View allAll Photos Tagged interstellar
Hey Rosetta! at the Interstellar Rodeo in Hawrelak Park in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
©Eric Kozakiewicz/Interstellar Rodeo
Okay, seriously, how cool is that?
This test tube contains 1.2 mg (1/25,000 oz..) of small diamond crystals isolated from the Allende meteorite, suspended in an acid and alcohol solution.
This diamond dust is billions of years old and predates our solar system.
David Hynes
Web: www.davidhynes.net
Email: theartist@davidhynes.net
These collages were chosen from a series of twenty-four. The title of the series is “The Evolution of Nothing”.
All the above images are 15”x20”. The media is paper and glue. The price of each image is $200.
IATSE local 873.
David Hynes
They sleep and dream in the interstellar space. Connecting galaxies through cosmic energy. Midjourney v5.
Water reflections, KidSpark area, Ontario Science Centre. Frame texture from another piece of Photoshop/Filter Forge artwork.
A science fiction film directed by Christopher Nolan and written by him and his brother Jonathan Nolan, from a treatment by Kip Thorne and producer Lynda Obst. The film is an exploration of physicist Kip Thorne's theories of gravity fields, wormholes and several hypotheses that Albert Einstein was never able to prove.
Loved how the abstract comet startrail showed the movement of the heavens...? Hrs in the cold, 227 images and hrs of processing, phew. All worth it. ??✨ via 500px ift.tt/2IZwVR0
Gord Downie and the Sadies at the Interstellar Rodeo in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ©Eric Kozakiewicz/Interstellar Rodeo
Dir: Christopher Nolan
Stars: Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain
A team of explorers travel through a wormhole in space in an attempt to ensure humanity's survival.
Watch it here for free: www.primewire.ag/watch-2753796-Interstellar-online-free
Title: Interstellar Visitor Over the Black Desert
From the heart of Egypt’s Black Desert, where volcanic hills rise like silent sentinels and acacia trees stand alone against the night, an object from another star system drifts through our sky — interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS.
In this frame, the faint green glow of 3I/ATLAS slips between the desert trees, a visitor older than our Sun, passing through the Solar System only once before returning to interstellar space. The comet’s subtle cyan hue comes from faint CN gas emission in its coma, a chemical fingerprint shared with distant comets but arriving here from a planetary system we will never see.
This image was captured using a Nikon Z6 (astro-modified) paired with a RedCat telescope lens, pushed to 3× optical zoom to achieve an effective focal length of ≈750 mm — enough to isolate this rare traveler against the desert horizon.
To reveal the comet’s structure and faint gas halo, the scene was stacked from:
60 exposures × 60 seconds at ISO 1500
60 exposures × 30 seconds at the same gain
These long integrations allowed the comet’s delicate coma and motion against the background stars to emerge clearly, even under the extremely dark Saharan skies.
An interstellar grain of cosmic history, captured from one of Earth’s most ancient landscapes.
Credit :
Osama Fathi – Night Sky Watcher
Social:
www.instagram.com/osama.fathi.nswatcher85/
Kind regards
Gord Downie and the Sadies at the Interstellar Rodeo in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ©Eric Kozakiewicz/Interstellar Rodeo
Edited NOIRLab photo of the interstellar comet 3I/Atlas.
Original caption: Comet 3I/ATLAS is captured in this image by the Gemini North telescope. The incredible sensitivity of Gemini North's Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS-N) reveals the comet’s compact coma — a cloud of gas and dust surrounding its icy nucleus.
Credit:
International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/K. Meech (IfA/U. Hawaii)
Image Processing: Jen Miller & Mahdi Zamani (NSF NOIRLab)
Get less NAKED & have Interstellar FUN with everyone!
Stop by the online shop for new Neatobots sticker, hat, prints, a can to put your stuff in & this great new shirt!
Christmas Eve.
And all preparation was done, all presents and provisions bought and stowed away and/or wrapped.
A Tuesday, apparently, and nothing at all to do.
We had a shower early on, had coffee, then by ten had breakfast and another coffee, and so we were ready to face the world.
Which pretty much involved drinking tea and snacking, watching videos on YouTube and listening to podcasts.
We did not go to the gym, but it had closed by lunchtime.
We did go out for a walk. Jools up to Windy Ridge, but me just up and down the streets of the estate on a new year plant hunt, and easily completed the #winter10 challenge of plants in flower.
Come four in the afternoon, and with shops closing or already closed, I suggested we drive to Deal to look in wonder at the festive lights. And maybe have a beer out.
The roads were already quiet into town, and in the main town car park there were spaces.
I paid for an hour, and we set off to explore.
The lights were on the main street, and street furniture got in the way in places, but I took shots.
Then round to Middle Street, to get shots of the narrow street and fake Victorian lighting, before walking back to the Just Reproach, but finding it full, we went to the car and drove back.
Getting back we had supper of party food, then settled down to watch Interstellar in demand, which was OK, and at least Matt Damon played against type.
At half nine, we went to bed, and so the house fell silent, all ready for Santa's visit.
Happy Christmas to all.
photo by Scott Beale / Laughing Squid
This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Scott Beale / Laughing Squid" and link the credit to laughingsquid.com.
Wagons at the Interstellar Rodeo held at Hawrelak Park in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
©Eric Kozakiewicz/ Interstellar Rodeo