Once in a lifetime image captured shows lizard attacking snake whilst being eatenhttps://t.co/BxGIt2DEDd pic.twitter.com/fnalt5wqJ4
— Express Pictures (@Express_Pics) July 4, 2016
It’s like the real-life version of this old comic.
Once in a lifetime image captured shows lizard attacking snake whilst being eatenhttps://t.co/BxGIt2DEDd pic.twitter.com/fnalt5wqJ4
— Express Pictures (@Express_Pics) July 4, 2016
It’s like the real-life version of this old comic.
I’ve cued the video to start at the 30-second mark, which I think is the most impressive and was taken over a time period of 17 day, per NASA’s Reddit AMA yesterday. NASA amazes me. That’s a five-year journey that takes into account the rotation of planets, orbits, gravitation pull, and a lot more – which means that’s five years worth of math working out just about perfectly.
NASA’s Juno spacecraft captured a unique time-lapse movie of the Galilean satellites in motion about Jupiter. The movie begins on June 12th with Juno 10 million miles from Jupiter, and ends on June 29th, 3 million miles distant. The innermost moon is volcanic Io; next in line is the ice-crusted ocean world Europa, followed by massive Ganymede, and finally, heavily cratered Callisto. Galileo observed these moons to change position with respect to Jupiter over the course of a few nights. From this observation he realized that the moons were orbiting mighty Jupiter, a truth that forever changed humanity’s understanding of our place in the cosmos. Earth was not the center of the Universe. For the first time in history, we look upon these moons as they orbit Jupiter and share in Galileo’s revelation. This is the motion of nature’s harmony.
Speaking of Galileo –
I love how NASA name things. Why Juno?