Space artists weigh in on seeing the first image of a black hole: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-brief/2019/04/25/eht-black-hole-picture-space-artists
Originally posted on Twitter.
Space artists weigh in on seeing the first image of a black hole: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-brief/2019/04/25/eht-black-hole-picture-space-artists
Originally posted on Twitter.
NASA’s artists have outdone themselves yet again. Download the individual posters (or the whole collage) in high resolution here: https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/resources/925/solar-system-and-beyond-poster-set.
Originally posted on Twitter.
A gloriously cosmic shot of this morning's SpaceX Falcon 9 launch from Cape Canaveral. After separation, the rocket's first stage boosts back toward the 'Of Course I Still Love You' droneship while the second stage pushes Dragon toward the space station. Images from Erik Kuna (@erikkuna).
Originally posted on Twitter.
Via NASA: “This might be the most exciting “history book” we’ve ever read. Astronomers have put together the largest and most comprehensive image of the evolving universe — using 16 years’ worth of observations from Hubble. Take a peek at this deep-sky mosaic.” https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2019/hubble-astronomers-assemble-wide-view-of-the-evolving-universe
Make sure and check out the short video at the link for a mind-boggling sense of scale.
Originally posted on Twitter.
4.5 of 5 Glorious Stars 🌟
The half-star deduction is entirely on the first 1.5 hours, which honestly could have been cut to an hour without losing anything. The second 1.5 hours, though? OMG. 😲 Damn near perfection.
If you are remotely, even casually, invested in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, see this movie. 🤗
Originally posted on Facebook.
Meteors, Comet, and Big Dipper over La Palma https://buff.ly/2Zphg5D. Image Credit: Vincent Duparc
Originally posted on Twitter.
I give you: A Geek's Guide To THE STARS LIKE GODS.🤓
The usual caveats: scenes are not necessarily chapters, the order may (but probably won't) change before release, etc.
For those of you who like to print these out, I’m providing a non-toner-depleting black and white version below as well.
Cover reveal and release date announcement coming next week!🤗
The sharpest ever view of the Andromeda Galaxy. This is what a trillion stars look like! (Credit: NASA/ESA) : https://twitter.com/WorldAndScience/status/1119039189939642368
Originally posted on Twitter.
Hubble Celebrates its 29th Birthday with Unrivaled View of the Southern Crab Nebula: https://www.spacetelescope.org/news/heic1907/
😲😍💖✨
The next-to-last shipment of signed Starshine annotated hardbacks is in the mail! I'll have more in stock next week, if anyone is interested in picking one up. Learn more at https://gsj.space/starshine-hardbacks
Ouch. This hits a little close to home, doesn’t it? I don’t think we’ve stumbled onto the Evil Methane Breathers yet, but…give it time. 🙄
https://boingboing.net/2017/04/17/every-sci-fi-star-map.html
Originally posted on Twitter.
A 1,060-hour image of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC): A mind-blowing view which might be the world's longest exposure picture in amateur astronomy. Taken by "Ciel Austral" in Chile. https://astrospace-page.blogspot.com/2019/04/1060-hours-image-of-the-large-magellanic-cloud-chile.html
Originally posted on Twitter.
SpaceX has successfully landed all 3 boosters of its Falcon Heavy rocket at 3 separate locations - and it's only the 2nd flight of the Falcon Heavy.
Space is hard, and in a very busy week for our accelerating journey into the stars, 2 huge success and one near miss isn't too bad. 🤗
Here's some insane footage of the side booster landings from multiple cameras at once: https://twitter.com/DJSnM/status/1116472530531958784
Credit for the images below: Jason Major (https://twitter.com/JPMajor/status/1116471931002400776) and Roman Tkachenko (https://twitter.com/_RomanTkache…/status/1116471879093620736).
For a ton of jaw-dropping images of the launch, including the ones below, check out astrophotographer Trevor Mahlmann’s Twitter feed and website.
Originally posted on Facebook.
Here you go, space nerds: the first ever image of the event horizon of a black hole! The supermassive black hole at the center of galaxy M87 is 54 million light-years from earth and has a mass of 6.5 billion suns.
The close-up image is from the Event Horizon Telescope, the wide-field view from the Chandra X-ray Observatory.
Early analysis suggests the observations are consistent with Einstein's Theory of General Relativity (some were hoping they would conflict, because having to redo all the theories is kind of exciting).
Download a high-res version of the image here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/lightsinthedark/47579266551/
Originally posted on Facebook.
In the arms of the maelstrom: in this view from JunoCam, bright white clouds can be seen popping up in and around the arms of a rotating northern hemisphere storm: https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/news/jupiter-spiral
Originally posted on Twitter.
Tigaer-Design (Christian Hecker) is one of the finest artists creating spacescapes and futuristic art today. This piece in particular, "Artificial," served as partial inspiration for the design of the anarchs' Post Epsilon base on Palaemon, which figured prominently in the events of Rubicon and the first half of Requiem.
You know, the post with the floating landing pads, the scene of Alex and Kennedy's first Caeles Prism test and one bar fight. 😝
You can see all his work on Art Station (https://www.artstation.com/tigaer) or Deviant Art (https://www.deviantart.com/tigaer)
Originally posted on Facebook.
BOO. YAH. 🎉
I can now say with a high degree of confidence that TSLG will be the longest of the Asterion Noir novels. I heard some of you like Moar Words? 😛
Originally posted on Facebook.
On my Birthday, I’m giving all of you a present: a fun little excerpt from THE STARS LIKE GODS, the upcoming conclusion to the Asterion Noir trilogy.
✨✨
The suite two-thirds of the way up Namino Tower couldn’t fairly be categorized as isolated or neglected, which were the first two words Cameron had used to describe her destination. The lights were bright and the view out the window in the lobby pleasant.
The furniture did have the veneer of mass production, as though it had been plucked from beneath a store sign reading, ‘Buy Office Furniture Here.’ Silence hovered in the air amid a hint of staleness; it marked a stark departure from the constant bustling activity and noise of the Pavilion, and she wondered when voices had last animated the lobby.
A dyne stood behind the counter, its frame locked so rigidly she assumed it was shut down. But as she approached, it lifted its head with a squeaky flexing of its joints. “How can I help you?”
“Nika Kirumase. I’m here to see Lance Palmer.”
“He is expecting you. You may enter.”
A door across the way opened, and after taking a last dubious glance around the lobby, she walked through it.
A man lounged behind a desk. Despite the presence of at least a dozen panes arrayed above the desk, he’d kicked back his chair, wound his hands behind his head and crossed his ankles atop the desk. Tawny hair fell neatly across his forehead above sage eyes. Rolled-up sleeves exposed tanned, muscular arms. Tactical pants led to scuffed and faded combat boots, which looked rather out of place atop the office desk.
One corner of his mouth twitched into an almost-smirk. “Nika Kirumase. I figured you’d come calling eventually. Frankly, I thought it would be more sooner and not so much later.”
She arched an eyebrow. “Well, I was a little busy being psyche-wiped, leading a rebellion, fleeing from government-funded assassins and exposing a Guide-led conspiracy to conceal the existence of a deadly alien species taking over the galaxy. You know, the usual.”