Icebreaker 0.2 Added basic legend. Changed name of -3 from compressor to "lower automation". Added names + color to ship overview as well. Changed fonts. Available on my site https://t.co/UOZfwVy3Pb & the EFT wiki #EscapefromTarkov
Not space yet, but getting there. Project Hail Mary just picked up its second Guinness World Record for launching and retrieving a LEGO set at 34,988 metres.
Fist bump! 👊
The Artemis II crew is now under 35,000 miles from Earth. The astronauts are preparing the spacecraft for reentry and the weather is looking good for splashdown.
🚨 Artemis II’s BIGGEST milestones are tomorrow. Here’s when they’ll happen:
📍1:56 PM ET (1756 UTC) Crew surpasses the Apollo 13 distance record
📍2:45 PM ET (1845 UTC) Lunar observation period begins
📍6:47 PM ET (2247 UTC) Loss of signal expected as Orion heads behind the Moon (~40 min)
📍7:02 PM ET (2302 UTC) Closest approach to the Moon
📍7:05 PM ET (2305 UTC) Orion reaches its furthest point from Earth
Tomorrow is going to be HISTORIC!
The countdown is on! 🚀
Artemis II lifts off tomorrow at 11:24pm BST, sending four astronauts around the Moon. 🌔
The UK is playing a role in NASA's historic return to the Moon, with @goonhillyorg providing critical lunar comms tracking. 📡🌒
Find out how to watch. 👇
Time is running out to fly your name around the Moon!
The Artemis II mission is launching no earlier than April 1. Now is your last chance to submit your name to be flown aboard the Orion spacecraft alongside four astronauts: https://t.co/vyLCuDWQtq
Project Hail Mary opened last week. Great film. But nobody is talking about the credits. They should be.
A guy with a telescope spent hundreds of hours collecting light from objects so distant that the photons hitting his sensor left their source before Rome was founded. His name is Rod Prazeres. His images ended up on 70-foot IMAX screens worldwide.
Look at what he captured. The Rosette Nebula is a cloud of gas 5,000 light-years away that has arranged itself into the shape of a human eye, ringed by fire. The Vela filaments are a stellar explosion still spreading outward through space – blue threads so fine they look like frost on glass. The dust pillar in the Pelican Nebula is manufacturing new suns right now. While you read this.
None of it was rendered. All of it is real.
Weir spent years getting the science right. The filmmakers felt the same way about the sky. When they needed something beautiful enough to close the film, they went looking for something that actually exists.
They found it. 5,000 light-years out.
Gandalv / @Microinteracti1