Auteur Sujet: wjto Behold, an X-ray of Hitler s head  (Lu 16 fois)

JeaoneKef

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wjto Behold, an X-ray of Hitler s head
« le: Décembre 27, 2024, 05:54:06 am »
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 Andrei Krivorukov got a wonderful Christmas gift: his very own life. He saved it after a titanium ball from a Russian communication satellite crashed right into his house, escaping death by just a few feet.     The Russian satellite was a Meridian, which is used for civilian and military communications. It was destroyed when a Soyuz-2 rocket exploded in midair, just a few minutes after its launch from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome鈥攁 Russian spa stanley cup uk ceport, located 500 miles north of Moscow. The catastrophe sent several pieces flying over Siberia, near the city of To stanley mug bolsk and as far as 62 miles from the city of Novosibirsk. One of them was the 11-pound titanium ball that fell through Krivorukov   roof, landing right where he was minutes before. That was when he decided to go to his yard to grab some wood for his fireplace. Because, you know, it   bloody cold in Siberia. And you have to run out of your house from time to time to avoid random satellite pieces from crushing you into a pile of  stanley ca gunk. He also got another gift: his town council says they are going to pay for the repairs. I ;m sure he   happy enough to save his neck. It   a weird accident not only because of this Christmas miracle: the Soyuz has an excellent track record. It   a tried-and-true vehicle with hundreds of successful missions since the 1960s, when it was designed by OKB-1 and manufactured at State Aviation Plant No. 1 in Samara, Russia. Its first flight was in 1966. The variant that Bmoh This star-making gas cloud is so cold, it   s invisible
 Over the years, scientists have found evidence revealing that an ocean may  stanley mugs have covered parts of the Red stanley cup  Planet billions of years ago. Others suggest that a future terraformed Mars could be lush with oceans and vegetation. In either scenario, what would Mars look like as a planet alive with water and life  By combining data from several sources 鈥?along with a bit of creative license 鈥?software engineer Kevin Gill has created some gorgeous images showing concepts of what a living Mars might look like from orbit, turning the Red Planet into its own version of the Blue Marble.     This was something that I did both out of curiosity of what it would look like and to improve the software I was rendering this in, Gill said via email. I am a software engineer by trade and certainly no planetary scientist, so with the exception of any parts derived from actual data, most of it is assumptions I made based on simply comparing the Mars terrain to similar features here on Earth  e.g. elevation, proximity to bodies of water, p stanley bottles hysical features, geographical position, etc  and then using the corresponding textures from the Blue Marble images to paint the flat image layer in a graphics program. For example, the view below is of the western hemisphere of Mars, with Olympus Mons on the horizon beyond the Tharsis Montes volcanoes and the Valles Marineris canyons near the center. Gill said the height of the clouds and atmosphere are largely arbitrary and