Moved to Twitter!
This blog will remain up, but I will be focusing my efforts on Twitter now.
Follow me at @JLUDragoon
See you there! :)
@udragoon / udragoon.tumblr.com
This blog will remain up, but I will be focusing my efforts on Twitter now.
Follow me at @JLUDragoon
See you there! :)
a gentle reminder that I would literally die for Transformers
Art by Torsten Gunst
My grandmother just past away last night on Christmas Eve. ....May she rest in peace.
Star Wars - Stayin’ Alive
I want someone to show me this on my death bed so I can die laughing.
Congrats to our lovely lady~
Congrats Samus!
Inktober: Friday the 13th
I was a day late on this one. XP
october mood
I feel like your pictures looks in low definition or something like that .u.
Tumblr’s good at making my stuff look like hot garbage
EDIT: MORE like hot garbage, I mean
✧ 305 // TITAN // EXO
This one is technically not yet history, because at the time of posting, the little craft has about half an hour left to go. That said, let’s proceed.
In 2017, NASA’s Cassini space probe ended its twenty-year mission at Saturn. After a nearly-seven-year-long journey there, it orbited the ringed planet for 13 years and just over two months, gathering copious amounts of information about the planet, said rings, and many of its moons. It landed an ESA probe called Huygens on Titan, the first-ever soft landing in the outer Solar System. It discovered lakes, seas, and rivers of methane on Titan, geysers of water erupting from Enceladus (and passed within 50 miles of that moon’s surface), and found gigantic, raging hurricanes at both of Saturn’s poles.
And the images it returned are beautiful enough to make you weep.
On this day in 2017, with the fuel for Cassini’s directional thrusters running low, the probe was de-orbited into the Saturnian atmosphere to prevent any possibility of any contamination of possible biotic environments on Titan or Enceladus. The remaining thruster fuel was used to keep the radio dish pointed towards Earth so the probe could transmit information about the upper atmosphere of Saturn while it was burning up due to atmospheric friction.
This is us at our best. We spent no small amount of money on a nuclear-powered robot, launched it into space, sent it a billion miles away, and worked with it for two decades just to learn about another planet. And when the repeatedly-extended missions were through, we made the little craft sacrifice itself like a samurai, performing its duty as long as it could while it became a shooting star in the Saturnian sky.
Rhea occulting Saturn
Water geysers on Enceladus
Strange Iapetus
Look at this gorgeousness
A gigantic motherfucking storm in Saturn’s northern hemisphere
Tethys
This image is from the surface of a moon of a planet at least 746 million miles away. Sweet lord
Mimas
Vertical structures in the rings. Holy shit
Titan and Dione occulting Saturn, rings visible
Little Daphnis making gravitational ripples in the rings
That’s here. That’s home. That’s all of us that ever lived.
Saturn, backlit
A polar vortex on the gas giant
Icy Enceladus
(All images from NASA/JPL)