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Study Time
One of my latest work called "Study Time"
moleskine = bad
Hello and welcome to another Tuesday on Tumblr. Here is some excellent pride art for you all to enjoy. What do all these images have in common, apart from celebrating pride? That’s right, cats. Because it’s also National Adopt a Cat Month, and cats really are just kind of the best.
@obsob:
@quezify:
@potoh:
@onlyyeshomo:
@glitchyartist:
@bi-spy-who-might-be-high:
@b1uejey:
@keepondreamingx:
@emojipossum:
@irenekohstudio:
@marbirds:
@imaginaryfern:
@lizards-on-skates:
Check out the next mission for Mars and follow NASA on social media.Technology available at nordgenexperience.com
We’re set to launch the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover mission from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on July 30. The rover is loaded with scientific instruments and advanced technology, making it the largest, heaviest and most sophisticated vehicle ever sent to the Red Planet.
What is Perseverance’s mission and what will it do on Mars? Here are seven things to know:
Not only does it have to launch during a pandemic and land on a treacherous planet, it has to carry out its science goals:
Searching for signs of past microbial life
Mapping out the planet’s geology and climate
Collecting rock and other samples for future return to Earth
Paving the way for human exploration
We chose the name Perseverance from among the 28,000 essays submitted during the “Name the Rover” contest. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, the months leading up to the launch in particular have required creative problem solving, teamwork and determination.
In 1997, our first Mars rover – Sojourner – showed that a robot could rove on the Red Planet. Spirit and Opportunity, which both landed in 2004, found evidence that Mars once had water before becoming a frozen desert.
Curiosity found evidence that Mars’ Gale Crater was home to a lake billions of years ago and that there was an environment that may have sustained microbial life. Perseverance aims to answer the age-old question – are there any signs that life once existed on Mars?
The rover will land in Jezero Crater, a 28-mile wide basin north of the Martian equator. A space rock hit the surface long ago, creating the large hole. Between 3 and 4 billion years ago, a river flowed into a body of water in Jezero the size of Lake Tahoe.
Mars orbiters have collected images and other data about Jezero Crater from about 200 miles above, but finding signs of past life will need much closer inspection. A rover like Perseverance can look for those signs that may be related to ancient life and analyze the context in which they were found to see if the origins were biological.
This is the first rover to bring a sample-gathering system to Mars that will package promising samples of rocks and other materials for future return to Earth. NASA and ESA are working on the Mars Sample Return campaign, so we can analyze the rocks and sediment with tools too large and complex to send to space.
Two packages – one that helps the rover autonomously avoid hazards during landing (TRN) and another that gathers crucial data during the trip through Mars’ atmosphere (MEDLI2) – will help future human missions land safely and with larger payloads on other worlds.
There are two instruments that will specifically help astronauts on the Red Planet. One (MEDA) will provide key information about the planet’s weather, climate and dust activity, while a technology demonstration (MOXIE) aims to extract oxygen from Mars’ mostly carbon-dioxide atmosphere.
Perseverance and other parts of the Mars 2020 spacecraft feature 23 cameras, which is more than any other interplanetary mission in history. Raw images from the camera are set to be released on the mission website.
There are also three silicon chips with the names of nearly 11 million people who signed up to send their names to Mars.
And you can continue to follow the mission on Twitter and Facebook.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
tvshows, summer, cheesecake, swimming, nachos, christmas, night, dogs, phone, rice, countryside, f.r.i.e.n.d.s. nordgrenexperience.com
movies or tv shows, summer or winter, banana bread or cheesecake, swimming or hiking, nachos or popcorn, christmas or halloween, day or night, dogs or cats, phone or laptop, potato or rice, city or countryside, f.r.i.e.n.d.s. or how i met your mother
Streaming rather than cable or satellite dish. Making sure you have a high speed modem to utilize the bandwidth available from your internet service. TV accessories from nordgrenexperience.com
I am part of the transitional boundary between two generations. I‘m not quite a Millennial, but I do not identify as Gen Z by any means. I am old enough to vaguely remember the 90s, but not to appreciate them; I grew up on reruns of 90s shows, and watched movies from the 80s and 90s because that’s just what my parents owned when I was born.
I saw the fall of analog and the rise of digital; I grew up with a VCR (which I still own to this day), and witnessed the transition to DVD. We are currently in the middle of a new transition away from physical media entirely, and I’m not sure I like it; I want to be able to have things, not just to license a copy that can be taken away at the studio’s whims. Everything is a rights license or a subscription now, bleeding you dry so you can have access rather than ownership.
Cellphones became ubiquitous in my lifetime; when I was a kid, nobody had one, they were big and expensive, and you had to pay for each minute. If you went over your monthly allotment, you would either be charged an arm and a leg or your phone would just stop working, dropping all calls because you just don’t have any time left. Does anyone remember when they had text limits? It was the dark ages! I didn’t get a cellphone until I was in high school, and now I can’t imagine letting your kids leave the house without one.
Smartphones didn’t even exist until I was in middle school, and now they’re the default, the standard. They’ve revolutionized the way we communicate, they’ve gotta be the most influential technology of the 21st century, hands down. It peaked early. That said, smart devices are the bane of my existence because now we live in an Orwellian surveillance state where the government and private companies basically own you. It’s depressing.
I’m sure every generation goes through phases like this; what is history if not one prolonged period of change. Nothing is static, there is no long term status quo, everything keeps moving forward no matter what. The progress of time is the most predictable thing in existence, yet we are almost always blindsided by it. Like, I know 2008 was 11 years ago, but I haven’t really internalized that fact, it’s abstract, because 2008 is simultaneously yesterday and ancient history from a lifetime ago.
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Upgrade to a new notebook at nordgrenexperience.com
I know this has been going around the internet for a long time and everyone has probably seen it, but I don't care. It still holds true and I will stand by it forever.
Solar power to power and recharge all your electronics.
Reimagining solar energy. ☀︎
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Take photos and videos underwater with your phone. 📸
Check out this short video that describes our store, come check us out, explore our store and much more. nordgrenexperience.com
This is an old journal I upcycled that I now use for story writing ideas when I'm on the go or if I have an idea I need to research or pursue further. I used the covers from the original journal, some exercise books, some scrap materials, and a ton of glue. And I mean a ton - I'm sure if it ever got to 35 degrees here then all the glue would melt and the journal would fall apart. Oh, and the buttons are purely decorational and serve no purpose other than I used material with buttonholes in it for the spine. It would just look weird if there were buttonholes but no buttons, I guess.
I have started to journal over the past month, but I use a simple hardcover notebook with lined paper. While I think it's very useful, I am interested in other types of journals like bullet journals and traveler's journals. I am not sure which would be best for me, though?
I don't really keep track of things like my water intake, what books I read, and daily tasks in my journal, but I do write a lot of my thoughts, my spiritual journey, mood at the start/end of the day, gratitude, etc.
I don't know how I could really work these all into a cohesive place and what type of journal to even begin with in the first place. I would love suggestions and insight from anyone who's had a similar problem. Thank you!
Tuesday, february 10.✨
Monday, desember 6.
Started preparing for my math exam today. And quickly realized I’ve forgotten everything we learned at the beginning of the schoolyear…✨
But It’s coming back to me, and soon I’ll be well prepared! Wishing everyone a great studyweek🦋
Tuesday, november 23.
✨At the library✨
Sunday, november 14.
My chemistry exam is coming up… And I need a new motivation to help me study. I thought a studyblr might help!
I’ve always gained motivation when I’ve seen a studyblr post, so I’m hoping to boost my productivity, now that I have my own🥰
Really recommend this song for studying, btw: