The Thin Red Line (1998)
Paz: .Mother is most definitely real.
.She is among us.
Jason-2: [sus]
Reactions: [among us face but on bread x3]
high tide and low tide in great britain. photographs by michael marten
.yeah
isn't it kinda spaceist that all the mods are human
i think there should be more stories about gay people coming back from the dead
“I don’t know / desire other than the need / to be shattered & / rebuilt”
— Ocean Vuong, from “My Father Writes From Prison”, Night Sky with Exit Wounds
.fuck
ctrl+z ctrl+z ctrl+z ctrl+z ctrl+z ctrl+z ctrl+z
.no its me telling you that you need sleep
.the more you tell me to sleep .the more its likely that i wont
Three Tails of Comet NEOWISE via NASA https://ift.tt/3bn69Cn
Euvelgunnerheem, Full moon - Eline Brontsema , 2020.
Dutch, b. 1988-
Woodcut, 31.9 x 28.9 cm
Vincent Van Gogh and snatches of blue
Judge magazine, November 1925
instead of saying hey queen/king can we start saying “yes chef” like in hell’s kitchen
draw a lil astronaut?
girl help i’m lost in the vast expanse of space
pan people are good and I like them. if ur pan I’m mentally shaking ur hand and “nice.”
y’know what. i think we need to start validating every single expression of bisexuality. i mean it. if a bi girl claims she has no preference but mainly talks about guys, she’s still bisexual. if a bi guy has only dated men, he’s still bisexual. if someone has a preference, they’re absolutely just as bisexual. also, having no gender preference is absolutely, 100% an expression of bisexuality. when it comes down to it, there is no way to define bisexuality through an individual’s experience. if they are bisexual they are bisexual, no matter how others may see it.
Hubble Reveals Dynamic Atmospheres of Uranus, Neptune by NASA Hubble
The James Webb Space Telescope – our next infrared space observatory – will not only change what we know, but also how we think about the night sky and our place in the cosmos. This epic mission to travel back in time to look back at the first stars and galaxies has inspired artists from around the world to create art inspired by the mission.
Image Credit: Anri Demchenko
It’s been exactly two years since the opening of the first James Webb Space Telescope Art + Science exhibit at the NASA Goddard Visitor Center. The exhibit was full of pieces created by artists who had the special opportunity to visit Goddard and view the telescope in person in late 2016.
Online Submission Image Credit: Tina Saramaga
Since the success of the event and exhibit, the Webb project has asked its followers to share any art they have created that was inspired by the mission. They have received over 125 submissions and counting!
Image Credit: Enrico Novelli
Online Submission Image Credit: Unni Isaksen
A selection of these submissions will be on display at NASA Goddard’s Visitor Center from now until at least the end of April 2019. The artists represented in this exhibit come not just from around the country, but from around the world, showing how art and science together can bring a love of space down to Earth.
More information about each piece in the exhibit can be found in our web gallery. Want to participate and share your own art? Tag your original art, inspired by the James Webb Space Telescope, on Twitter or Instagram with #JWSTArt, or email us through our website! For more info and rules, see: http://nasa.gov/jwstart.
Webb is the work of hands and minds from across the planet. We’re leading this international project with our partners from the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), and we’re all looking forward to its launch in 2021. Once in space, Webb will solve mysteries of our solar system, look beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probe the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it.
Learn more about the James Webb Space Telescope HERE, or follow the mission on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
📣 Attention, space explorers! Our Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope presents: two new coloring pages! Unleash your creativity to bring these celestial scenes to life.
Nancy Grace Roman, NASA’s first chief astronomer, smiles out at us from our first coloring page. She’s considered the mother of our Hubble Space Telescope because she helped everyone understand why it was important to have observatories in space – not just on the ground. If it weren’t for her, Hubble may have never become a reality.
The Roman Space Telescope is named after her to honor the legacy she left behind when she died in 2018. Thanks to Nancy Grace Roman, we’ve taken countless pictures of space from orbiting telescopes and learned so much more about the universe than we could have possibly known otherwise!
The second coloring page illustrates some of the exciting science topics the Roman Space Telescope will explore. Set to launch in the mid-2020s, the mission will view the universe in infrared light, which is like using heat vision. We’ll be able to peer through clouds of dust and see things that are much farther away.
We anticipate all kinds of discoveries from the edge of our solar system to the farthest reaches of space. This coloring page highlights a few of the things the Roman Space Telescope will help us learn more about. The mission will find thousands of planets beyond our solar system and hundreds of millions of galaxies. It will also help us unravel the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy, represented by the gray web-like pattern in the background. With so much exciting new data, who knows what else we may learn?
Download the coloring pages here!
Learn more about the Roman Space Telescope at: https://roman.gsfc.nasa.gov/
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com