Hubbles Jupiter and the Amazing Shrinking Great Red Spot
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Happy leap day!!!
Once every four years, an extra calendar day is added: a leap day. But why?
The reason for adding leap days to the calendar is to align the calendar year with the actual year – which is defined by the time it takes Earth to circle the sun. It is equal to 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds, or 365.24219 days.
If all calendar years contained exactly 365 days, they would drift from the actual year by about 1 day every 4 years. Eventually, July would occur during the northern hemisphere winter! Wouldn’t that be weird?
To correct (approximately), we add 1 day every 4 years…resulting in a leap year.
By making most years 365 days but every fourth year 366 days, the calendar year and the actual year remain more nearly in step.
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These are gorgeous and I need them all! 😍😍😍
Spectacular “Space Glass” Pendants Let You Hold the Cosmos in the Palm of Your Hand
Saturn’s Rings
(via)
Oh my
Phahahaha :P ~luna<3
The Galilean moons. From left to right, in order of increasing distance from Jupiter: Io, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto.
Ganymede: Orbits Jupiter, Diameter 5,262 km
Titan: Orbits Saturn, Diameter 5,150 km
Callisto: Orbits Jupiter, Diameter 4,821 km
Io: Orbits Jupiter, Diameter 3,643 km
The Moon: Orbits Earth, Diameter 3,475 km
Europa: Orbits Jupiter, Diameter 3,122 km
Triton: Orbits Neptune, Diameter 2,707 km
Titania: Orbits Uranus, Diameter 1,578 km
Rhea: Orbits Saturn, Diameter 1,529 km
Just a socially awkward college student with an interest in the celestial bodies in our universe.
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