I cannot believe this
“Once you get to know George it is easy to fall in love with his quirky
little self. All he wants is someone to love him for the rest of his
life. Maybe that special person is you!”
He doesn’t even look real I love him
I’m 100% sure it is a smaller dog in a costume of a bigger dog with stilts….
This dog looks like it was drawn by someone who can’t draw dogs
Mangalica is a rare breed of pig of Hungarian origin that have wool or fur resembling a sheep’s.
ummm i love her
FLUFFY PIGS
Look at the bABIES
i can’t fucken believe that one of the main arguments against wind farms is that they’re an eyesore
do you know what’s an even bigger eyesore?
not having fuckin trees or coral reefs or glaciers or any number of incredible natural beauties because fossil fuels and pollution and global fuckin warming killed it all dead
“Why’d you let the planet die?”
“Aesthetic.”
Diverging Parallel Light Rays?..
Crepuscular rays appear to burst out of the sun and up into the sky; or burst out of the sun and down onto the horizon. They fool the naked eye because as divergent and widespread as they may appear, the rays are actually parallel to one another. The rays only appear to be angled and sprouting from a central point mostly due to atmospheric variables.
Southern Craters and Galaxies
(via APOD; Image Credit & Copyright:Babak Tafreshi (TWAN) )
The Henbury craters in the Northern Territory, Australia, planet Earth, are the scars of an impact over 4,000 years old. When an ancient meteorite fragmented into dozens of pieces, the largest made the 180 meter diameter crater whose weathered walls and floor are lit in the foreground of this southern hemisphere nightscape. The vertical panoramic view follows our magnificent Milky Way galaxy stretching above horizon, its rich central starfields cut by obscuring dust clouds. A glance along the galactic plane also reveals Alpha and Beta Centauri and the stars of the Southern Cross. Captured in the region’s spectacular, dark skies, the Small Magellanic Cloud, satellite of the Milky Way, is the bright galaxy to the left. Not the lights of a nearby town, the visible glow on the horizon below it is the Large Magellanic Cloud rising.
The Milky Way as shot in Tasmania, Australia.
Source: https://imgur.com/DM6P7cs
How to catch a speeding star
“The gas gets compressed by the star’s motion so severely that molecular collisions cause dramatic gas heating. The gas then radiates that heat away, which it does in the infrared or even — at high enough energies — in visible light.
By getting a strong “kick” from an exploding star or a gravitationally bound cluster, these stars obtain large velocities relative to most others in the Milky Way.”
Travel fast enough through the air, and you’ll exceed the speed of sound. The compressed air in front of you builds up, denser and denser, creating a shock wherever you’ve exceeded the sound barrier. In interstellar space, stars that move fast enough do the exact same thing.There doesn’t need to be sound in space for runaway stars to compress gas, heating it and causing it to radiate. Our infrared space telescopes, like NASA’s Spitzer and WISE, are ideal for identifying and imaging these stellar bow shocks. Hundreds have been identified so far, with thousands to millions likely in every galaxy overall.
The beauty of landscapes made by water that runs through them.
- Photographed by Frederick Ardley











