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zeroing:

Jeremy Geddes

(via rinlockhart)

byroglyphics:

I have a new print ‘Pleiades’ available from Knee Deep in Sleep.

Edition of 50 -signed, embossed and supplied with a certificate of authenticity.

Printed on  Hahnemühle PhotoRag 310gsm paper. 59 x 42 cm

Please click on the link or the image for further information. http://bit.ly/tLtw0H

(via cgfonzie)

(Source: tomorrowandbeyond)

fuckyeahmovieposters:

Blade Runner by 3ftDeep

(via blacksheepboy-)

(Source: iwillspitinyourfuckingface)

(Source: moonzerotwo)

fuckyeahspaceexploration:

Sputnik poster.

(by justinvg)

smithsonianmag:

Never-Before-Seen Photos From the Early Days of Space Exploration

The Gemini astronauts also took some of the most memorable photos in NASA history. You’d think we would have seen them all by now. But with Nasa’s help and funding, a team of researchers at Arizona State University led by lunar scientist Mark Robinson has retrieved from the archives dozens of outtakes that never made it into wide circulation.

Photos: NASA

Ed note: Check out our friends at Air & Space for more stunning photos from the Gemini mission.

(Source: moonzerotwo)

(Source: moonzerotwo)

The family photo that Charlie Duke left on the Moon on April 23, 1972, NASA.

(via ugh)

motherfuckinscifi:

Brad Wright

(Source: hibernative)

(Source: jhonys)

In the late 1970s, NASA launched two small spacecraft, Voyager I and Voyager II, and sent them through our solar system, past the planets, and then far out into interstellar space.

Voyager 1, now the most distant human-made object in the universe, and Voyager 2, close on its heels, continue their ground-breaking journey, studying the region in space where the Sun’s influence ends and the dark recesses of interstellar space begin.

The entire Voyager program is considered by many to be the most productive, and certainly the most cost-effective, space program ever.
Outer space is filled with all sorts of electronic waves. The two Voyager spacecraft detect these electronic signals and then, with radio transmitters as powerful as a small lightbulb, transmit the signals back to earth, where they are converted to audible sounds.

Yes, I know: electronic waves and energy are not “sound.” These sounds were derived and created from the transmitted signals by converting the electronic waves to audible frequency. The resulting sounds are fascinating and haunting.