expose-the-light:

Tour the landmarks of Mars in these vintage travel posters

Mars tourism is still a long ways off, but it’s not hard to imagine that someday, tourists will visit the natural geological landmarks of Mars much like they tour the Grand Canyon. And every great tourist destination needs a retro travel poster to entice visitors.

Ron Guyatt, who also created beautifully detailed maps of Westeros and Jurassic Park, sells these travel prints, based on Mars’ Seven Sisters caves on Arsia Mons, the volcano Olympus Mons, and Valles Marineris. In his store, Guyatt says these are part of a series depicting landmarks in our solar system, so with luck, we’ll see more travel posters from Mars and beyond.

Mars travel posters [Etsy via Ian Brooks]

(via tuckthis)

Tags: science space art

grandsoulgem:

I actually have a love affair with Jupiter’s moons.Sorry, earth moon. 

grandsoulgem:

I actually have a love affair with Jupiter’s moons.
Sorry, earth moon. 

(Source: kcabanikova, via tuckthis)

Tags: science space

jtotheizzoe:

Watch the skies tonight!
Hey folks! Check your meteor calendars! Tonight marks the next major event of 2012, with the Lyrid meteor shower. Best viewed from the northern hemisphere, look to the northeast after midnight until dawn. The meteors will peak then, radiating off the east side of the bright star in Lyra up there (although you could see them anywhere in the sky).
Here’s a complete guide from EarthSky on what to look for tonight. Best of all? No moon to get in the way!
jtotheizzoe:

Meteor Showers 2012
A calendar of all the major meteor showers taking place in 2012 that I drew up.
Of course, this isn’t all of the meteor events this year. Only the ones with the best chance of being visible. I chose only events with a Zenith Hourly Rate (ZHR, the number of peak events per hour) above 10. You should also consider the moon phase for that date, which I did not include.
How to use this: 
The date on the left is the early morning after midnight on the day it will peak (so “October 7” is between midnight and sunrise on the morning of the 7th). 
The constellation represents the point in the sky that the shower will “originate” from. 
Choose someplace dark, away from city lights, and bring a blanket and a friend.
Enjoy.
To calculate the sunrise/sunset for your area on a specific date, go here. Many more details about each event can be found in this summary from EarthSky. Some events will favor the North or South Hemispheres, but such is life.
Feel free to distribute freely!
(Link to hi-res version)

jtotheizzoe:

Watch the skies tonight!

Hey folks! Check your meteor calendars! Tonight marks the next major event of 2012, with the Lyrid meteor shower. Best viewed from the northern hemisphere, look to the northeast after midnight until dawn. The meteors will peak then, radiating off the east side of the bright star in Lyra up there (although you could see them anywhere in the sky).

Here’s a complete guide from EarthSky on what to look for tonight. Best of all? No moon to get in the way!

jtotheizzoe:

Meteor Showers 2012

A calendar of all the major meteor showers taking place in 2012 that I drew up.

Of course, this isn’t all of the meteor events this year. Only the ones with the best chance of being visible. I chose only events with a Zenith Hourly Rate (ZHR, the number of peak events per hour) above 10. You should also consider the moon phase for that date, which I did not include.

How to use this: 

  1. The date on the left is the early morning after midnight on the day it will peak (so “October 7” is between midnight and sunrise on the morning of the 7th). 
  2. The constellation represents the point in the sky that the shower will “originate” from. 
  3. Choose someplace dark, away from city lights, and bring a blanket and a friend.
  4. Enjoy.

To calculate the sunrise/sunset for your area on a specific date, go here. Many more details about each event can be found in this summary from EarthSky. Some events will favor the North or South Hemispheres, but such is life.

Feel free to distribute freely!

(Link to hi-res version)

(via tuckthis)

tuckthis:

jtotheizzoe:

24 Hours of the Sun, Stars and Earth in a Single Panoramic Image
A stereographic projection of an entire day stitched together to provide the view of one rotation of the Earth. Wow.
(via Colossal)

This might look strange to us, but for untold generations this is kinda how the world looked to people.
They of course didn’t see it this way, but this was the sum of their information of the world around them.

tuckthis:

jtotheizzoe:

24 Hours of the Sun, Stars and Earth in a Single Panoramic Image

A stereographic projection of an entire day stitched together to provide the view of one rotation of the Earth. Wow.

(via Colossal)

This might look strange to us, but for untold generations this is kinda how the world looked to people.

They of course didn’t see it this way, but this was the sum of their information of the world around them.

jollityfarm:

lady-holmes:

infinity-imagined:

Brain Cells and Galaxy Clusters

Like dying stars.

n-a-s-a:

Thor’s Helmet from CFHT 
Credit & Copyright: Jean-Charles Cuillandre (CFHT) & Giovanni Anselmi (Coelum Astronomia), Hawaiian Starlight

n-a-s-a:

Thor’s Helmet from CFHT

Credit & Copyright: Jean-Charles Cuillandre (CFHT) & Giovanni Anselmi (Coelum Astronomia), Hawaiian Starlight

(via apieceofmine)

thetimethatisgivenus:

Jon Stewart speaks for the people.

thetimethatisgivenus:

Jon Stewart speaks for the people.

(Source: , via apieceofmine)

redcloud:

This is beautiful.

redcloud:

This is beautiful.

(Source: houseoftherinsingsun)

Tags: science space

(via julihawk)

cubby-hole:

Im currently reading Cosmos. It kicks ass

cubby-hole:

Im currently reading Cosmos. It kicks ass