This Is Pumpkin

This Is Pumpkin

This is Pumpkin

More Posts from Allisonkitten and Others

9 years ago

Remember to look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Try to make sense of what you see and wonder about what makes the universe exist. Be curious. And however difficult life may seem, there is always something you can do and succeed at.  It matters that you don’t just give up.

Stephen Hawking, who turns 74 today. Happy birthday! (via astrowhat)

9 years ago
Andromeda Legend: The Chained Lady

Andromeda Legend: The Chained Lady

Cassiopeia, Andromeda’s mother, boasted that she was the most beautiful woman in the world, even more beautiful than the gods. Poseidon, the brother of Zeus and the god of the seas, took great offense at this statement, for he had created the most beautiful beings ever in the form of his sea nymphs. In his anger, he created a great sea monster, Cetus (pictured as a whale) to ravage the seas and sea coast. Since Cassiopeia would not recant her claim of beauty, it was decreed that she must sacrifice her only daughter, the beautiful Andromeda, to this sea monster. So Andromeda was chained to a large rock projecting out into the sea and was left there to await the arrival of the great sea monster Cetus. As Cetus approached Andromeda, Perseus arrived (some say on the winged sandals given to him by Hermes). He had just killed the gorgon Medusa and was carrying her severed head in a special bag. When Perseus saw the beautiful maiden in distress, like a true champion he went to her aid. Facing the terrible sea monster, he drew the head of Medusa from the bag and held it so that the sea monster would see it. Immediately, the sea monster turned to stone. Perseus then freed the beautiful Andromeda and, claiming her as his bride, took her home with him as his queen to rule.

9 years ago
Cassini At Saturn, 2016
Cassini At Saturn, 2016
Cassini At Saturn, 2016
Cassini At Saturn, 2016
Cassini At Saturn, 2016
Cassini At Saturn, 2016

Cassini at Saturn, 2016

9 years ago

Solar System: Things to Know This Week

Our solar system is huge, let us break it down for you. Here are a few things to know this week:

1. The New New Horizons

Solar System: Things To Know This Week

Seven months after the  Pluto flyby, information and discoveries continue to flow from the New Horizons mission, as the spacecraft transmits more and more data to scientists on Earth.

2. A Longlasting Dawn

Solar System: Things To Know This Week

The Dawn orbiter is in good health as it carries out the ongoing reconnaissance of the dwarf planet Ceres, which is revealing some spectacular and mysterious landscapes.

3. Storm Watch: Saturn

Solar System: Things To Know This Week

This week the Cassini spacecraft will be watching for storms in Saturn’s turbulent atmosphere. On March 6, it will spend about 14 hours acquiring a movie of the narrow, braided F ring. Check out some past photos of Saturnian storms HERE.

4. The Next Flight to Mars Departs Soon

Solar System: Things To Know This Week

The ExoMars 2016 mission, a joint endeavor between the European Space Agency and the Russian space agency Roscosmos, is set to lift off in March. The 2016 mission consists of the Trace Gas Orbiter and the Schiaparelli Entry, Descent and Landing Demonstrator Module. We’re supplying some of the technology that will fly aboard the orbiter. In 2018, the ExoMars rover is slated to follow.

5. Early Encounter with a Comet

Solar System: Things To Know This Week

As we continue to marvel at the latest images from Rosetta, this week is a good time to remember the 30th anniversary of the Vega 1 Comet Halley flyby. This Russian spacecraft dropped off a balloon probe at Venus before continuing on to the comet, which is photographed and examined at close range by flying through its coma.

Want to learn more? Read our full list of the 10 things to know this week about the solar system HERE.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

9 years ago

These are gorgeous and I need them all! 😍😍😍

Spectacular “Space Glass” Pendants Let You Hold The Cosmos In The Palm Of Your Hand
Spectacular “Space Glass” Pendants Let You Hold The Cosmos In The Palm Of Your Hand
Spectacular “Space Glass” Pendants Let You Hold The Cosmos In The Palm Of Your Hand
Spectacular “Space Glass” Pendants Let You Hold The Cosmos In The Palm Of Your Hand
Spectacular “Space Glass” Pendants Let You Hold The Cosmos In The Palm Of Your Hand

Spectacular “Space Glass” Pendants Let You Hold the Cosmos in the Palm of Your Hand

9 years ago
Time Lapse Of Voyager 1′s Approach To Jupiter

Time lapse of Voyager 1′s approach to Jupiter

9 years ago
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings
NASA’s Cassini Reveals The Full Glory Of Saturn’s Rings

NASA’s Cassini reveals the full glory of Saturn’s rings

“Composed of 99.9% water-ice, the ring system has thousands of thin gaps, and was thicker and more varied in the past. The once-rocky material has coalesced into moons, but the watery rings will remain for as long as our Solar System exists.”

In the 1600s, the earliest telescopes saw that Saturn had “ears,” while later observers all the way back then finally saw their true nature: a ringed system with complex gaps, bands and colorations throughout. Since then, Saturn’s rings have been a source of wonder and puzzlement to skywatchers everywhere. The only ring system visible through most telescopes from Earth, Saturn’s main rings measure more than 70,000 km long, yet are no more than 1 km in thickness. Once thought to have only two gaps in them, the Cassini spacecraft has revealed over a thousand, teaching us that Saturn’s rings are ancient – likely as old as the planet itself – and will likely continue to exist for as long as our Sun shines.

Go get the full story in a glorious set of pictures from Cassini and no more than 200 words on today’s Mostly Mute Monday!

allisonkitten - Here, have some space
Here, have some space

Just a socially awkward college student with an interest in the celestial bodies in our universe.

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