Space is the place
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- _niko1
first image today
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FXeX…
- _niko1
- We need Dr Matt Taylor with another of his offensive shirts. I find it annoying that people expect scientists to be extroverts or even celebritiesIanbolton
- I hear you but if they could harness a fraction of the enthusiasm and presentation skills that apple puts into revealing dumb shit like the "notch" it'd be huge_niko
- Couldn't agree more. Apple have been doing that shit for years though. Maybe Apple should buy NASA?!Ianbolton
- nb2
- grafician10
- "NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has produced the deepest and sharpest infrared image of the distant universe to date. Known as Webb’s First Deep Field..."grafician
- hi res https://stsci-opo.or…grafician
- and comparison to the old Hubble one: https://twitter.com/…grafician
- Ooooh...to see a universe in a grain of sandNonEntity
- quote has a "so far" at the end.sted
- The international NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has delivered the deepest, sharpest infrared image of the distant Universe so far.sted
- If you held a grain of sand on the tip of your finger at arms length, that is the part of the universe that you're seeing. Just one little speck of the universehotroddy
- Amazing how we are able to look back in time billions of years at ancient light so far away.monospaced
- Absolutely beautiful and mind blowing._niko
- I wonder what trump's reaction to this would be? does he comprehend our place in the universe?_niko
- we’re not aloneprophetone
- JJ Abrams wet dreamRamanisky2
- Spent a few hours looking at that image, there's no way we're alone, it's only logicalgrafician
- Its amazing that they had lensflares billions of (light) years agowoowahesque
- And He-Man is the master of this.jagara
- when i vape..neverscared
- grafician-3
"CHINA COULD LAND ON MOON AND CLAIM IT AS ITS OWN TERRITORY: NASA CHIEF"
- Probably CAPS intended at this pointgrafician
- Sigh https://youtu.be/vXB…_niko
- LOL _nikoooografician
- grafician-1
"Astronauts lose decades' worth of bone mass in space that many do not recover even after a year back on Earth, researchers said Thursday, warning that it could be a "big concern" for future missions to Mars."
- whatthefunk10
"It's really hard to not look at the universe in a new light and not just have a moment that is deeply personal," he said. "It's an emotional moment when you see nature suddenly releasing some of its secrets. and I would like you to imagine and look forward to that."
- 12 days...monospaced
- Pretty quick considering it took a while before they got Hubble capturing clear images.aliastime
- Excitingmonospaced
- Fingers crossed Xutopian
- They saw “Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion bright as magnesium”_niko
- God damn it niko, beat me to it.garbage
- :)_niko
- excited about thisssssea_sea
- PhanLo0
This isn't the future we were promised.
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- PonyBoy3
See a rare alignment of all the planets in the night sky
https://www.nationalgeographic.c…
The view's have been spectacular this last week... it was especially amazing w/the full moon. <3
- Salarrue0
- Contrary to popular belief, messy work environments have no effect on either creativity or executive functions: https://www.frontier…Salarrue
- given ISS was put up in space in the mid 90's vs China's last year I'd say the ISS looks pretty fucking good given the time it's put inPonyBoy
- ISS looks waaaay coolerOBBTKN
- But surely it’s easy to snag a foot or something on a cable as you’re drifting by and fuck everything up?_niko
- grafician0
"Asteroid samples contain 'clues to origin of life': Japan scientists"
https://news.yahoo.com/asteroid-…
"Asteroid dust collected by a Japanese space probe contains organic material that shows some of the building blocks of life on Earth may have been formed in space, scientists said Friday.
Pristine material from the asteroid Ryugu was brought back to Earth in 2020 after a six-year mission to the celestial body around 300 million kilometres away.
But scientists are only just beginning to discover its secrets in the first studies on small portions of the 5.4 grams (0.2 ounces) of dust and dark, tiny rocks.
In one paper published Friday, a group of researchers led by Okayama University in western Japan said they had discovered "amino acids and other organic matter that could give clues to the origin of life on Earth".