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Photos from Cosmic Cavern near Berryville, Arkansas.

With a commission specifically designed for this gallery Spencer Finch brings the starry sky indoors with a constellation of 350 light fixtures. “Cosmic Latte” refers to the official name given to the average color of the universe, which -- in a 2009 study of the light emitted by 200,000 galaxies -- was determined to be more beige than what had traditionally been thought of as blue. The artist represents this tannish-white color with LED light bulbs of various sizes. The groupings model the atomic molecules of powdered pigments that Finch used to emulate the specific Cosmic Latte hue: titanium white, Mars yellow, chrome yellow, and a bit of cadmium red.

Arranged to mimic the gently arching shape of the Milky Way as it is observed in the Northern Hemisphere in March, the undulating swathe of lights also relates to the Hoosic River visible through the windows. In Japan and China, the Milky Way is called the "river of the heavens" and "river of the sky." Like many of Finch's works the installation presents an alternative notion of representation -- one that is simultaneously scientific and symbolic.

 

The Red Skull was always messing around with these things:

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_cube

This was the quilt that my class made for Project Linus. We did a whole unit on quilts as they apply across the subject areas, and made the cover story of an education magazine for it. We had The Quiltmaker's Gift as an English component, we did the math, of course, with perimeter, area, adding, subtracting, and dividing. We talked about the history of quilts, including the slave quilts of the civil war, and then went through the parts of a sewing machine in science. It was a lot of fun!

  

Eileen Flood (DIAS), Carmel & Prof. Denis O'Sullivan - Deirdre Kelleghan holds a Cosmic ray detector used on the Lunar Module.

Ross School hosted a Cosmic Bowling Party at East Hampton Bowl on January 29 to help support the School’s Annual Appeal. Students, teachers and parents enjoyed a fun and relaxing evening of games, pizza and juice.

 

Ross School hosted a Cosmic Bowling Party at East Hampton Bowl on January 29 to help support the School’s Annual Appeal. Students, teachers and parents enjoyed a fun and relaxing evening of games, pizza and juice.

Alyssa L'Salle is one of the galactic government’s top agents and always manages to save the day! But when she accidentally uncovers a dark conspiracy, her own government outs her as a legendary spy and the people’s champion! Sure, now she has hordes of adoring fans but every villainous organization she’s ever crossed in her career knows who she is and is out for her blood! Can she save the day once more while she faces her greatest challenge ... Everyone!?

 

Cosmic Star Heroine for PS4 is a humorous sci-fi RPG adventure from Zeboyd Games. The game has designed with classic 2D pixel art and turn-based RPG mechanics while still pushing forward play and design aspects over the team's previous hits. Players will be able to customize their own spy headquarters by recruiting more agents, and combat will take place inside the gameplay map rather than in a cut-away view.

 

More PlayStation screenshots, trailers and trophies and everything for PS3, PS Vita & PS4: PSMania.

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Cosmic bowling party last weekend. Total success.

Virgin Atlantic's Cosmic Girl a Boeing 747-400 G-VWOW off to the bay for some fog cutting by the bridge.

An old photo I've always really liked. Looking up the stairs at Cosmic Dave's with that great logo in the window. 2009

In physical cosmology, cosmic inflation, cosmological inflation or just inflation is the theorized extremely rapid exponential expansion of the early universe by a factor of at least 10 to the 78th power in volume, driven by a negative-pressure vacuum energy density. It happened so fast, the universe went to plaid... or something close. ;)

 

Taken during the Toronto Photo Walks group's Bloordale and Dufferin Grove walk on a very chilly and blustery 20 April 13.

Cosmic Jellyfish

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Gear:

Camera: ASI294MM-Pro w/ EAF, EFW

Filters: Astrodon 3nm SII,Ha,OIII

Scope: Meade 70mm Quad APO

Guidescope: Williams Optics 30mm Uniguide

Guidecam: ASI120MM mini

Mount: SW EQ6R Pro

Pegasus Astro Pocket Power Box

Astro-Zap dew heaters

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Image details:

81x300s HA, Gain 120, -10c, bin 2x2

77x300s OIII, Gain 120, -10c, bin 2x2

52x300s OIII, Gain 120, -10c, bin 2x2

25 darks, flats, darkflats

17.5 hrs total

Bortle 5/6 sky

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Acquisition/Edits:

SharpCap, NINA, PHD2, Stellarium, Pixinsight, Photoshop

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My Instagram: www.instagram.com/colorado_astro/

Having initially taken part in an 'air race' display, visiting LeVier Cosmic Wind G-ARUL ‘Ballerina’ would go on to perform a solo aerobatic display during its appearance at the Shuttleworth Collection's 'Race Day' event on 7th October 2018. The plane was one of three initially designed and built by Lockheed employees, including chief test pilot Tony LeVier, and is notable as the winner of the 1964 King's Cup race.

www.eso.org/public/unitedkingdom/images/eso1123a/?lang

 

The colourful Rho Ophiuchi star formation region, about 400 light-years from Earth, contains very cold (around -250 degrees Celsius), dense clouds of cosmic gas and dust, in which new stars are being born. The clouds are mostly made of hydrogen, but contain traces of other chemicals, and are prime targets for astronomers hunting for molecules in space. Astronomers using the APEX telescope to observe this region discovered hydrogen peroxide molecules in interstellar space for the first time, in the area marked with the red circle. This is also a rich region for amateur observations. Rho Ophiuchi itself is the bright star near the top of the image. The bright yellowish star in the bottom left is Antares, one of the brightest stars in the sky. Below and to Antares’ right is the globular cluster Messier 4. This image of the region was obtained from the Paranal Observatory by observing with a 10-cm Takahashi FSQ106Ed f/3.6 telescope and a SBIG STL CCD camera, using a NJP160 mount. Images were collected through three different filters (B, V and R) and then stitched together. It was originally created as part of ESO’s Gigagalaxy Zoom project.

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View the LARGE version for better detail.

I built one of these as a kid in the 70's, same colors :)

Oct. 2, 2022 at McMenamins Edgefield

11 x 17

Graphite on paper

2009

Throwing heavy balls is fun, especially when you're in a sleep-deprived delirium!

3.30.14 - Cosmic Gate @ Ultra Music Festival, Miami

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