Life, Universe and everything within

Just read that about 1,000 people have signed up for the one-way trip to Mars.

It sounds awesome but i´m not sure i want to spend the rest of my life on some remote planet that has nothing on it.

Now if it was Pandora (Avatar) :) I might consider it!
 
Imagine of Saturn, very cool actually :)

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"Images taken using infrared, red and violet spectral filters were combined to create this enhanced-color view. The images were obtained with the Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera on Oct. 17, 2012 at a distance of approximately 500,000 miles (800,000 kilometers) from Saturn. Image scale at Saturn is about 30 miles per pixel (50 kilometers per pixel)."


To get an idea of the sheer size here´s a comparison with earth,
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Breathtaking images.

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Mars believe it or not, sand dunes apparently.
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And a mindboggling one..
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Just galaxies containing 4-500 billion stars and probably more planets in each dot.
And it´s just a small window in one part of the universe. Probably not even 0,0001% of all Galaxies.
 
Woah, i just read that humans and giant apes co-existed as late as only 100.000 years ago.
They could be 3 meters in height! (9,8ft)

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that is crazy.

Gigantopitheus Blacki actually co-existed with Homo Erectus...

A baby chimpanzee have the strength of a full grown man....imagine what this dude could do to you if he found out you stole his food :)
 
Stars reveal the secrets of looking young
ESO PRESS RELEASE

Some people are in great shape at the age of 90, while others are decrepit before they're 50. We know that how fast people age is only loosely linked to how old they actually are - and may have more to do with their lifestyle. A new study using both the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at ESO's La Silla Observatory and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope reveals that the same is true of star clusters.
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This image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope shows NGC 6388, a dynamically middle-aged globular cluster in the Milky Way. While the cluster formed in the distant past (like all globular clusters, it is over ten billion years old), a study of the distribution of bright blue stars within the cluster shows that it has aged at a moderate speed, and its heaviest stars are in the process of migrating to the centre. Credit: NASA, ESA, F. Ferraro (University of Bologna)

Globular clusters are spherical collections of stars, tightly bound to each other by their mutual gravity. Relics of the early years of the Universe, with ages of typically 12-13 billion years (the Big Bang took place 13.7 billion years ago), there are roughly 150 globular clusters in the Milky Way and they contain many of our galaxy's oldest stars.

But while the stars are old and the clusters formed in the distant past, astronomers using the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have found that some of these clusters are still young at heart. The research is presented in the 20 December 2012 issue of the journal Nature.

"Although these clusters all formed billions of years ago," says Francesco Ferraro (University of Bologna, Italy), the leader of the team that made the discovery, "we wondered whether some might be aging faster or slower than others. By studying the distribution of a type of blue star that exists in the clusters, we found that some clusters had indeed evolved much faster over their lifetimes, and we developed a way to measure the rate of aging."

Star clusters form in a short period of time, meaning that all the stars within them tend to have roughly the same age. Because bright, high-mass stars burn up their fuel quite quickly, and globular clusters are very old, there should only be low-mass stars still shining within them.

This, however, turns out not to be the case: in certain circumstances, stars can be given a new burst of life, receiving extra fuel that bulks them up and substantially brightens them. This can happen if one star pulls matter off a close neighbour, or if they collide. The re-invigorated stars are called blue stragglers, and their high mass and brightness are properties that lie at the heart of this study.

Heavier stars sink towards the centre of a cluster as the cluster ages, in a process similar to sedimentation. Blue stragglers' high masses mean they are strongly affected by this process, while their brightness makes them relatively easy to observe.

To better understand cluster aging, the team mapped the location of blue straggler stars in 21 globular clusters, as seen in images from the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope and Hubble, among other observatories. Hubble provided high resolution imagery of the crowded centres of 20 of the clusters, while the ground-based imagery gave a wider view of their less busy outer regions.

Analysing the observational data, the team found that a few clusters appeared young, with blue straggler stars distributed throughout, while a larger group appeared old, with the blue stragglers clumped in the centre. A third group was in the process of aging, with the stars closest to the core migrating inwards first, then stars ever further out progressively sinking towards the centre.

"Since these clusters all formed at roughly the same time, this reveals big differences in the speed of evolution from cluster to cluster," said Barbara Lanzoni (University of Bologna, Italy), a co-author of the study. "In the case of fast-aging clusters, we think that the sedimentation process can be complete within a few hundred million years, while for the slowest it would take several times the current age of the Universe."

As a cluster's heaviest stars sink towards the centre, the cluster eventually experiences a phenomenon called core collapse, where the centre of the cluster bunches together extremely densely. The processes leading towards core collapse are quite well understood, and revolve around the number, density and speed of movement of the stars. However, the rate at which they happened was not known until now. This study provides the first empirical evidence of how quickly different globular clusters age.
 
If Mars had an conditions like earth today, pretty cool.
It would have been awesome if it actually looked like that and people had grown up on Mars as well and we are just about on the verge of meeting one another :)

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Comments from the guy who did it,

"I am a software engineer by trade and certainly not a planetary scientist, so most of my assumptions were based on simply comparing the Mars terrain to similar features here on Earth (e.g. elevation, proximity to bodies of water, physical features, geographical position, etc) and then using the corresponding textures from the Blue Marble images."
 
So basically, it's like an absolutely enormous pile of cosmic garbage ?
I don´t think we have a word for it yet lol.

Just imagine that the distance from our galaxy to our nearest, the Andromeda galaxy is 1,600 times smaller then this massive reactor.

I can´t get over the fact that while still going at warp speed (speed of light) it would take 4 billion years just to pass by it.
That´s our planets total life up til today almost.

On a side note, astronomers now theorize that there are about 17 billion planet just in our galaxy.

17 billion.
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/news/2013/pr201301.html
 
Some awesome pictures here,

One is a needle the other is the spike of a bee. Nature clearly more scary in this case.

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The egg of a butterfly apparently, looks like it defies the laws of gravity.

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Cigarette paper believe it or not. the crystals help burn the paper.

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Cucumber

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Dirty dental floss

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Random fly

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Hummingbird tounge

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Eyelashes,

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Maggot, looks like a Samruraj lol

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Another needle, hypodermic. The cavity is the beginning of the hole.
The red is blood cells.

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Razor blade after shaving.

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Spider head

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