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Physics-astronomy

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Exploring physics beyond Earth 🌌 Black holes, galaxies & the secrets of the universe. https://t.co/4qT3CNb6Gw?

Shorts

The Sun isn't just a ball of fire. It's a ball of plasma. Every second, it fuses 600 million tons of hydrogen into helium. That energy is what allows life to exist on Earth

The Sun isn't just a ball of fire. It's a ball of plasma. Every second, it fuses 600 million tons of hydrogen into helium. That energy is what allows life to exist on Earth

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Most people will never witness something like this in real life. 🤯✨ What started as a dark, heavy storm suddenly gave way to a rare supernumerary rainbow. Look closely—the arcs aren’t just a single curve, but multiple bands layered together, almost like a glowing doorway in the sky. This phenomenon occurs when light waves overlap and interfere, producing those extra shimmering stripes. Captured from a moving car, it’s a reminder that the most breathtaking moments often appear when you least expect them. Nature never stops surprising us. 🌦️

Most people will never witness something like this in real life. 🤯✨ What started as a dark, heavy storm suddenly gave way to a rare supernumerary rainbow. Look closely—the arcs aren’t just a single curve, but multiple bands layered together, almost like a glowing doorway in the sky. This phenomenon occurs when light waves overlap and interfere, producing those extra shimmering stripes. Captured from a moving car, it’s a reminder that the most breathtaking moments often appear when you least expect them. Nature never stops surprising us. 🌦️

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Beautiful Saturn ✨ . . Video upscaled using OpenArt

Beautiful Saturn ✨ . . Video upscaled using OpenArt

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Artemis II: 400,000 Kilometers from Home — A Pale Blue Dot Adrift in the Cosmos From the window of the Orion spacecraft, racing through cislunar space on humanity’s first crewed lunar mission in over fifty years, the astronauts turned to look back at Earth. At a distance of 400,000 kilometers (about 250,000 miles)—once the defining span of the Apollo missions—our world fades into a single, luminous blue point against the vast darkness. No borders. No cities. Only a fragile sphere of swirling oceans and clouds, holding every human story, every dream, every life ever lived. A quiet, humbling reminder of our smallness… and the extraordinary value of the only home we’ve ever known. Captured during Artemis II’s sweeping journey around the Moon, this view echoes the spirit of the “Pale Blue Dot,” while signaling a bold new era in humanity’s return to deep space.

Artemis II: 400,000 Kilometers from Home — A Pale Blue Dot Adrift in the Cosmos From the window of the Orion spacecraft, racing through cislunar space on humanity’s first crewed lunar mission in over fifty years, the astronauts turned to look back at Earth. At a distance of 400,000 kilometers (about 250,000 miles)—once the defining span of the Apollo missions—our world fades into a single, luminous blue point against the vast darkness. No borders. No cities. Only a fragile sphere of swirling oceans and clouds, holding every human story, every dream, every life ever lived. A quiet, humbling reminder of our smallness… and the extraordinary value of the only home we’ve ever known. Captured during Artemis II’s sweeping journey around the Moon, this view echoes the spirit of the “Pale Blue Dot,” while signaling a bold new era in humanity’s return to deep space.

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Physics always incredible

Physics-astronomy

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