One of Fred’s shyer relatives breaks cover…
(via Black Hole Discovered Which Emits Brilliant Light)
This is literally my favorite ever. Best post. Good.
King Arthur: I actually think he was probably not a wizard. But he definitely knew about wizardry and did his best to support it.
Gawain: Definitely a wizard. DEFINITELY a wizard. Specializes in liaising with nonhuman species living on earth, go-to diplomat when aliens show up.
Kay: Nope, Kay’s...
A new cosmic map is giving scientists an unprecedented look at the boundaries for the giant supercluster that is home to Earth’s own Milky Way galaxy and many others. Scientists even have a name for the colossal galactic group: Laniakea, Hawaiian for “immeasurable heaven.”
Image 1: Scientists have created the first map of a colossal supercluster of galaxies known as Laniakea, the home of Earth’s Milky Way galaxy and many other. This computer simulation, a still from a Nature journal video, depicts the giant supercluster, with the Milky Way’s location shown as a red dot. Credit: [Nature Video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rENyyRwxpHo)
Image 2: This computer-generated depiction of the Laniakea Supercluster of galaxies, which includes the Milky Way galaxy containing Earth’s solar system, shows a view of the supercluster as seen from the supergalactic equatorial plane. Credit: SDvision interactive visualization software by DP at CEA/Saclay, France
The scientists responsible for the new 3D map suggest that the newfound Laniakea supercluster of galaxies may even be part of a still-larger structure they have not fully defined yet.
"We live in something called ‘the cosmic web,’ where galaxies are connected in tendrils separated by giant voids," said lead study author Brent Tully, an astronomer at the University of Hawaii at Honolulu.
Galactic structures in space
Galaxies are not spread randomly throughout the universe. Instead, they clump in groups, such as the one Earth is in, the Local Group, which contains dozens of galaxies. In turn, these groups are part of massive clusters made up of hundreds of galaxies, all interconnected in a web of filaments in which galaxies are strung like pearls. The colossal structures known as superclusters form at the intersections of filaments.
The giant structures making up the universe often have unclear boundaries. To better define these structures, astronomers examined Cosmicflows-2, the largest-ever catalog of the motions of galaxies, reasoning that each galaxy belongs to the structure whose gravity is making it flow toward.
"We have a new way of defining large-scale structures from the velocities of galaxies rather than just looking at their distribution in the sky," Tully said.
I was so cool and fine and normal about Dairine Callahan at age ten (I was NOT, I was SO NOT NORMAL, and I have never become normal about her, she is a childhood blorbo and I have been rotating her like a 90’s windows screen saver for twenty-two years)
theres a giant burning orb in the sky and it can burn your flesh, it can give you diseases, it can kill you, looking directly at it causes physical pain, and we all think this is okay. we like this orb. we like to go outside and lie around on our backs when this orb is in the sky. children draw cute pictures of this levitating death orb with a smiley face on it. what is wrong with us
Inside a Neutron Star
Credit: Karl Tate, via SPACE.com
…I wanted to greet her with “Fairest and fallen, greeting and defiance, now and always.”
Not because I thought she was literally the Lone Power. But because she was clearly one of those people the Lone Power was acting through and loving it. And because dealing with her seemed to be part of my Ordeal.
And honestly because remembering that there are malevolent forces in the universe that use people like her to hurt people (and that she would willingly hand herself over to such forces if she believed in them, she was that kind of person), and that those malevolent forces of the universe can be named, greeted, and resisted, even resisted politely, was very important.
If you ever hear me say anything starting with “Fairest and fallen…” you know I’m serious. I may be wry, I may be half-joking, but some part of me is deadly serious if you hear those words come out of my mouth. It means “I know you. I know what I’m looking at. I know where your evil comes from, even if you don’t. And I won’t put up with it, and I won’t stand by and let this happen.”
The Young Wizards books are among a type of books I’ve read that hide deep and meaningful truths about the universe in the guise of ordinary children’s books. That’s my favorite type of book, ever.
I once read someone on dduane’s tumblr saying that when she was a kid, she would repeat the Wizard’s Oath over and over again, hoping it would make her a wizard.
I wrote to dduane telling her that I hadn’t read them as a kid. But when I grew up, I found that the Wizard’s Oath had already somehow become etched onto my heart, and it only took reading the words to remember how it happened. She said she gets that response from adults now and again.
There are many versions of the Wizard’s Oath, and some fans (including me) have made our own recensions. Each person gets the version they need. But here’s the one from the first book:
In Life’s name and for Life’s sake, I say that I will use the Art for nothing but the service of that Life. I will guard growth and ease pain. I will fight to preserve what grows and lives well in its own way; and I will change no object or creature unless its growth and life, or that of the system of which it is part, are threatened. To these ends, in the practice of my Art, I will put aside fear for courage, and death for life, when it is right to do so — till Universe’s end.
Here’s a version written for a dinosaur who had been living underground in a dystopian city:
“The Fire is at the heart, and the Fire is the heart; for its sake, all fires whatever are sacred to me. I shall kindle them small and safe where there are none, for the wayfinding of those who come after: I will breathe on those fires about to die in dark places, and in passing, feed those that burn without harm to any; the fire that burns and warms those who gather about it, in no wise shall I meddle with it save that it seems about to consume its cofocals, or to die. To these ends, as the Kindling requireth, I shall ever thrust my claw into the flames to shift the darkening ember or feed the failing coal, looking always toward that inmost Hearth from which all flames rise together, and all fires burn undevouring, in and of That Which first set light to the world, and burns in it ever more…”
And my personal recension:
In the soil, we are all growing, together. I will moisten the roots of those who need water. I will never allow the soil to dry out. I will make room for seeds to grow into plants. I will allow the soil to consume the parts of me that are no longer needed, and I will reach towards the sun. I will not touch leaves that may die at my touch, unless it is necessary to prevent some greater harm. I will love sorrel and tree, fungus and slug, alike. I will live inside of love, and let love guide me, to the best of my ability. I will look always to the place where all of our roots reach down as one.
This is awful. I just looked it up and Koi fish can live more than 200 years, the oldest on record being Hanako Fish who died at age 226.
Tom and Carl will die before them.
Today’s Cards Against Errantry card!
Like this card? Wish you could use it in a real-life game with fellow cousins? Then make sure to get your badge (and reserve your room) for CrossingsCon 2016.
A personal temporospatial claudication for Young Wizards fandom-related posts and general space nonsense.
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