Sick
My happiness
@snktrd #snktrd #2013 #nike #sneakers #sneakerhead #jordan
#ASW aka A Season’s Worth Season 2 Ep 1 Drops on April 28th! Help get the word out, reblog and what not! The season is going to be a legendary one this summer!
Here’s the Very First Episode http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImPCZGz6HPs
Y’all roll blunts I smoke Cubans all day #jayz
So simple but so adorable
Photoshopped NASA Photos Give New Life to Outer-Space Imagery
Remember when you were a kid and you used to stare up into the clouds and pick out shapes and animals? Well Chris Keegan has taken that timeless exercise to whole new level by applying it to photos of space from NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory.
Like a child lying on the grass, he ponders a photo for a while and as soon as something jumps out he takes the image into Photoshop and starts rearranging the celestial elements to reinforce what he’s seen.
(via n-a-s-a)
The closest point to the Sun in a planet’s orbit is called Perihelion. The furthest point is called Aphelion. The planet moves fastest at perihelion and slowest at aphelion.
GIFs extracted from Year On Earth
Planets in our Solar System orbit the Sun. The orbits of some planets are almost perfect circles, but others are not. Some orbits are shaped more like ovals, or “stretched out” circles.
Scientists call these oval shapes “ellipses”. If a planet’s orbit is a circle, the Sun is at the center of that circle. If, instead, the orbit is an ellipse, the Sun is at a point called the “focus” of the ellipse, which is not quite the same as the center.
Since the Sun is not at the center of an elliptical orbit, the planet moves closer towards and further away from the Sun as it orbits. The place where the planet is closest to the Sun is called perihelion.
When the planet is furthest away from the Sun, it is at aphelion. The words “aphelion” and “perihelion” come from the Greek language. In Greek, “helios” mean Sun, “peri” means near, and “apo” means away from.
(via n-a-s-a)