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#image #picture #photo #inspiration #interior design #architecture #design #artt #walls
I like not having a conversation that doesn't need to be had. Simplicity is useful when the mind doesn't feel it necessary to empty itself constantly. I like the occasional pause, the itinerant journey, the time slowed and can appreciate what you have to share.
Find me an adventurer, collector, designer, writer, outdoors-man, artist... I enjoy conversation, food, cooking, friends, ideas, inventive objects-minds, interior designs, decorating, landscapes, photography, architecture, history, travel, antiques, timeless craftsmanship and you, maybe. Why NOT?!?
I am a Mississippian and have a knack for living. I've been to the world and have come back to myself.
Enjoy your visit: say hi and share anytime :)
(Source: procaine, via americansatori)
cwnl:
Solar-Type Stars (Medium)
This is the kind of star we are most familiar with. It is the type of star we see in the day time, the sun that warms planet Earth and the rest of the planets within our Solar System. They’re distinguishable by their bright yellow hues.
(Source: ikenbot)
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Rafflesia Arnoldii
Rafflesia arnoldii is the world’s largest flower having a diameter of about one meter and weighing up to ten kilograms. It is a rare flower and not easily located. It grows only once a year and blooms for around five days. According to researches in discovery news, this flower that looks and smells like rotting flesh is related to flimsy flowers like violets, poinsettias and passionflowers. Hence it also called as “meat flower” or “corpse flower”. The flower is pollinated by flies and carrion beetles attracted by its vile smell. It contains about 27 species and found in Indonesian rain forests of southeastern Asia and Philippines. Rafflesia is an official state flower of Indonesia, Surat Thani Province in Thailand and Sabah state in Malaysia.
Todmorden: A town where greenthumbs, not sticky fingers, prevail
The Daily Mail pays a visit to Todmorden, a quaint British town that’s littered with raised vegetable and herb gardens where residents can grow — and take — whatever they fancy.The ethnically and economically diverse mill town of about 15,000 residents is home to Incredible Edible, an ambitious, agrarian-minded scheme that’s brought together an entire community under one common goal: to become completely self-sufficient in food by the year 2018.
(via socialuprooting)
cwnl:
The Life Cycles of Stars
Imaged Above: Stellar evolution by Chandra X-Ray Observatory
Introduction
Initial Note: There’s a spilled set of jewels and treasures sparkling out there in the night sky most people are in the habit of ignoring whilst having their strolls to wherever their destinations may be. While some of us may already be aware of the little fact that we’re made of the same chemical elements as these cosmic gems, some still perceive them as merely bright little dots of light emitting faint photons into our eyes whenever the Sun clocks out for the day. However, you’d be surprised at just how active and diverse these dots of concentrated matter truly are. In the following set of posts courtesy of NASA, we’ll be taking a comprehensive look into the life of Stars.
What Is A Star?
A star is a sphere of gas held together by its own gravity. The force of gravity is continually trying to cause the star to collapse, but this is counteracted by the pressure of hot gas and/or radiation in the star’s interior. This is called hydrostatic support. During most of the lifetime of a star, the interior heat and radiation is provided by nuclear reactions near the center, and this phase of the star’s life is called the main sequence.
Before and after the main sequence, the heat sources differ slightly. Before the main sequence, the star is contracting and is not yet hot enough or dense enough in its interior for the nuclear reactions to begin. During this phase, hydrostatic support is provided by the heat generated during contraction.
After the main sequence, most of the nuclear fuel in the core has been used up. The star now requires a series of less-efficient nuclear reactions for internal heat. Eventually, when these reactions no longer generate sufficient heat to support the star against its own gravity, the star will collapse.
The Cycle
A star’s life cycle is determined by its mass. The larger the mass, the shorter the life cycle. A star’s mass is determined by the amount of matter that is available in its nebula, the giant cloud of gas and dust in which it is born. Over time, gravity pulls the hydrogen gas in the nebula together and it begins to spin.
As the gas spins faster, it heats up and is known as a protostar. Eventually the temperature reaches 15,000,000 °C and nuclear fusion occurs in the cloud’s core. The cloud begins to glow brightly. At this temperature, it contracts a little and becomes stable. It is now called a main sequence star and will remain in this stage, shining for millions or billions of years to come.
As the main sequence star glows, hydrogen in the core is converted into helium by nuclear fusion. When the hydrogen supply in the core begins to run out, the core becomes unstable and contracts. The outer shell of the star, which is still mostly hydrogen, starts to expand. As it expands, it cools and glows red.
The star has now reached the red giant phase. It is red because it is cooler than it was in the main sequence star stage and it is a giant because the outer shell has expanded outward. All stars evolve the same way up to the red giant phase. The amount of mass a star has determines which of the following life cycle paths it will take after the red giant phase.
(Source: ikenbot)
(Source: pandor4, via socialuprooting)
a little pond in Southern Mississippi
Picture of the Day. Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan. A space capsule (a Russian Soyuz TMA-21, to be specific) carries US astronaut Ron Garan and two Russian cosmonauts, Andrey Borisenko and Alexander Samokutyayev, to earth.
In the news: The three returned to earth after a mission to the International Space Station. The US is currently paying Russia to send it’s astronauts into space at the cost of over $50 million dollars per person.
Photo Credit: Sergei Ilnitsky/AFP/Getty. Via.
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