The Fairy of Eagle Nebula
Tim Greenan rebuilt the Millenium Falcon using Blender 3D and photoshop.
“She may not look like much, but she’s got it where it counts.” - Han Solo
Millenium Falcon 3D by Tim Greenan / chaosmechanic (deviantART)
(via pacalin)
It’s official: God exists. The Hubble caught Him out of his home, taking a walk on the Gemini constellation, about 5,000 light-years from Earth. Looking at His photo, God doesn’t have a beard. Or maybe this isn’t God.
In fact, NASA says that this image taken by the space telescope Hubble—which is turning 20 this year—is the Eskimo Nebula, NGC 2392. It began forming 10,000 years ago—which sounds about right because that’s when God created Earth, as everybody knows. NGC 2392 was first discovered by William Herschel in 1787. In the middle you can see a dying star surrounded by some objects and gas.
Hello From Earth.net
ARE WE ALONE in the universe? Is there life on other planets? Are there other civilisations in our galaxy?
How life began, and whether it exists elsewhere, is a fascinating question which we still cannot answer. Of the eight planets in our Solar System, only one - Earth - has life as far as we know. But there are 400 million other suns in our galaxy, and billions of galaxies in the universe - so the chances are high that life exists elsewhere, and that intelligence and civilisation will have arisen more than once.
Since 1995, more than 350 planets have been discovered orbiting other stars. Known as exoplanets, they vary greatly in size and composition.
At COSMOS magazine, we thought it would be a cool way to celebrate National Science Week in Australia - and the International Year of Astronomy - by sending a message to a potentially habitable planet outside the Solar System.
Thanks to the support of Australia’s Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research, the CSIRO and NASA, and a bunch of other really helpful people, the text messages collected on this site will be transmitted to the closest Earth-like planet that might harbour life: Gliese 581d.
At the end of Science Week, NASA will transmit the messages to Gliese 581d using the Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex in Tidbinbilla.






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