Properties of Farel Akbar, simple. Gamer, Computer Amateur Specialist and Crazy with love and.. and.. I LOVE SUSHI :9

#acecombat6 #ultimate #artwork #cfa44

#acecombat6 #ultimate #artwork #cfa44

itsfullofstars:

(via Astronomy Picture of the Day)
Image Credit & Copyright: Anthony Ayiomamitis

itsfullofstars:

(via Astronomy Picture of the Day)

Image Credit & CopyrightAnthony Ayiomamitis

Source: apod.nasa.gov

propagandery:


A refreshingly simple new idea has emerged in the complicated world of high energy physics. It proposes that the early universe was a one-dimensional line. Not an exploding sphere, not a chaotic ball of fire. Just a simple line of pure energy.
Over time, as that line grew, it crisscrossed and intersected itself more and more, gradually forming a tightly interwoven fabric, which, at large distances, appeared as a 2-D plane. More time passed and the 2-D universe expanded and twisted about, eventually creating a web — the 3-D universe we see today.
This concept, called “vanishing dimensions” to describe what happens the farther one looks back in time, has been gaining traction within the high energy physics community in recent months.

Did the universe begin as a simple 1-D Line?

propagandery:

A refreshingly simple new idea has emerged in the complicated world of high energy physics. It proposes that the early universe was a one-dimensional line. Not an exploding sphere, not a chaotic ball of fire. Just a simple line of pure energy.

Over time, as that line grew, it crisscrossed and intersected itself more and more, gradually forming a tightly interwoven fabric, which, at large distances, appeared as a 2-D plane. More time passed and the 2-D universe expanded and twisted about, eventually creating a web — the 3-D universe we see today.

This concept, called “vanishing dimensions” to describe what happens the farther one looks back in time, has been gaining traction within the high energy physics community in recent months.

Did the universe begin as a simple 1-D Line?

(via itsfullofstars)

Source: propagandery

spacerules:

Pluto in perspective.

spacerules:

Pluto in perspective.

(via itsfullofstars)

Source: runningwiththetrains

itsfullofstars:

A list of all NASA´s current missions

It´s quite easy to get lost in the middle of the data NASA releases to the world on a daily basis. There are more than 50 missions right now under the agency´s supervision, all of them producing a myriad of amazing images and information about many different subjects such as sunspots, Earth´s atmosphere, Saturn´s moons, the birth of stars at distant galaxies and faraway asteroids.

To help us follow all that, NASA has listed all current missions on alphabetical order in a way that clicking on each one of them takes you to a specific page about the mission with all the data you need to understand all those probes, satellites, robots, telescopes and on.

Check it out!

Source: itsfullofstars

Source: jlipsett

Source: sophisticatedplatform

Source: sexualseoul

japanlove:

santa claus view by nodoca on Flickr.

japanlove:

santa claus view by nodoca on Flickr.

Source: japanlove

caribbeansurfingsummer:

sushi…mi favorite food <3

caribbeansurfingsummer:

sushi…mi favorite food <3

Source: weheartit.com