View allAll Photos Tagged messy,
Rainbow hair with holographic hair tinsel, I actually just used some holographic thread... I pinned my hair up like this after washing it and applying mouse, then after it dried and I took the pins out I had really pretty wavy hair. though I don't think I actually got any pictures of that... =/
Southeast corner of my bedroom. Still moving in, obviously...but the X-mas lights were top priority!
My messy, messy desk. I am not a neat freak in any other aspect of my life. But I just can't concentrate with a cluttered deck. So I cleaned it off first this morning.
I don't have a date or location for this picture.
I see on the table:
2 jars of Sanka
1 Heinz ketchup bottle
1 pack of Winston.
Image of open cluster Messier 39 in the constellation of Cygnus. This large open cluster contains around 30 stars and is about 800 light years from Earth. This shot was taken with a DSLR using 250mm lens on a Star Adventurer tracking mount on 20 May 2018.
Messier 53 (M53) is a globular Star Cluster
camera: Canon t4I using Orion 80mm ED.
exposure: 18 x 120sec , 4 Dark, bios and flats.
stacked using DSS, Photoshop cs
Taken on March 17th 2018 from FluffyDuck Observatory
Messy Nation via Instagram www.instagram.com/p/BUow6crAd0V/
Shot on Ilford PanF+ 50iso pushed at 100, (under)developed in HC110, 11min 30sec is not enough.
Yay my first french braid... I always thought they were pretty and have always wanted a long one on my back ...Yesterday my friend braided my hair into a single french braid...she is a pro at french braiding ..Hope someday I could braid my own hair :)
The Whirlpool Galaxy, also known as Messier 51a, M51a, and NGC 5194, is an interacting grand-design spiral galaxy with a Seyfert 2 active galactic nucleus. It lies in the constellation Canes Venatici, and was the first galaxy to be classified as a spiral galaxy. Wikipedia
Age: 400.3 million years
Distance to Earth: 23.16 million light years
Radius: 30,000 light years
Coordinates: RA 13h 29m 53s | Dec +47° 11′ 43″
Stars: 100 billion
Messier 45. Apilado de 329x16 segs (1h 27 min), f:400mm @ F/5.7, ISO 1600. Canon 1000D +Celestron 70/400, montura CG4. 11 y 29-08-2012
Messy party to celebrate graduating from 8th grade
Beginning to play "Pie Roulette". You pass the pie around, and when the music stops, you can pie yourself to stay in the game or pie your neighbor and you are out.
Messier 15 in soft seeing (best focus was 5" stars). LRGB with 2 minute sub exposures, 5 per channel.
Triangulum (Messier 33)
Credit: Giuseppe Donatiello, Alessandro Falesiedi, Mario Lovrencie / Sezione Nazionale di Ricerca Profondo Cielo - UAI
(J2000) RA: 01h 33m 50.02s Dec: +30° 39′ 36.7″
Messier 33 is a low-luminosity flocculent spiral galaxy at 3 million light-years in Triangulum. It is catalogued also as NGC 598 and known as Triangulum Galaxy. The galaxy is the smallest spiral galaxy in the Local Group and it is believed to be a big satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy.
M33 has two asymmetric faint arms, and an interstellar medium rich in gaseous filaments that extends for about 7 kpc. Although the inner disk is relatively undisturbed, the northern arm is less regular in shape than the southern one. M33, is a bulge-free galaxy with only two optically luminous dwarf galaxies believed to be its satellites: AndXXII (McConnachie et al., 2009; Martin et al., 2016) and Pisces VII (Martínez-Delgado et al., 2022) m discovered by me in 2020. However, given its mass, ΛCDM cosmological simulations predict that M33 should host a larger number of satellites, at least 10.
The neutral hydrogen (HI) disk is three times larger than the star-forming disk and is clearly warped. The outer disk has the same inclination as the inner one with respect to our line of sight but the position angle of the major axis changes by about 30 degrees compared to the inner disk and is more aligned with the M31 direction. While M33's undisturbed inner disk indicates that no major collisions between M31 and M33 or between M33 and a satellite have occurred in the past, the distortion could be the result of a flyby about 9 billion years ago. Timing assessments make this scenario unlikely and favor the hypothesis of a first fall of M33 in the region of influence of M31.
This image is distributed in full-resolution as CC0 but for its use please refer to what is indicated in the info here: www.flickr.com/people/133259498@N05/
I can't believe how many times in the past two and half years I have cleaned out this room and then presto it looks like this. I hate not having clear access to my books. This mess was created by bringing in the stuff we used to stage my mother's house.....Oh this isn't all....We had just cleaned out the area in the garage where we park the car and now it is full of furniture from mother's house.