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Messy Games at Youth!

100 Drawings In 1 Month are waiting to go get shrinkwrapped in a pile on messy desk.

messy desk...there's a scanner back there somewhere under that pile!

Open cluster Messier 48 shot at full moon.

L: 5x5min

R,G,B: 4x5min

This is on the messy side for my desk. Notice how the OCD kicks in for even the little things. The Post-Its are basically all squared off, the pens are always lined up in this fashion, and my phone, radio, and calendar are all turned at the same angle. I can't help it.

El Cúmulo globular M4 (también conocido como Objeto Messier 4, Messier 4, M4 o NGC 6121), es un cúmulo globular que se encuentra en la constelación de Scorpius. Fue descubierto por Philippe Loys de Chéseaux en el año 1746 y más tarde catalogado por Charles Messier en 1764. Este fue el primer cúmulo globular donde se distinguieron estrellas individuales. En la frontera de visión a ojo desnudo, M4 se observa en los telescopios más pequeños como una borrosa bola de luz. En telescopios de mediano tamaño es posible distinguir estrellas individuales, las cuales poseen una magnitud aparente de 10,8.

 

A una distancia de 7.200 años luz, debe ser el cúmulo globular más cercano a nuestro Sistema Solar. Al menos 43 estrellas variables se han observado en este cúmulo: todas ellas son asequibles para el aficionado, siempre que se utilice una cámara CCD para estudiarlas (aparecen con magnitudes a partir de la 10ª).

 

De su velocidad radial, 70.4 km/s, se deduce que se aleja de la Tierra a más de 253.400 km/h: esta velocidad se debe tanto a su movimiento propio alrededor del núcleo de la Vía Láctea como al movimiento orbital del Sol y la Tierra. Su magnitud conjunta en banda B (luz azul) es igual a la 8.13, su magnitud conjunta en banda V (luz verde) es igual a la 7.12; su tipo espectral es F8 (fotográficamente aparece amarillento, debido a la gran cantidad de estrellas gigantes rojas que posee).

 

En 1987 se descubrió un púlsar en M4 con un período de 3,0 milisegundos. Fotografías tomadas por el Telescopio Espacial Hubble en 1995 han revelado estrellas enanas blancas que están entre las más viejas de la Vía Láctea (su edad se estima en unos 13.000 millones de años). Una de ellas es una estrella binaria con un púlsar como compañero, PSR B1620-26 y un planeta orbitándola con una masa 2,5 veces superior a Júpiter.

The image changes every 30 minutes and the desktop got more messy

La galaxie Messier 66 fait partie du triplet du Lion. La petite taille de mon capteur ne me permet cependant que d'imager une seule galaxie à la fois..

 

Image réalisée à partir de clichés pris avec une caméra Altaïr GP-CAM au foyer d'un télescope Skywatcher 150/750. Les clichés ont ensuite été empilés avec Deep Sky Stacker, puis l'image finale traitée avec GIMP.

Messy Games at Youth!

Messier 4 or M4 (also designated NGC 6121) is a globular cluster in the constellation of Scorpius. It was discovered by Philippe Loys de Chéseaux in 1746 and catalogued by Charles Messier in 1764. It was the first globular cluster in which individual stars were resolved.

M4 is a rather loosely concentrated cluster of class IX and measures 75 light years across. It features a characteristic "bar" structure across its core, visible to moderate sized telescopes. The structure consists of 11th magnitude stars and is approximately 2.5' long and was first noted by William Herschel in 1783. At least 43 variable stars have been observed within M4.

M4 is approximately 7,200 light years away, the same distance as NGC 6397, making these the two closest globular clusters to our Solar System. It has an estimated age of 12.2 billion years.

Credit: NASA/STScI/WikiSky

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THIS IS A BOM HAND TATTOO (YES IT IS MESSY)

 

THIS GOES WELL WITH MOST ARM TATTOOS.

© All Rights Reserved. Please don't use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my permission.

HDR of my messy place today.

 

Long Beach, CA

February 2008

Messy Games at Youth!

Teen rooms are often messy because teens are busy with more important things than cleaning, like studying, socializing, gaming, or sleeping. Teens also have a different definition of messiness than their parents. What may look like a chaotic pile of clothes, books, and gadgets to an adult is actually a carefully organized system of personal belongings that only the teen can understand. Teens also like to express their individuality and creativity by decorating their rooms with posters, stickers, and other accessories that may not match the rest of the house. Therefore, teen rooms are often messy because they reflect the teen's personality, lifestyle, and preferences.

 

Source: AI Text Generator

Messy hair and don't care!

I care very little towards changing my appearance. I dye my hair once or twice a year... make up on a rare occasion... etc :D

Messier 106 widefield

 

Camera: Canon 300D modded + IDAS P2 front filter

Scope: Celestron C6-N guided with a Meade DSI on a Meade 70AZ

Stacked in Deep Sky Stacker, PP in PS CS3

 

Details:

35 x 360s exposures @ ISO800

10 darks/20 flats/20 bias

The Triangulum Galaxy always strikes me as looking messy, as if it has permanent bedhead.

 

Captured under the dark sky of Killarney Provincial Park, Ontario.

Sidewalks are valuable real estate, for Cafés, dining and sale of goods.

 

Sidewalks are also good for planting trees that make walking enjoyable.

Including many uses on the same street and in the same building makes a neighbourhood vibrant and lively. The groundfloor of this apartment building has stores and a car repair shop. A small shop that needs and uses the sidewalk for additional workspace.

Its owner and workers live above the shop, a recipe for good urbanism.

Dynamic, entrepreneurial, economical, effective and messy urbanism.

Oh, so that's where my scissors are.

Messier 102. Edge on galaxy 50 million light year's distant.

Messy Games at Youth!

4X5 minute exposures with C9.25 operating at F/6.3 and Canon XSi. More exposure time is needed for this object.

Well... live with it!

Messy Games at Youth!

Messy party to celebrate graduating from 8th grade

Meh...what guy's closet isn't messy?

M31 The Andromeda Galaxy

4 x 90sec at ISO400

 

Processed with Deep Sky Stacker and Paint.NET

Canon EOS 300D at prime focus on Orion ST80

Celestron CG-4 mount with SynScan EQ3-2 upgrade

Turns out cooking with a toddler wasn't quite as messy as I thought it would be!

 

Tonight I turned to an open cluster for imaging, as the Moon was at first quarter, lighting up the sky.

 

Messier 52 is a nice, rich open cluster in Cassiopeia, somewhere between 3 000 and 7 000 ly away. It is about 35 million years old, meaning that the light we see from it right now left M52 when dogs first appeared on our planet. Rather fitting that when I was imaging this tonight my dog was outside with me, doing 35-million-year-old dog stuff.

The Crab Nebula (Messier 1, M1) is a supernova remnant and pulsar in the constellation of Taurus.

 

Image by James Abbott

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