Bliss Within A Reverie

By Edgar
4.05.12
70 notes

(Source: girlslovecams, via nicenakedchicks)

4.05.12
70 notes
3.09.12
0 notes
3.09.12
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2.28.12
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2.28.12
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2.03.12
467 notes
theworldwelivein:

Skating back home (by B℮n)

theworldwelivein:

Skating back home (by B℮n)

2.03.12
467 notes
2.03.12
965 notes
theworldwelivein:

Evening at the Summer Palace (by Stuck in Customs)

theworldwelivein:

Evening at the Summer Palace (by Stuck in Customs)

2.03.12
965 notes
2.03.12
1,422 notes
theworldwelivein:

Milky Mirror | Auster-Skaftafellssysla, Iceland©  Iceland Aurora (Photo Tours)

theworldwelivein:

Milky Mirror | Auster-Skaftafellssysla, Iceland
©  Iceland Aurora (Photo Tours)

2.03.12
1,422 notes
12.23.11
103 notes
Life as a daydream: Awesome Life Secrets and Tips

lifeasadaydream:

Memorize something everyday.

Not only will this leave your brain sharp and your memory functioning, you will also have a huge library of quotes to bust out at any moment. Poetry, sayings and philosophies are your best options.

Constantly try to reduce your attachment to possessions.

12.23.11
103 notes
12.22.11
1,366 notes

(Source: kalahariheart, via candl3light)

12.22.11
1,366 notes
12.08.11
21,773 notes
12.08.11
21,773 notes

(Source: thejeanicole, via lifeasadaydream)

12.05.11
764 notes
12.05.11
764 notes

unknownskywalker:

Rainbow Photographed in Candle Smoke

Photographer Grover Schrayer captured this amazing photograph of a rainbow in candle smoke right after extinguishing the flame.

12.05.11
28,486 notes
12.05.11
28,486 notes

lifeasadaydream:

Dream House.

12.05.11
38 notes
unknownskywalker:

Hot Cores in Dark Clouds
The earliest stages in the life of a star are among the most mysterious. This is primarily because stars form inside dark clouds of material that block optical light, and because they form relatively quickly, in only hundred of thousands of years, whereas once a star starts burning its hydrogen fuel it can last for billions of years.
The details of high mass star birth are the most difficult of all to unravel because massive stars evolve the fastest, and can reach maturity even before their natal birth cloud dissipates. As a result, astronomers infer their presence from hot cores buried deep inside dark clouds, perhaps accompanied by other signposts like outflowing gas or strong ultraviolet radiation.
Infrared dark clouds are rich in molecules and dense gas. They are natural sites for star birth, and the hot cores inside them are thought to be among the earliest stellar embryos. CfA astronomers used the Smithsonian’s Submillimeter Array (SMA) to examine two hot cores that were previously discovered in infrared surveys and then confirmed as cores at millimeter wavelengths.
The SMA observations revealed the presence of over a dozen complex molecules including complex nitrogen-, oxygen-, and sulfur-rich species and isotopes of these molecules. The scientists model the data to conclude that the masses of the two cores are about eight and twenty-six solar-masses, that the temperatures in the material near these young stars are a few hundred kelvin, and that there is evidence for rotating structures (possibly preplanetary disks) around the young stars.
Above: A false-color, infrared image of a dark cloud as seen against the bright background of Milky Way emission. Within the snake-like cloud structure seen here, dust and gas are congealing into new stars that are detected as embedded, hot cores.

unknownskywalker:

Hot Cores in Dark Clouds

The earliest stages in the life of a star are among the most mysterious. This is primarily because stars form inside dark clouds of material that block optical light, and because they form relatively quickly, in only hundred of thousands of years, whereas once a star starts burning its hydrogen fuel it can last for billions of years.

The details of high mass star birth are the most difficult of all to unravel because massive stars evolve the fastest, and can reach maturity even before their natal birth cloud dissipates. As a result, astronomers infer their presence from hot cores buried deep inside dark clouds, perhaps accompanied by other signposts like outflowing gas or strong ultraviolet radiation.

Infrared dark clouds are rich in molecules and dense gas. They are natural sites for star birth, and the hot cores inside them are thought to be among the earliest stellar embryos. CfA astronomers used the Smithsonian’s Submillimeter Array (SMA) to examine two hot cores that were previously discovered in infrared surveys and then confirmed as cores at millimeter wavelengths.

The SMA observations revealed the presence of over a dozen complex molecules including complex nitrogen-, oxygen-, and sulfur-rich species and isotopes of these molecules. The scientists model the data to conclude that the masses of the two cores are about eight and twenty-six solar-masses, that the temperatures in the material near these young stars are a few hundred kelvin, and that there is evidence for rotating structures (possibly preplanetary disks) around the young stars.

Above: A false-color, infrared image of a dark cloud as seen against the bright background of Milky Way emission. Within the snake-like cloud structure seen here, dust and gas are congealing into new stars that are detected as embedded, hot cores.

12.05.11
38 notes
12.05.11
110 notes
lifeasadaydream:

Scientists debate how (and even if) the world will endScientists may not agree on the how the universe will end, but dark energy, the unexplained force that is counteracting gravity, is widely believed to be the reason why.

lifeasadaydream:


Scientists debate how (and even if) the world will end

Scientists may not agree on the how the universe will end, but dark energy, the unexplained force that is counteracting gravity, is widely believed to be the reason why.

(Source: mothernaturenetwork)

12.05.11
110 notes
12.05.11
43 notes
12.05.11
43 notes

unknownskywalker:

A Super-Sized Lunar Eclipse

On Dec 10th, sky watchers in the western United States will witness a total lunar eclipse swollen to super-sized proportions by the Moon illusion.

11.30.11
84 notes
unknownskywalker:

Autumn Japanese Maple by Garrick Liddell

unknownskywalker:

Autumn Japanese Maple by Garrick Liddell

11.30.11
84 notes
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