Monthly Archives: August 2021
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 22:15:15
Skarla Ali by Eva Wang for Vogue Portugal , April 2021
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 21:55:25
Ian Davenport (British, b. 1966), Flow, 2018. Acrylic on aluminum mounted on aluminium panel.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 16:59:54
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 16:44:29
Illusion
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 15:13:23
“Civil War II” Battle Lines are Drawn in Marvel Comics’ July 2016 Solicitations
Follow The Best Comics Artwork Blog on Tumblr
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 14:51:54
Kazuaki Iwasaki, from JCA Annual 5 (1984)
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 14:37:59
Black Panther Vol. 7 #3 [Textless] (2021)
Art by: Alex Ross
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 12:08:18
Lightspeed was slang for the speed at which a starship traveled through hyperspace. In reality, though, a class 1.0 hyperdrive motivator could propel a ship through hyperspace over one hundred thousand times faster than light, allowing a ship to cross the galaxy in a matter of days.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 12:04:42
Hubble finds infant stars in neighbouring galaxy by NASA Hubble
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 03:31:02
Valerie June
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 02:57:06
Imants Tillers (Australia, 1950 - )
Kangaroo Blank, 1988
oilstick, gouache, synthetic polymer paint
78 canvas boards, nos. 16231 - 16308
installation 213.0 (h) x 195.0 (w) cm
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 02:21:23
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 01:46:31
Agnes Pelton (1881–1961) — Mother of Silence (oil on canvas, 1933)
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 01:37:47
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 01:10:50
nasa:
The Stellar Buddy System
Our Sun has an entourage of planets, moons, and smaller objects to keep it company as it traverses the galaxy. But it’s still lonely compared to many of the other stars out there, which often come in pairs. These cosmic couples, called binary stars, are very important in astronomy because they can easily reveal things that are much harder to learn from stars that are on their own. And some of them could even host habitable planets!
The birth of a stellar duo
New stars emerge from swirling clouds of gas and dust that are peppered throughout the galaxy. Scientists still aren’t sure about all the details, but turbulence deep within these clouds may give rise to knots that are denser than their surroundings. The knots have stronger gravity, so they can pull in more material and the cloud may begin to collapse.
The material at the center heats up. Known as a protostar, it is this hot core that will one day become a star. Sometimes these spinning clouds of collapsing gas and dust may break up into two, three, or even more blobs that eventually become stars. That would explain why the majority of the stars in the Milky Way are born with at least one sibling.
Seeing stars
We can’t always tell if we’re looking at binary stars using just our eyes. They’re often so close together in the sky that we see them as a single star. For example, Sirius, the brightest star we can see at night, is actually a binary system (see if you can spot both stars in the photo above). But no one knew that until the 1800s.
Precise observations showed that Sirius was swaying back and forth like it was at a middle school dance. In 1862, astronomer Alvan Graham Clark used a telescope to see that Sirius is actually two stars that orbit each other.
But even through our most powerful telescopes, some binary systems still masquerade as a single star. Fortunately there are a couple of tricks we can use to spot these pairs too.
Since binary stars orbit each other, there’s a chance that we’ll see some stars moving toward and away from us as they go around each other. We just need to have an edge-on view of their orbits. Astronomers can detect this movement because it changes the color of the star’s light – a phenomenon known as the Doppler effect.
Stars we can find this way are called spectroscopic binaries because we have to look at their spectra, which are basically charts or graphs that show the intensity of light being emitted over a range of energies. We can spot these star pairs because light travels in waves. When a star moves toward us, the waves of its light arrive closer together, which makes its light bluer. When a star moves away, the waves are lengthened, reddening its light.
Sometimes we can see binary stars when one of the stars moves in front of the other. Astronomers find these systems, called eclipsing binaries, by measuring the amount of light coming from stars over time. We receive less light than usual when the stars pass in front of each other, because the one in front will block some of the farther star’s light.
Sibling rivalry
Twin stars don’t always get along with each other – their relationship may be explosive! Type Ia supernovae happen in some binary systems in which a white dwarf – the small, hot core left over when a Sun-like star runs out of fuel and ejects its outer layers – is stealing material away from its companion star. This results in a runaway reaction that ultimately detonates the thieving star. The same type of explosion may also happen when two white dwarfs spiral toward each other and collide. Yikes!
Scientists know how to determine how bright these explosions should truly be at their peak, making Type Ia supernovae so-called standard candles. That means astronomers can determine how far away they are by seeing how bright they look from Earth. The farther they are, the dimmer they appear. Astronomers can also look at the wavelengths of light coming from the supernovae to find out how fast the dying stars are moving away from us.
Studying these supernovae led to the discovery that the expansion of the universe is speeding up. Our Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will scan the skies for these exploding stars when it launches in the mid-2020s to help us figure out what’s causing the expansion to accelerate – a mystery known as dark energy.
Spilling stellar secrets
Astronomers like finding binary systems because it’s a lot easier to learn more about stars that are in pairs than ones that are on their own. That’s because the stars affect each other in ways we can measure. For example, by paying attention to how the stars orbit each other, we can determine how massive they are. Since heavier stars burn hotter and use up their fuel more quickly than lighter ones, knowing a star’s mass reveals other interesting things too.
By studying how the light changes in eclipsing binaries when the stars cross in front of each other, we can learn even more! We can figure out their sizes, masses, how fast they’re each spinning, how hot they are, and even how far away they are. All of that helps us understand more about the universe.
Tatooine worlds
Thanks to observatories such as our Kepler Space Telescope, we know that worlds like Luke Skywalker’s home planet Tatooine in “Star Wars” exist in real life. And if a planet orbits at the right distance from the two stars, it could even be habitable (and stay that way for a long time).
In 2019, our Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) found a planet, known as TOI-1338 b, orbiting a pair of stars. These worlds are tricker to find than planets with only one host star, but TESS is expected to find several more!
Want to learn more about the relationships between stellar couples? Check out this Tumblr post: https://nasa.tumblr.com/post/190824389279/cosmic-couples-and-devastating-breakups
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 00:35:15
✧ ✧
I will do whatever it takes to make all your dreams come true.THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG (2009)
Dir. John Musker & Ron Clements
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-30 00:27:39
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 20:11:34
Credit: Tiger Tateishi aka Taiga Tateishi aka 立石タイガー (Fukuoka, Japan 1941-1998. First image: Composition, 1969 [used as cover of Tora : Tiger Tateishi super multi dimension, Tōkyō : Kōsakusha, 2010]. Second image: Wind God, Thunder God and the Shadow Fuji, 1991, oil on canvas, triptycheach: 145 x 89.5 cm. (57 1/8 x 35 ¼ in.)overall: 145 x 268.5 cm. (57 1/8 x 105 ¾ in.), thanks to @christiesinc for the tip. Third image: Ventilated tiger, 1992, thanks to @yamamoto_gendai for the tip.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 18:19:38
“The Maiden”. Artwork by @lost_intheisland
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 18:15:34
Marcel Mouly
France, 1918-2008
Echecs (Chess)
Lithograph
74.93 x 53.34 cm. | 29.5 x 21 in.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 16:58:47
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 16:48:09
Listen/purchase: Cricket on the Moon by Lee “Scratch” Perry
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 16:36:12
Lee “Scratch” Perry 1936-2021
Rest In Power, Legend.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 16:24:48
Psions info page
art by Shawn McManus
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 15:53:10
Alien Limes by Krystal Foster
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 15:48:56
Canyon Falls Big Sur, CA (slick-vic)
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 15:41:22
circadian by manzel bowman
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-29 15:26:36
Pascal Blanché
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 21:40:31
I guess we are getting Ship backstory? and They are somehow tied in with the Celestials I guess…
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 21:04:51
View of Neptune in the infrared, showing bands of methane in its atmosphere captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, this image is surrounded by four of its satellites, Proteus, Larissa, Despina and Galatea.
Credit: NASA/ESA/Hubble
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 20:30:56
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 20:11:03
ken marten
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 20:15:00
Khaos
By Kpierre.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 20:06:51
A badly damaged white Tura limestone pyramidion, thought to have been made for the Red Pyramid of Sneferu at Dahshur, has been reconstructed and is on open-air display beside that pyramid; it presents a minor mystery, however, as its angle of inclination is steeper than that of the edifice it was apparently built to surmount. [X]
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 16:24:52
Africa | Fashion | South African designer Lukhanyo Mdingi’s most recent collection, spring/summer 16’s Taintless, is a gender-fluid take on Japanese design techniques. Photographed by Travys Owen and styled by Gabrielle Kannemeyer.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 13:33:14
Tali’Zorah vas Normandy
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-28 10:00:28
snuh:
Bruce Pennington: A Wilderness of Stars: Stories of Man in Conflict with Space - Corgi Books #08942, January 1972
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 23:24:28
snuh:
Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald: Dream A Little Dream Of Me
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 22:50:47
yizr:
mutex
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 22:33:53
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 22:13:50
Click here To Experience the True Nature of Reality for a Short Moment by Rainbow Clash on Spotify!
Follow Rainbow Clash on Twitter Instagram Facebook Spotify Bandcamp Soundcloud Youtube +++ rainbowclash.com +++
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 19:57:45
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 18:54:05
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 18:46:42
No turning back now.
LOKI (2021 - ) | Episode 6: For All Time. Always
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 17:29:24
Nestor Goldar
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 17:23:30
Heart of the Lagoon Nebula by NASA Hubble
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 17:09:42
currently reading
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 16:53:30
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 16:28:08
Ajuma and Awuoi, Alexander McQueen Spring/Summer 2005
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 09:14:34
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-27 00:36:35
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 23:28:16
Hair by Erol Karadag.
- Photography: @/spadestudios2
- Model: @/anyiangyak
- MUA: @/christynakay
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 23:15:16
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 20:30:49
by Jason Stokes
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 19:54:38
Fernsehturm Berlin, Matthias Heiderich
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 19:20:46
Jurassic Park - Art by Noriyoshi Ohrai
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 18:44:32
Joseph Kyle, Entelechy Series II #42, Acrylic on canvas
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 18:43:22
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 18:39:32
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 15:48:44
Nyaueth Riam by Zee Nunes for Vogue Brasil , August 2021
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 15:37:50
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 14:13:46
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 11:40:27
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-26 11:10:55
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-25 22:42:01
source: unknown
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-25 11:52:59
Tanerélle by Dana Trippe, 2020
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-25 11:29:08
KV17 - tomb of Seti I.
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-25 11:13:03
The Best of Isaac Asimov 1954-1972 (1977) Cover Art by Peter Elson
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 20:11:45
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 17:50:25
Celestial Fireworks - The Official Hubble 25th Anniversary Image by NASA Hubble
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 16:54:12
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 16:51:53
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 15:34:54
Adelaide Black
Kylie Marume
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 15:32:28
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 12:06:34
how we make up
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 11:58:31
Les Jardins d'Étretat
Inst @viettrang.tr
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 11:08:35
by Conrad Lee
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 10:45:07
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-24 10:44:15
Perseverance Captures Incredible Clip of Lumpy Martian Moon via /r/space https://ift.tt/3j77pxk
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 23:56:31
Surveying the cosmos by NASA Hubble
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 23:50:55
via sophiakossada on instagram
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 23:32:00
✨Hathor✨
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 16:54:56
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 16:52:48
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 14:12:01
Stanford Torus Colony (1974) illustration by Gerard O'Neill complete with Californian style houses, swimming pools and streetscapes!
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 00:36:56
The California Nebula NGC 1499
A classic emission nebula around 100 light-years long. Drifting through the Orion Arm of the spiral Milky Way Galaxy, this cosmic cloud by chance echoes the outline of California on the west coast of the United States. cr. NASA’s APOD(Jan. 2016)/ Farmakopoulos Antonis
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-23 00:36:56
The California Nebula NGC 1499
A classic emission nebula around 100 light-years long. Drifting through the Orion Arm of the spiral Milky Way Galaxy, this cosmic cloud by chance echoes the outline of California on the west coast of the United States. cr. NASA’s APOD(Jan. 2016)/ Farmakopoulos Antonis
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 21:40:58
Janet Jumbo By Damien Krisl For Vogue Czechoslovakia August 2021
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 21:05:45
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 20:31:29
“Whatever we look at, and however we look at it, we see only through our own eyes.”
― C.G. Jung
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 19:54:51
Joe Webb
Vessels
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 19:44:39
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 19:40:57
Mauresque Noire (Black Moorish Woman)
Charles Cordier, 1856
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 19:20:58
Alton Mason by Elizaveta Porodina for Homme Natherlands Magazine - March 2020
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 18:44:49
Source : Myrto Amorgianou gif (modified)
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 18:15:29
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 17:09:49
Charmer – Jvzmina X Art
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 16:41:45
John Berkey
SAUCER KOMMAND 2021-08-22 16:32:24
Julio Larraz - Sol de Agosto – August’ Sun, 2015, oil on canvas, 60 x 72 in
(artoftheworldgallery)