Astronom Gallery
lee dongwook
darkonehook
happy nudes
christopherspines
Carolina Cutt
the-wolf-and-moon: LDN 1622, Stardust in Orion ooh…! the other night, I had a dream and I sa
Something Bigger by Christoffer Meyer Photography on Flickr.
This is an image from a manuscript of Chilam Balam, meaning the Jaguar Priest. It is a book that pre
denial ✸ ¼ of an introspective seriescreated a little series for class based on the stages of
depression ✸ 4/4 of an introspective seriescreated a little series for class based on the stages of
bargaining ✸ ¾ of an introspective seriescreated a little series for class based on the stage
forgiveness
nemfrog: The year in meteor showers. A fourteen weeks course in descriptive astronomy. 1870.
First photo of a black hole. Pretty cool.
nemfrog: Sun. Atlas of Astronomy by Alex Keith Johnston. 1869. Atlas page detail.
Stellar Sparklers That Last : While fireworks only last a short time here on Earth, a bundle of cosm
Cassini Spacecraft Crosses Saturns Ring Plane : If this is Saturn, where are the rings? When Saturn
teamenti: ☽ ★ moodboard: misc vintage astronomy illustrations ★ ☽
Hubble Rocks with a Heavy-Metal Home : This 10.5-billion-year-old globular cluster, NGC 6496, is hom
The Perseus Cluster, 240 million light-years away, which plays a B, 57 octaves below middle C. Two d
herowyn: Galileo Galilei 1564-1642the father of observational astronomy
retrofutureground: Yerkes Observations, 1918 Solar Eclipse Expedition (part II) 1. Prominences arou
Hubble Sights Galaxy’s Celestial Sequins : This smattering of celestial sequins is a spiral galaxy n
Lluta River (Chile, July 2012), from the Earth Observing-1 satellite.The Lluta River runs through th
Jupiter - PJ3-114 by Kevin M. Gill JNCE_2016346_03C00114_V02 NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Kevin M. Gil
A Desert Eclipse : A good place to see a ring-of-fire eclipse, it seemed, would be from a desert.
sciencesoup: Badass Scientist of the Week: Sir Bernard Lovell Sir Bernard Lovell (1913–2012) was a
yungcosmonauts: kenyaguay: Simple. This is great! I’m glad someone made this. it’s a pretty funny
nemfrog:Terrestrial & celestial globes. Smith’s Illustrated astronomy. 1855.
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