawking-morre-aos-76-anos
Meu canto
Our solar system is huge, so let us break it down for you. Here are 5 things to know this week:
1. It’s Lunacy, Whether by Day or Night
What’s Up in the night sky during November? See all the phases of the moon by day and by night, and learn how to look for the Apollo landing sites. Just after sunset on November 13 and 14, look near the setting sun in the western sky to see the moon as a slender crescent. For more, catch the latest edition of the monthly “What’s Up” Tumblr breakdown.
2. Answer to Longstanding Mars Mystery is Blowin’ in the Wind
What transformed Mars from a warm and wet environment, one that might have supported surface life, to the cold, arid planet it is today? Data from our Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission pins much of the blame on the sun. Streams of charged solar particles crash against the Martian atmosphere, and without much of a magnetic field there to deflect the onslaught, over time the solar wind has stripped the air away.
3. Orbital Maneuvers in the Dark
The New Horizons mission team has set a new record. They recently performed the last in a series of trajectory changes that set the spacecraft on a course for an encounter with a Kuiper Belt object in January 2019. The Kuiper Belt consists of small bodies that orbit the sun a billion miles or more beyond Pluto. These latest course maneuvers were the most distant trajectory corrections ever performed by any spacecraft.
4. Visit Venus (But Not Really — You’d Fry)
Mars isn’t the only available destination. You can visit all the planets, moons and small worlds of the solar system anytime, right from your computer or handheld device. Just peruse our planets page, where you’ll find everything from basic facts about each body to the latest pictures and discoveries. Visit Venus HERE.
5. Titan Then and Now
Nov. 12 marks the 35th anniversary of Voyager 1’s Saturn flyby in 1980. Voyager saw Saturn’s enshrouded, planet-sized moon Titan as a featureless ball. In recent years, the Cassini mission haas revealed Titan in detail as a complex world. The spacecraft has peered beneath its clouds, and even delivered a probe to its encounter, which will include infrared scans, as well as using visible light cameras to look for methane clouds in the atmosphere.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com