High Heel Bowl...Love It!!

High Heel Bowl...Love It!!

High Heel Bowl...Love it!!

More Posts from Amyleigh81 and Others

7 years ago

Very Interesting

Inside - Vadim Sadovski
Inside - Vadim Sadovski
Inside - Vadim Sadovski
Inside - Vadim Sadovski
Inside - Vadim Sadovski
Inside - Vadim Sadovski
Inside - Vadim Sadovski
Inside - Vadim Sadovski

Inside - Vadim Sadovski

7 years ago
Sequence Of Juno Spacecraft’s Close Approach To Jupiter

Sequence of Juno Spacecraft’s Close Approach to Jupiter

Once every 53 days the Juno spacecraft swings close to Jupiter, speeding over its clouds. In just two hours, the spacecraft travels from a perch over Jupiter’s north pole through its closest approach (perijove), then passes over the south pole on its way back out. This sequence shows 14 enhanced-color images.

The first image on the left shows the entire half-lit globe of Jupiter, with the north pole approximately in the center. As the spacecraft gets closer to Jupiter, the horizon moves in and the range of visible latitudes shrinks. The third and fourth images in this sequence show the north polar region rotating away from our view while a band of wavy clouds at northern mid-latitudes comes into view. 

By the fifth image of the sequence the band of turbulent clouds is nicely centered in the image. The seventh and eighth images were taken just before the spacecraft was at its closest point to Jupiter, near Jupiter’s equator. Even though these two pictures were taken just four minutes apart, the view is changing quickly.

As the spacecraft crossed into the southern hemisphere, the bright “south tropical zone” dominates the ninth, 10th and 11th images. 

The white ovals in a feature nicknamed Jupiter’s “String of Pearls” are visible in the 12th and 13th images. 

In the 14th image Juno views Jupiter’s south poles. Image Credit: NASA/SWRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt/Seán Doran

4 years ago
Love & Hope

Love & Hope


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7 years ago
Chill The Fuck Out!

Chill the Fuck Out!


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7 years ago
A Crack In The Larsen C Ice Shelf Grew By 11 Miles In The Last Week Of May
A Crack In The Larsen C Ice Shelf Grew By 11 Miles In The Last Week Of May

A crack in the Larsen C ice shelf grew by 11 miles in the last week of May

President Donald Trump on Thursday announced his decision to withdraw the U.S. from the historic Paris climate agreement. Thousand of miles away in Antarctica, the devastating effects of climate change were making themselves abundantly clear.

Scientists at Project MIDAS tracking the Larsen C ice shelf reported that a rift in the ice shelf grew by an additional 17 kilometers, or 11 miles, between May 25 and May 31.

It’s just the latest period of rapid growth for the rift, which previously grew by 10 kilometers in January and 18 kilometers in the second half of December 2016. Read more (6/2/17)

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