From The Right Angle, Saturn’s Moon Mimas Looks Like The Death Star And Has A Pac-Man Heat Signature.

From The Right Angle, Saturn’s Moon Mimas Looks Like The Death Star And Has A Pac-Man Heat Signature.

From the right angle, Saturn’s moon Mimas looks like the Death Star and has a Pac-Man heat signature. Source Source 2

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More Posts from Saients and Others

8 years ago
Pink Poison, the Surprising New Trend That’s Saving Rhinos
Rhino experts discuss a bright approach to keeping poachers away.

1) Does not hurt rhinos

2) Discolours ivory (BRIGHT PINK) thus reducing saleability

3) Can be detected by airport scanners, even if ground up, thus increasing the chances you will be caught

4) Causes nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea if ingested by humans, thus driving away your customer base

Win. Win. Win. Win.


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8 years ago
Vera Rubin, The Woman Who Discovered The First Evidence Of Dark Matter, Has Died At 88
Vera Rubin, The Woman Who Discovered The First Evidence Of Dark Matter, Has Died At 88
Vera Rubin, The Woman Who Discovered The First Evidence Of Dark Matter, Has Died At 88
Vera Rubin, The Woman Who Discovered The First Evidence Of Dark Matter, Has Died At 88
Vera Rubin, The Woman Who Discovered The First Evidence Of Dark Matter, Has Died At 88

Vera Rubin, the woman who discovered the first evidence of dark matter, has died at 88

Vera Rubin, the astrophysicist responsible for confirming the first existence of dark matter, died on Sunday night at the age of 88.

Carnegie Institution president Matthew Scott called Rubin “a national treasure as an accomplished astronomer and a wonderful role model for young scientist.”

Rubin and her colleagues observed galaxies in the 1970s, they learned the motion of stars is a result of a “material that does not emit light and extends beyond the optical galaxy” — also known as dark matter.

Swiss astrophysicist Fritz Zwicky proposed the idea of dark matter in 1933, but Rubin’s groundbreaking work subsequently led to the confirmation of the material.

This finding is what led to the discovery that 90% of the universe is made up of dark matter, a finding some colleagues felt was overlooked and deserving of a Nobel Prize. Read more

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7 years ago
Giant Squids Might Be Even Bigger Than We Realized
Giant Squids Might Be Even Bigger Than We Realized
Giant Squids Might Be Even Bigger Than We Realized
Giant Squids Might Be Even Bigger Than We Realized
Giant Squids Might Be Even Bigger Than We Realized
Giant Squids Might Be Even Bigger Than We Realized

Giant squids might be even bigger than we realized

According to research from Charles Paxton, fisheries ecologist and statistician at Scotland’s University of St. Andrews, published in the Journal of Zoology this month, the giant squid could grow to reach as much as 65 feet. But even that is a “conservative analysis,” as size could protect against their #1 predator.

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8 years ago

Hues in a Crater Slope

by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center   Impact craters expose the subsurface materials on the steep slopes of Mars. However, these slopes often experience rockfalls and debris avalanches that keep the surface clean of dust, revealing a variety of hues, like in this enhanced-color image from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, representing different rock types. The bright reddish material at the top of the crater rim is from a coating of the Martian dust. The long streamers of material are from downslope movements. Also revealed in this slope are a variety of bedrock textures, with a mix of layered and jumbled deposits. This sample is typical of the Martian highlands, with lava flows and water-lain materials depositing layers, then broken up and jumbled by many impact events. This image was acquired by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on Feb. 28, 2011 at 15:24 local Mars time. It is a stereo pair with image ESP_021454_1550. The University of Arizona, Tucson, operates HiRISE, which was built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colo. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of Caltech in Pasadena, California, manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Project for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Image Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona Caption: Alfred McEwen NASA Media Usage Guidelines


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7 years ago
Know Your Cephalopods!

Know Your Cephalopods!


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7 years ago

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7 years ago
Cost Per Kg For Human Spaceflight

Cost per kg for human spaceflight

via reddit


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7 years ago
The World’s Smallest Snowman Is Only 2.7 Microns Tall (for Comparison, A Human Hair Is 75 Microns Thick).

The world’s smallest snowman is only 2.7 microns tall (for comparison, a human hair is 75 microns thick). To create it, scientists stacked 3 tiny silica spheres, added a nose and arms made of platinum, and cut the eyes and mouth with a focused ion beam. Source

The World’s Smallest Snowman Is Only 2.7 Microns Tall (for Comparison, A Human Hair Is 75 Microns Thick).

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7 years ago

lab partner: *hands me precisely 1 mole of a substance*

me: *vine voice* an avogadro!!! thanks!!

7 years ago

Physicists: we don’t really understand how the big bang happened

Secondary media:

Physicists: We Don’t Really Understand How The Big Bang Happened

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saients - How Cool Is That?
How Cool Is That?

Stardate: 2258.42...or, uh, 4... Whatever. Life is weird, at least we've got science.

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