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Artscape 2008. A colaboration between Scott Pennington and Paige Shuttleworth. Photos by Nancy Froelich
The transmitters will run out of power in the next 8 years but it will still be out there with its gold disc!
https://www.npr.org/2018/12/10/675324587/voyager-2-bids-adieu-to-the-heliosphere-entering-interstellar-space
Interstellar - The Search for Extraterrestrial Life and Our Future in the Stars - Avi Loeb (Astronomy - review 0993, 03-04-24)
It is so revitalizing to read a book on the possibility of Extraterrestrial Civilizations ETC that's authoritative written, realistically optimistic and details methods actively being undertaken to expand our knowledge of UAP Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (aka UFO's).
Mr. Loeb is the chairman of the Harvard Astronomy Department and an elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Science, American Physics Society and the International Academy of Astronautics. He acknowledges that we have not definitely identified any objects as origination from an ETC (Extraterrestrial Civilization) but we should undertake a systematic search utilizing the scientific method including peer review of all reports and conclusions.
Some may believe this is a total waste of time and money that could be better spent elsewhere, and they may, in the long, run be correct. Nonetheless Mr. Loeb makes a very persuasive case this is an enterprise worth undertaking and has initiated the scientific analysis of current and future UAP's Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (aka UFO's).
Joel Plaskett, Kathleen Edwards, and Luc Doucet perform as the Interstellar All-Stars at the Interstellar Rodeo in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ©Eric Kozakiewicz/Interstellar Rodeo
Luc Doucet performs as part of the Interstellar All-Stars at the Interstellar Rodeo in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ©Eric Kozakiewicz/Interstellar Rodeo
By affiliates@fandango.com
Interstellar first took off in theaters last November and people still can’t stop talking about Christopher Nolan’s science fiction epic.
Fellow sci-fi director Rian Johnson (whose last movie was Looper and whose next movie is Star Wars: Episode VIII)...
videogamedemons.com/movie-news/interstellar-extras-hear-r...
Artscape 2008. A colaboration between Scott Pennington and Paige Shuttleworth. Photos by Nancy Froelich
Strumbellas at the Interstellar Rodeo in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ©Eric Kozakiewicz/ Interstellar Rodeo
Dusty emission in the Tadpole nebula, IC 410, lies about 12,000 light-years away in the northern constellation Auriga. The cloud of glowing gas is over 100 light-years across, sculpted by stellar winds and radiation from embedded open star cluster NGC 1893. Formed in the interstellar cloud a mere 4 million years ago, bright cluster stars are seen all around the star-forming nebula. Notable near the image center are two relatively dense streamers of material trailing away from the nebula's central regions. Potentially sites of ongoing star formation in IC 410, these cosmic tadpole shapes are about 10 light-years long. The featured image was taken in infrared light by NASA's Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) satellite. via NASA ift.tt/1t0IGXN
Joel Plaskett, Kathleen Edwards, and Luc Doucet perform as the Interstellar All-Stars at the Interstellar Rodeo in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ©Eric Kozakiewicz/Interstellar Rodeo
Like a ship plowing through cosmic seas, runaway star Zeta Ophiuchi produces the arcing interstellar bow wave or bow shock seen in this stunning infrared portrait. In the false-color view, bluish Zeta Oph, a star about 20 times more massive than the Sun, lies near the center of the frame, moving toward the left at 24 kilometers per second. Its strong stellar wind precedes it, compressing and heating the dusty interstellar material and shaping the curved shock front. Around it are clouds of relatively undisturbed material. What set this star in motion? Zeta Oph was likely once a member of a binary star system, its companion star was more massive and hence shorter lived. When the companion exploded as a supernova catastrophically losing mass, Zeta Oph was flung out of the system. About 460 light-years away, Zeta Oph is 65,000 times more luminous than the Sun and would be one of the brighter stars in the sky if it weren't surrounded by obscuring dust. The image spans about 1.5 degrees or 12 light-years at the estimated distance of Zeta Ophiuchi. via NASA ift.tt/1fcAp39