View allAll Photos Tagged awesomeness
lookie at what i got for christmas!!!
[a rad vintage 60's webcore portable record player!!!]
YEEEEEEEEEEE!
now, if you'll excuse me, Kashmir just came up and i need to go rock the heck OUT.
I enhanced the color for clarity. We fully expected to get lucky and see a tornado but one never developed. The first wall cloud faded out and came back as the one you see here.
A glimpse into just a small part of the awesome Auckland Waterfront, at the viaduct... world class facilities, world class attraction. You must go there.
Born September 17, 2015 Tafari - from African origin meaning "He who is awesome". Hard to tell from this shot if he's playing his version of Where's Waldo (Tafari) or eyeing lunch. What a wonderful gift!
Wonderful collection of saying image from famous people.
you may download it for free about awesome quotes about relationships .
Here are another love quote by famous people for you :
“Co-op is awesome, man! It offers a whole new level to the game where it’s not just about you b...
appreciating those awesome aunties who are actual family
or are honorary- you are real to us :)
have a happy saturday and a wonderful weekend.
53/365 aDaD "a duck a day"
Yesterday, i passed an extremely important examination. I learned the whole year for it and now im able to do my job. Big time for me!
so i guess im back here in flickr too. i apologize for neglecting you a bit!!! i 'll definitly visit your awesome streams.
The awesome energy of the Sun can be readily appreciated in this sequence of images combining data from three instruments on the ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter spacecraft. It shows the way a solar flare on 25 March 2022, one day before Solar Orbiter’s closest approach to the Sun, created a huge disturbance in the Sun’s outer atmosphere, the solar corona, leading to a huge quantity of the gas being hurled into space in a coronal mass ejection.
The first image was taken by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instrument at a wavelength of 17 nanometres. The solar flare is shown by an arrow. The view then zooms out to show what the Metis instrument sees. Metis takes pictures of the corona from 1.7 to 3 solar radii by blotting out the Sun’s bright disc. The final zoom shows the huge coronal mass ejection blasting into space. The data comes from SoloHI, which records images made of sunlight scattered by the electrons in the solar wind.
Credit: ESA & NASA/Solar Orbiter/EUI, Metis and SoloHI Teams
Now available on Etsy!
www.etsy.com/listing/100410746/this-needs-more-awesome-12...
Jets are awesome.