And how's that work? You're a bicycle.
Death and Rebirth
On July 4, 1054 A.D, a bright new star appeared in the sky. Although it was 6,500 light-years away from Earth, it shone brighter than whole galaxies and was visible in daylight for 23 days. Little did the astronomers of the day know, the “new” star was actually the violent death of an old star: a supernova explosion. Stars more than ten times the mass of our sun will eventually become supernovas when they die. For their whole lives, they battle to balance energy trying to get out and gravity trying to crush them in under their own weight—but when they run out of fuel to burn, gravity wins. The star’s core collapses and its very atoms are crushed, emitting an enormous shockwave that flings heavy elements out into space. The remnants of this particular supernova formed the enigmatic Crab Nebula, an energetic cloud spanning five light-years, with each different colour representing different chemicals: orange is hydrogen, red is nitrogen, green is oxygen… And at the centre of the nebula lies the remnant of the exploded star. Gravity has squashed all the empty space out of it, leaving an incredibly dense object called a neutron star—just 20 km across, but with the mass of our sun, so on Earth, one teaspoonful would weigh one billion tons. Rotating neutron stars are known as pulsars, and this one spins at a rate of 30 times per second, sending out violent jets of particles at nearly the speed of light.
(via sciencesoup:)
“Curiosity will enrich your whole life.” —Frank Oppenheimer
Frank update: 82/100.
100 posts, over 100 days, leading to 100 years since Exploratorium founder Frank Oppenheimer’s birth, August 14. Follow along with #Frank100 at: http://exploratorium.tumblr.com/tagged/frank100
Images © Exploratorium, www.exploratorium.edu
(via petrak)
Martian Colorful Layers in Nili Fossae
This enhanced-color version of the central part of the HiRISE image shows colorful layers that may contain carbonate minerals.
AWESOME ALERT: This Guy Hand-Forged His Wedding Ring Out Of A METEORITE!
Go over to io9.com to check out photos that show his process. He turned a Gibeon meteorite into a kick ass wedding ring all in his garage. Anyone else insanely jealous of his talent? I want one!
Real life Sauron, anyone?
The Photogenic Vela
by John Gleason
Approximately 11,000 to 12,000 years ago a massive star exploded in the southern constellation of Vela. The matter ejected by the supernova scattered the contents of the star into the surrounding interstellar medium creating shock fronts of multimillion degree gas and high energy particles. — Robert Gendler
The 1,200-metre diameter Barringer Crater in Arizona is the result of an impact with an asteroid 50 metres across
(via realfakescientist)


