Author Archives: Chompsky

Behold: comet dust raining down last week in a composite shot taken during the peak night of the annual Perseid meteor shower. To wit:

The umbrella was not needed as a shield from meteors, since they almost entirely evaporate high in the Earth’s atmosphere. Many of the component images featured individual Perseids, while one image featured the foreground near Jiuquan City, Gansu Province, China. The stellar background includes the central band of our Milky Way Galaxy, appearing nearly vertical, as well as the planets Jupiter and Saturn on the left. Although the comet dust particles are traveling parallel to each other, the resulting shower meteors clearly seem to radiate from a single point on the sky — the radiant in the eponymous constellation Perseus. The image captured so long an angular field that the curvature of the sky is visible in the trajectory of the Perseids. 

(Image: Luo Hongyang)

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https://twitter.com/pompeii_sites/status/1423632179184218122

Pompeii’s best preserved thermapolium (hot food shop) reopened this week for the first time since 79AD.

The Regio V site, discovered by archaeologists in 2019 buried beneath volcanic ash from Mount Vesuvius is now open to visitors every day from noon to 7pm.

No eating. Only for looking at.

MORE: Frescoed ancient fast food joint opens in Pompeii (The History Blog)

colossal

Behold: Mammatus clouds – the most stacked of all suspended aerosols. To wit:

Normally, cloud bottoms are flat. This is because moist warm air that rises and cools will condense into water droplets at a specific temperature, which usually corresponds to a very specific height. As water droplets grow, an opaque cloud forms. Under some conditions, however, cloud pockets can develop that contain large droplets of water or ice that fall into clear air as they evaporate. Such pockets may occur in turbulent air near a thunderstorm. Resulting mammatus clouds can appear especially dramatic if sunlit from the side. The mammatus clouds pictured here, lasting only a few minutes, were photographed over Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, just after a storm in 2012.

(Image: Michael F Johnston)

apod

In the first part of a new series on the human body, German educational design studio Kurzgesagt explores the human immune system – an extensive biological system which…

…consists of hundreds of tiny and two large organs, it has its own transport network spread throughout your body. Every day it makes hundreds of billions of fresh cells. It is not some sort of abstract entity. Your immune system is YOU. Your biology protecting you from the billions of microorganisms that want to consume you and from your own perverted cells that turn into cancer.

Previously: The Biggest Black Hole In The Universe

Papi off of the comment section asks:

… for the tech heads out there. I have an iPod with about 10 gigs of superb music, most taken directly from a vinyl collection. How do I get it off and into a new computer? The iPod works, for a bit, but I have no connection to the collection on iTunes. I’ve called Apple, they’re no help. All I have is the iPod. Help

Anyone?

Behold: the Super73xHot Wheels RX Series eBike – a limited edition collaboration between the toy car manufacturer and leading Californian electric bike maker Super73. 

The business end is an aircraft-grade aluminum alloy frame, 960 watt-hour battery, and 2,000W brushless DC hub-mounted motor. The special edition includes an embroidered leather saddle, oversized pedals, LED headlight and bespoke black livery with blue and orange accents.

Pricing (in the US) starts at $5,000 and you also get a matching Hot Wheels x SUPER73 diecast Ford Bronco R adventure truck.

You know, for the kids.

hiconsumption