I can calculate the motion of heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people. —Isaac Newton
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7EYS0oGXGc)
space dreamer
You’re your own sun your own solar system you are immortal blazing brightest in this galaxy nothing can touch you that’s how you like it you’ve lost and learned and come out better that’s more than I can say for many you love like a mother when someone is just the right distance away from your fire to close and you’ll turn them to ash to far and they’ll freeze you’re surrounded by planets that glow and shine and glisten with life all of them caught in your gravity basking in your burning beauty they are more alive than I will ever be I should find a dimmer star to love maybe then I wouldn’t be as jealous of all the light around you and within you but I understand that simply in the act of writing this I am caught in your gravity
A.O.A.M. || Sun God (via thehipsterconspiracy)
This month you can catch a rare sight in the pre-dawn sky: five planets at once! If you look to the south (or to the north if you’re in the southern hemisphere) between about 5:30 and 6 a.m. local time you’ll see Mercury, Venus, Saturn, Mars and Jupiter lined up like jewels on a necklace. They’re beautiful in the sky, and even more fascinating when you look closely.
This week we’re taking a tour of the planets with recent information about each:
1. Artistic License
Craters on Mercury are named for writers and artists of all kinds. There are Tolstoy, Thoreau and Tolkien craters, for example, as well as those that bear the names of the Brontës, photographer Dorothea Lange and dancer Margot Fonteyn. See the complete roster of crater names HERE.
2. Lifting the Veil of Venus
A thick covering of clouds made Venus a mystery for most of human history. In recent decades, though, a fleet of robotic spacecraft has helped us peer past the veil and learn more about this world that is so like the Earth in some ways — and in some ways it’s near opposite.
3. Curious?
Have you ever wanted to drive the Mars Curiosity rover? You can take the controls using our Experience Curiosity simulation. Command a virtual rover as you explore the terrain in Gale Crater, all using real data and images from Mars. Try it out HERE.
4. Now That’s a Super Storm
Winter weather often makes headlines on Earth — but on Jupiter there’s a storm large enough to swallow our entire planet several times over. It’s been raging for at least three hundred years! Learn about the Great Red Spot HERE.
5. Ring Watcher
This week, the Cassini spacecraft will be making high-resolution observations of Saturn’s entrancing rings. This is a simulated look at Saturn, along with actual photos of the rings from the Cassini mission.
Want to learn more? Read our full list of the 10 things to know this week about the solar system HERE.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
Through all of my lives I never thought I’d wait so long for you The timing is right, the stars are aligned
BØRNS, PAST LIVES X TITIAN, BACCHUS AND ARIADNE