NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day 2016 September 19
What’s happening at the edge of the Sun? Although it may look like a monster is rampaging, what is pictured is actually only a monster prominence – a sheath of thin gas held above the surface by the Sun’s magnetic field. The solar event was captured just this past weekend with a small telescope, with the resulting image then inverted and false-colored. As indicated with illustrative lines, the prominence rises over 50,000 kilometers above the Sun’s surface, making even our 12,700-diameter Earth seem small by comparison. Below the monster prominence is active region 12585, while light colored filaments can be seen hovering over a flowing solar carpet of fibrils. Filaments are actually prominences seen against the disk of the Sun, while similarly, fibrils are actually spicules seen against the disk. Energetic events like this are becoming less common as the Sun evolves toward a minimum in its 11-year activity cycle.
Jungle
Mask face thing
I've never read a truer statement
Jon Stewart sure picked the shittiest year ever to retire….
Ramzy Masri is a Senior Designer for Nickelodeon, and his images of architecture turn our buildings into colorful creations using all the colors of the rainbow.
Nice!
We already consider the octopus an awesome master of camouflage, but these illustrations by Columbus, OH-based industrial designer and illustrator Gabe Pyle take that capability to a whole new level. According to Pyle, these crafty cephalopods can use their tentacles to mimic the shapes of other animals.
The entire series of 12 Animals [That Are Definitely Not An Octopus] is currently up for voting as a design on Threadless.
[via Pleated Jeans]
Very nice
Carmine Pearl
Sweet art
That is the coolest.
Handmade mossy meadow carpet by Alexandra Kehayoglou
Race Dog