minha cena favorita loveeeeeeee
You should worry a little less about my love-life and a little more about your fighting skills
#eye of sauron #OR #fluffy donut #????
You and Grindelwald were as close as brothers…
Oh we were closer than brothers.
Unusual hexagonal cloud pattern surrounding Saturn’s north pole. Credit:NASA, JPL-Caltech, SSI, Maksim Kakitsev
The north remembers. See a long-lived storm at the edge of Jupiter’s northern polar region in this Jovian cloudscape this JunoCam cloudscape.
Images of Jupiter taken by JunoCam on NASA’s Juno spacecraft.
Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, Mission Juno, Jason Major, Luca Fornaciari, Gerald Eichstädt
On that day in 1957 was launched the satellite Sputnik 1, the Earth’s first artificial satellite.
The Soviet Union launched it into an elliptical low Earth orbit on 4 October 1957, orbiting for three weeks before its batteries died, then silently for two more months before falling back into the atmosphere. It was a 58 cm (23 in) diameter polished metal sphere, with four external radio antennas to broadcast radio pulses. Its radio signal was easily detectable even by radio amateurs and the 65° inclination and duration of its orbit made its flight path cover virtually the entire inhabited Earth. This surprise success precipitated the American Sputnik crisis and triggered the Space Race, a part of the Cold War. The launch ushered in new political, military, technological, and scientific developments.
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Images of Jupiter taken by JunoCam on NASA’s Juno spacecraft.
Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, Mission Juno, Jason Major, Luca Fornaciari, Gerald Eichstädt
Soaring over Jupiter. See the gas giant planet from my point of view in this striking citizen-scientist-processed JunoCam image.