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About

Tries to minimize the drama and maximize the bacon.

Links

There used to be a method to the madness. But that ended with the June 16, 2010 post.

Why I spelled "nut" wrong.

CREDITS

I try to properly credit everything, but if I missed something, just holla.

Anything tagged my stuff is usually 100% me and preservative free.

Sometimes I write silly poems inspired by a photo I took. All I can say is, they made sense to me at the time. ;)

Thanks to Hunson for the theme, to Streampad for the audioplayer, to tumblr for the distraction I cannot afford, and to you for randomly browsing my randomness.

Following

16 January 12
This is one of the better little planet projections I’ve seen.  :)
Little Planet Lovejoy
image credit:  Alex Cherney (Terrastro, TWAN)
APOD:
Once a bright apparition in the southern hemisphere dawn Comet Lovejoy is fading, but its long tail still stretches across skies near the south celestial pole. Captured on the morning of December 30th, the comet appears near edge of this little planet as well. Of course, the little planet is actually planet Earth and the image was created from a 12 frame mosaic used to construct a spherical panorama. The type of stereographic projection used to map the image pixels is centered directly below the camera and is known as the little planet projection. Stars surrounding this little planet were above the photographer’s cloudy horizon near the Bay of Islands on the Great Ocean Road in southern Victoria, Australia. Running alongside the Milky Way the comet can be identified, with other celestial highlights, by putting your cursor over the picture. Very bright stars Canopus and Sirius are right of the little planet.
(via APOD: 2012 January 11 - Little Planet Lovejoy)

This is one of the better little planet projections I’ve seen.  :)

Little Planet Lovejoy

image credit:  Alex Cherney (Terrastro, TWAN)

APOD:

Once a bright apparition in the southern hemisphere dawn Comet Lovejoy is fading, but its long tail still stretches across skies near the south celestial pole. Captured on the morning of December 30th, the comet appears near edge of this little planet as well. Of course, the little planet is actually planet Earth and the image was created from a 12 frame mosaic used to construct a spherical panorama. The type of stereographic projection used to map the image pixels is centered directly below the camera and is known as the little planet projection. Stars surrounding this little planet were above the photographer’s cloudy horizon near the Bay of Islands on the Great Ocean Road in southern Victoria, Australia. Running alongside the Milky Way the comet can be identified, with other celestial highlights, by putting your cursor over the picture. Very bright stars Canopus and Sirius are right of the little planet.

(via APOD: 2012 January 11 - Little Planet Lovejoy)

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Themed by Hunson. Originally by Josh