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UGC 12591: The Fastest Rotating Galaxy Known via NASA https://ift.tt/326jqJe
The Great Red Spot of Jupiter, observed by Voyager 1 on this day in 1979.
All five remaining instruments on NASA’s venerable Voyager 2 spacecraft are back to gathering science data after power overuse in late January interrupted the probe’s operations.
NASA made the announcement yesterday (March 3), over a month after the incident occurred. Troubleshooting for the spacecraft is a slow process because of its distance from Earth; it takes 17 hours for each command to reach the probe and for data indicating its efficacy to reach engineers.
During my book writing this NaNoWriMo, I came up with my own "humans are weird" concept!
You know, within a lot of stories, aliens are more advanced than us (technology). Have more senses than us (heat vision). Maybe have stronger senses than us (like hearing). But what if we have an advantage somewhere? Like maybe... We see more colors than they can?
In my book, one of my aliens cannot see the color red like the human can. I'd say she was "color blind", except this is just how all of her species see, so it's not a disability.
It's not as if she can't see red altogether, it just is a much duller color than what the human sees. Nearly brown. But it also happens to be the main color of her planet's environment.
This poses as a problem. See, her ship is red, and many of her outfits are red. These items are meant to blend in with the environment while moving across the planet.
A human visitor crashed on said planet, and our alien needs to go out to spy on then, see if they are friend or foe.
But the human, well, they sees her no matter where our alien protagonist moves. Incredibly well. Flying in over the mountains to come check on our human visitor? Human is already staring at the ship before it lands. Hiding behind a bush to observe the visitor? Human sees them immediately.
Once proper contact is made, our alien then asks about this. "Why were you always able to see me?" And the human seems confused.
"With all that bright red? I'd see you from a mile away!"
With proper research and observation, our alien comes to learn that the human sees basically a bright beacon against a dull background. But to our alien's eyes? It's all the same color.
Rozgwieżdżone niebo, Mazowsze Starry sky, Mazovia
Hubble Hooks a One-Arm Galaxy via NASA https://ift.tt/3bGuO2f
Digital Spacescapes by Tim Barton
Sharpless-308, Water Dolphin
Why is the final phase so difficult?Sorry if I sound dumb,I'm just curious.Also,what will be the rover's first task after landing?
M83, Southern Pinwheel
22 year old space blogger•Not just a space blogger.Also a worrier. •
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