(via imgTumble)STOP WHAT YOU’RE DOING. read this. I started following this girl and her whole dash ended up these. And her last post. I can’t even say words. Anons took her life. If that okay with you, then carry on with your day. If you agree this is unacceptable and okay, then reblog and spread the word. What you say can actually change a persons life! So help out
this is sad ;__;
This beautifully composed space footage will 100% give you chills
Trust us. Stop what you’re doing, set aside two minutes of your time, full-screen this bad boy and just watch. Listen. Think about the fact that the “video” you see here was, in fact, carefully pieced together from thousands of individual photographs captured during NASA’s Cassini and Voyager missions. Let the carefully selected mix of imagery, old and new, invade your retinas. Just watch.
This video, which is simply titled “Outer Space,” was created by Hauge-based filmmaker Sander van den Berg. Van den Berg plumbed the depths of NASA’s Cassini and Voyager image databases to find photographs that were taken in succession, allowing him to stitch them together into moving pictures. The result, as you can see, was nothing short of breathtaking. Ring gaps, moonlets, geysers, big red spots and littler red spots abound.
This beautifully composed space footage will 100% give you chills
Trust us. Stop what you’re doing, set aside two minutes of your time, full-screen this bad boy and just watch. Listen. Think about the fact that the “video” you see here was, in fact, carefully pieced together from thousands of individual photographs captured during NASA’s Cassini and Voyager missions. Let the carefully selected mix of imagery, old and new, invade your retinas. Just watch.
This video, which is simply titled “Outer Space,” was created by Hauge-based filmmaker Sander van den Berg. Van den Berg plumbed the depths of NASA’s Cassini and Voyager image databases to find photographs that were taken in succession, allowing him to stitch them together into moving pictures. The result, as you can see, was nothing short of breathtaking. Ring gaps, moonlets, geysers, big red spots and littler red spots abound.
Nobel Laureate Rita Montalcini Turns 103
Has Dr. Rita Levi Montalcini unlocked the secret of eternal life? The oldest living and the longest-lived Nobel laureate in history, Montalcini celebrates today her 103th birthday.
“I can say my mental capacity is greater today than when I was 20, since it has been enriched by so many experiences,” she says.




