#Natur
— NonCochlearPosting (@NonCochlear) January 30, 2019
#Natur
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/nIStuhTvIV
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) June 13, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/BYncqFFD2P
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) May 6, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/4eX3wcoxAt
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) April 3, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/UmCLXfCyz5
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) March 27, 2020
#Natur
In this amazing photomontage we get to see the evolution of a tornado that formed north of Minneola, Kansas on May 24, 2016. The photo is a composite of eight images shot in two sequences. According to photographer Jason Weingart, this prolific supercell went on to produce at least 12 tornadoes and at times had two and even three tornadoes on the ground at once.
This image was most recently awarded first place in the Wikimedia Commons 2018 Picture of the Year. The image was also a Jury’s Choice award winner in the 2017 Wiki Science Competition in the United States.
(via neatorama)
#Natur
It was one of the largest and longest lived storms ever recorded in our Solar System. First seen in late 2010, the above cloud formation in the northern hemisphere of Saturn started larger than the Earth and soon spread completely around the planet. The storm was tracked not only from Earth but from up close by the robotic Cassini spacecraft then orbiting Saturn. Pictured here in false colored infrared in February, orange colors indicate clouds deep in the atmosphere, while light colors highlight clouds higher up. The rings of Saturn are seen nearly edge-on as the thin blue horizontal line. The warped dark bands are the shadows of the rings cast onto the cloud tops by the Sun to the upper left. A source of radio noise from lightning, the intense storm was thought to relate to seasonal changes when spring emerges in the north of Saturn. After raging for over six months, the iconic storm circled the entire planet and then tried to absorb its own tail — which surprisingly caused it to fade away.
(via Neatorama)
hat mittlerweile einen eigenen Twitteraccount – der Grand Canyon unseres Sonnensystems.
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/WmixnyTNva
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) February 27, 2020
— Seán Doran (@_TheSeaning) February 24, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/IL9pD3DDFM
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) February 11, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/vq0lQEaMaW
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) February 6, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/crvGDqT9cA
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) February 1, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/sAWQijg9OV
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) January 27, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/CCFE3Q7yKJ
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) January 20, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/LOnBBuZpxD
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) January 20, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/WF38mZNzGN
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) January 18, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/DaPId3bJHw
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) January 17, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/8n6efWAiV3
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) January 17, 2020
A bit of #Jupiter pic.twitter.com/h7Xtc4HnoG
— Bits of Jupiter (@bitsofjupiter) January 2, 2020
this is the complete genome of Covid-19 as a soundpoem.
(Danke für den Tipp, Aaron!)