SONY. COMPUTER. ENTERTAINMENT.
PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES GIJINKAS (PART 1)
HTML: Handles Internet with CSS and Javascript. Breaks the 4th wall on a daily basis. Literally a popstar. The gay is strong here.
CSS: The one that does HTML’s wardrobe. Avid abstract artist. Bullies Javascript for eternity. Extremely one sided love for HTML.
Javascript: Will do anything to keep HTML’s shit together. Has more than 10 toolboxes. Java’s happy sibling. Lowkey crush on Ruby.
PHP: Confused 80% of the time. Oblivious to everything. ??????. No one knows she’s a great musician.
SQL: Tsundere like no tomorrow. Cares a lot about PHP, but also consistently gets pissed at her. They live in the library. Robot arm because of a bookshelf accident.
Python: Loves mountains and camping. Owns 2 bikes. Lowkey crush on the entire C family. Flaming bisexual.
Ruby: Python’s hiking partner. Lives in a cave she renovated all on her own. Secretly wants to overthrow Python. Highkey crush on Javascript.
C: Wildlife and nature. Exercises with tree trunks. The one who taught Python how to camp. Daddy.
C++: The son of C. Always hangs out with Java at the arcade. Consistently wins online arguments. Has a crush on Python.
Java: C++’s bestfriend. Owns 2 bookshelfs: One with video games, and one with actual books. Doesn’t know what sleep is. Absolute nerd.
As promised. Which ones should I do next?
“I felt I was an accepted team member. It was a great experience and a unique opportunity.”
Ruth Ann Strunk, a math major, was hired in 1968 at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center as an acceptance checkout equipment software engineer. She monitored the work of contractors who wrote the computer programs designed to check out the command module, lunar module and the Apollo J mission experiments. These experiments were conducted aboard the service modules on Apollo 15, 16 and 17 by the command module pilots.
“I am proud of the advancement and the number of women who are working and enjoy working here,” Strunk said. “It was a wonderful opportunity NASA afforded me during Apollo that I have been able to use ever since.”
Remember the women who made #Apollo50th possible.
Follow Women@NASA for more stories like this one, and make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
This is Earth, our amazing home. The only planet in the solar system with the ability to harbor life (that we know of).
This is the distance between our awesome planet and the moon.
Doesn’t look that far does it? How about if I told you that you could fit EVERY planet in our solar system neatly in that distance.
Speaking of the other planets in our solar system, this is them & this is where our amazing planet resides.
The moon’s our cute little companion. This is the United States compared to it.
The planets in the solar system are so cool. This is what North America looks like in comparison to Jupiter.
Speaking of Jupiter and the moon, this is what it would look like if Jupiter was in the place of the moon. (The white dot is our moon).
Earth compared to Saturn (well 6 Earths…)
Ever wonder about what Earth would look like if it had rings like Saturn? Well wonder no more..
Amazing right? Want to see something cooler? Here is the Earth compared to our Sun.
Here’s what we look like from the moon
And from Mars
From Saturn
From Neptune…
Here is what the Sun looks like from Mars
Remember what Carl Sagan said? There are more stars in space than grains of sand on every beach in the Earth.
That’s a lot right? That only means there are stars way larger than our Sun..like this one for example:
And there are stars bigger than that….
Stars are huge, but the galaxy is even bigger. If you shrunk the Sun down to the size of a white blood cell, the Milky Way Galaxy would be the size of the United States.
This is where the Earth is in our huge galaxy
You know all the stars we see in the sky? These are the ones we only ever see (this isn’t our galaxy but its very similar)
The Milky Way is so big that the last time the Earth was in this exact position in the galaxy, the dinosaurs were here
Even though our galaxy is huge, there are galaxies that are even bigger…
This picture from Hubble shows thousands of thousands of thousands of galaxies that each have their own stars with their own planets…
Here is one of the galaxies in that picture. It is 10 BILLION light years away. When we look at it, we are looking 10 BILLION YEARS BACK IN TIME
And just to keep this in mind, this is a very small portion of the sky that was believed to be empty…
Everything is relative.
Next time you’re stressed out or worried about something, stop and take a step back. Look up at the sky and think about all of the things that are out there. All the stars being born, the stars dying, galaxies colliding.
We live in such an amazing universe, and we are only an extremely tiny part of it.
Credit- pictures from: Buzzfeed on Facebook
In October 2017, astronomers announced the first detection of gravitational waves from the merger of two neutron stars earlier that year. The event also rung in the era of multi-messenger astronomy, as more than 70 telescopes observed the event’s afterglow in optical light, X-rays, gamma rays, and more. Now, an X-ray signal dubbed XT2 from a galaxy 6.6 billion light-years away has revealed another neutron star merger, which left behind a single, heavier neutron star with an incredibly powerful magnetic field: a magnetar.
Read more ~ astronomy.com
Image: Chandra observations show the flare-up and subsequent dimming of XT2, which matches predictions for the signal from a pair of merging neutron stars and the birth of a magnetar. Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/Uni. of Science and Technology of China/Y. Xue et al; Optical: NASA/STScI