Showing posts with label google pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google pictures. Show all posts

Monday, September 19, 2011

Music From The Universe & Across The Universe Beatles

Music From The Universe & Across The Universe Beatles







PICTURES OF NATURE & UNIVERSE PHOTOGRAPHY

Pequi

Pequi:
FernandoPaoliello postou uma foto:



Pequi



Fruto do Pequizeiro (Caryocar brasiliensis)


NATURE PICTURES & THE UNIVERSE

Espiral adormecida.

Gavião

Outono chegando...

Príncipe Negro

Artesanato de Lagoa Santa, MG

Flor do Pequizeiro

Lichia

Lichia:
FernandoPaoliello postou uma foto:



Lichia



LITCHI CHINENSIS - FAMÍLIA SAPINDACEAE



Originária da China onde é considerada a fruta nacional, a lichieira e uma árvore subtropical com até 12 metros de altura e de grande longevidade. Em muitos países e considerada a rainha das frutas.


NATURE PICTURES & THE UNIVERSE

Madrepérola

Madrepérola:
FernandoPaoliello postou uma foto:



Madrepérola



Madrepérola (ou nácar) é uma substância calcária, dura, brilhante, branca ou escura e iridescente produzida por diversos moluscos. São o principal componente das pérolas.

A madrepérola pode refletir freqüências difererentes da luz de acordo com a maneira como é iluminada, de modo que pode apresentar cores variadas, que vão dos rosas, aos azuis, verdes e amarelos, em várias tonalidades. Esse efeito é considerando bastante agradável à vista.


NATURE PICTURES & THE UNIVERSE

The Fab 4

The Fab 4:
FernandoPaoliello postou uma foto:



The Fab 4



Créditos: Leonardo B. Paoliello


NATURE PICTURES & THE UNIVERSE

Centro Histórico de Porto Seguro,BA

Vida e Morte (Life and Death)

Mandarová

Pitangas

Abelhas

Monday, September 5, 2011

Is the Moon Mars Myth Over?

Is the Moon Mars Myth Over?:





Mars and the Moon -- NOT. Credit: Scientific American

Twitter users Kris McCall and Wayne Povey reminded me that it’s August 27th today. Don’t you know what that is? That’s the day all those stupid “Mars is going to look bigger than the Moon” hoax emails go around the internet. We’ll usually get deluged by emails from the recipients, and have to write up a big response explaining itagainand againand again.


But I just realized… I haven’t gotten a single email this year. I totally forgot to mention it in Universe Today.


So that’s it, I’m officially calling this hoax over. You hear me hoaxers and remailers? You’ve lost. People now understand that there’s no possible way that Mars can look bigger in the sky. Your ridiculous hoax is falling on deaf ears. It just took 8 years of non-stop debunking.


Skepticism has won this day.
PICTURES OF NATURE & UNIVERSE PHOTOGRAPHY

Astronomy Without A Telescope – Why The LHC (Still) Won’t Destroy The Earth

Astronomy Without A Telescope – Why The LHC (Still) Won’t Destroy The Earth:




Concerns about a 'big science machine' destroying the Earth have been around since the steam engine. The LHC is the latest target for such conspiracy theories. Credit: CERN.



Surprisingly, rumors still persist in some corners of the Internet that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is going to destroy the Earth – even though nearly three years have passed since it was first turned on. This may be because it is yet to be ramped up to full power in 2014 – although it seems more likely that this is just a case of moving the goal posts, since the same doomsayers were initially adamant that the Earth would be destroyed the moment the LHC was switched on, in September 2008.


The story goes that the very high energy collisions engineered by the LHC could jam colliding particles together with such force that their mass would be compressed into a volume less than the Schwarzschild radius required for that mass. In other words, a microscopic black hole would form and then grow in size as it sucked in more matter, until it eventually consumed the Earth.


Here’s a brief run-through of why this can’t happen.(...)
Read the rest of Astronomy Without A Telescope – Why The LHC (Still) Won’t Destroy The Earth (799 words)
PICTURES OF NATURE & UNIVERSE PHOTOGRAPHY

The Genesis of Galaxy Eris…

The Genesis of Galaxy Eris…:




This image of the Eris simulation shows the stars in the galaxy as observers would see it. Blue colors are regions of recent star formation, while redder regions are associated with older stars. The spiral arms are typically star-forming, and the central bulge is basically "red and dead." Credit: J. Guedes and P. Madau.



In as much time as it takes to give birth to human life, a supercomputer and a team of researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and the Institute for Theoretical Physics in Zurich have given rise to the first simulation of the physics involved in galaxy formation that produced the Milky Way. They named their child Eris… (...)
Read the rest of The Genesis of Galaxy Eris… (611 words)
PICTURES OF NATURE & UNIVERSE PHOTOGRAPHY

Book Review: Lunar and Planetary Rovers

Book Review: Lunar and Planetary Rovers:




Lunar and Planetary Rovers offers a bit of a primer before NASA's Mars Science Laboratory launches to Mars this November. Image Credit: NASA/Spinger/Praxis



Ordinarily if a book attempts to cover crewed and unmanned missions – the book is a compilation of space flight history in general. This is not the case when it comes to Springer/Praxis’ offering Lunar and Planetary Rovers. Written by Anthony Young, the book details both crewed (the Apollo “J” missions) and unmanned rovers (Pathfinder, Mars Exploration Rovers and Curiosity). The book is not a perfect blending of the two interconnected, yet separate programs – but it does have much to offer.(...)
Read the rest of Book Review: Lunar and Planetary Rovers (463 words)
PICTURES OF NATURE & UNIVERSE PHOTOGRAPHY