Don't Miss It! Join The #ITER Business Forum #IBF19 From 26-28 March In Antibes, France. Learn About

Don't miss it! Join the #ITER Business Forum #IBF19 from 26-28 March in Antibes, France. Learn about upcoming business opportunities, partner up with other businesses and foster relationships! MORE INFO HERE: https://t.co/yEwk722uzN #b2b #WeAreITER https://t.co/cFJHUodfsJ

More Posts from Mousoudi20 and Others

4 years ago
Outer Banks → Places: heyward’s Seafood
Outer Banks → Places: heyward’s Seafood
Outer Banks → Places: heyward’s Seafood

outer banks → places: heyward’s seafood

5 years ago
Hi Everyone! It Has Been A While Since I Last Posted, And I Apologise For That! Today Was My Last Day

hi everyone! it has been a while since i last posted, and i apologise for that! today was my last day of uni (i still have exams, but classes ended today), so i decided to go out and spend the afternoon reading at @commacafe_ 🧡 it was nice to sit outdoors, because the weather was so lovely today! . i’m still currently reading the starless sea, and i’m looooving every page of it!🥰 i hope to read more over the break! have a great weekend everyone✨ (at Comma Cafe) https://www.instagram.com/p/B4C-9oSHghW/?igshid=yki1hnb07p91

6 years ago

#IBF2019 participants on tour at #ITER. Here in the Assembly Hall where the two giant tools stand ready to assemble the vacuum vessel sectors. #fusionenergy #WeAreITER https://t.co/MLh2Z7gbr3

6 years ago

good smell with good day!!

Good Smell With Good Day!!
5 years ago
The Lagoon Nebula 

The Lagoon Nebula 

This colorful image, taken by our Hubble Space Telescope between Feb. 12 and Feb. 18, 2018 , celebrated the Earth-orbiting observatory’s 28th anniversary of viewing the heavens, giving us a window seat to the universe’s extraordinary tapestry of stellar birth and destruction.

At the center of the photo, a monster young star 200,000 times brighter than our Sun is blasting powerful ultraviolet radiation and hurricane-like stellar winds, carving out a fantasy landscape of ridges, cavities, and mountains of gas and dust.

This region epitomizes a typical, raucous stellar nursery full of birth and destruction. The clouds may look majestic and peaceful, but they are in a constant state of flux from the star’s torrent of searing radiation and high-speed particles from stellar winds. As the monster star throws off its natal cocoon of material with its powerful energy, it is suppressing star formation around it.

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

6 years ago
Good Omens Meets Sherlock?

Good Omens meets Sherlock?

6 years ago

Computational modeling of fusion plasmas is very challenging: scales to be covered range from micrometers to meters and picoseconds to minutes. With largest supercomputers available, our understanding was pushed forward by modelling and still is.

#FusionFriday

(GIF: Waltz/Candy) https://t.co/hKdD5VGNNf

4 years ago

The Perseid Meteor Shower Is Here!

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Image Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls 

The Perseids are at their peak this week!

The Perseid meteor shower, one of the biggest meteor showers of the year, will be at its brightest early in the morning on Wednesday, August 12. Read on for some tips on how to watch the night sky this week – and to find out: what exactly are the Perseids, anyway?

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Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

Your best chance to spot the Perseids will be between 2 AM and dawn (local time) the morning of August 12. Find a dark spot, avoid bright lights (yes, that includes your phone) and get acclimated to the night sky.

Your eyes should be at peak viewing capacity after about 30 minutes; though the Moon may block out some of the dimmer meteors, you should still be able to see up to 15-20 an hour. If you’re not an early bird, you can try and take a look soon after sunset (around 9 PM) on the 11th, though you may not see as many Perseids then.

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Credit: NASA/MEO

If it’s too cloudy, or too bright, to go skywatching where you are, you can try again Wednesday or Thursday night – or just stay indoors and watch the Perseids online!

Our Meteor Watch program will be livestreaming the Perseids from Huntsville, Alabama on Facebook (weather permitting), starting around 9 p.m. EDT on August 11 and continuing through sunrise.

So… why are they called the Perseids?

Because all of a meteor shower’s meteors have similar orbits, they appear to come from the same place in the sky – a point called the radiant. 

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The radiant for the Perseids, as you might guess from the name, is in the constellation Perseus, found near Aries and Taurus in the night sky.

But they’re not actually coming from Perseus, right?

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Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky

Right! The Perseids are actually fragments of the comet Swift-Tuttle, which orbits within our solar system.

If you want to learn more about the Perseids, visit our Watch the Skies blog or check out our monthly “What’s Up” video series. Happy viewing!

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

5 years ago
THE POGUES — THE PERFECT PLAN
THE POGUES — THE PERFECT PLAN
THE POGUES — THE PERFECT PLAN
THE POGUES — THE PERFECT PLAN
THE POGUES — THE PERFECT PLAN

THE POGUES — THE PERFECT PLAN

6 years ago

We Just Took a Major Step Forward in our Moon Landing Program

As part of the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative, we’ve selected the first American companies that will deliver our science and technology payloads to the Moon.

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Seen above from left to right are lander prototypes from:

Astrobotic of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Intuitive Machines of Houston, Texas

Orbit Beyond of Edison, New Jersey

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Astrobotic of Pittsburgh has proposed to fly as many as 14 payloads to a large crater on the near side of the Moon.

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Intuitive Machines of Houston has proposed to fly as many as five payloads to a scientifically intriguing dark spot on the Moon.

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Orbit Beyond of Edison, New Jersey, has proposed to fly as many as four payloads to a lava plain in one of the Moon’s craters.

Each company is charged with demonstrating technology that will shape the development of future landers and other exploration systems needed for humans to return to the Moon’s surface under the new Artemis program. Artemis is the program that will send the first woman and the next man to the Moon by 2024 and develop a sustainable human presence on the Moon by 2028. The program takes its name from the twin sister of Apollo and goddess of the Moon in Greek mythology.

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Together we are going to the Moon—to stay.

Watch the CLPS announcement on our YouTube channel to learn about how each company will prepare us for human missions to the Moon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qODDdqK9rL4

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

mousoudi20 - Pogue Life
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