View allAll Photos Tagged Stardusted
I still havent taken this out on the road BUT she's going! I call her Stardust! She looks like she's sprinkled with the dust of stars.......And sounds HEAVENLY!!!
there is currently an art show hanging at stardust video and coffee. you should go there and feel what you will when studying the handmade love that is jessica earley.
Hoy os presento unos anillos inspirados en la famosa pulsera shamballa.
No es una idea original mía, lo ví en alguna parte aunque no recuerdo exactamente donde.
Lo que he modificado es que lo he cerrado completamente, en vez de dejar los extremos finales del hilo vistos. Supuse que para un anillo sería más cómodo.
Está realizado con bolas stardus de color plata y negro de 10 milímetros.
Bueno, eso es todo, espero que os guste.
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
Comet Sample Return Capsule
Stardust was the first U.S. space mission dedicated solely to returning extraterrestrial material from outside the Earth-Moon orbit. Its main goal was to collect samples from Comet Wild 2 and interstellar dust. Launched on February 7, 1999, Stardust flew nearly 3 billion miles before returning to Earth and parachuting to a landing in the Utah desert on January 15, 2006.
The Stardust return system has six major components: a heat shield, backshell, sample canister, sample collector grid with aerogel (shown here deployed for flight as it passed through cometary clouds and rotated 180 degrees for display with the dust impact side facing toward the viewer), parachute system, and avionics. The samples were sealed in an aluminum canister encased in an exterior shell composed of ablative materials to protect them from the heat of re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere. Stardust made the fastest atmospheric entry of a human-made object at about 29,000 miles per hour.
Stardust also carried several other science packages that remain in space aboard the central vehicle. The sample return capsule brought back material that may date from the formation of the solar system. Those cometary and interstellar dust samples have gone to scientists worldwide, and results from their study are altering our understanding of the universe. One of the major scientific findings of the mission is that ice-rich comets also contain fragments of high temperature materials.
Transferred from NASA