you wouldn’t believe who i saw at disney world
“So, what if, instead of thinking about solving your whole life, you just think about adding additional good things. One at a time. Just let your pile of good things grow.”
— Attachments, Rainbow Rowell (via theglasschild)
if you’re reading this and you’re in a bad mental place, i love you. i love you so much and you’re gonna feel better one day. im proud of you for letting yourself keep existing in the world, whether you went to class, talked to friends, just drank some water, or woke up at all. you’re wonderful. you’re good. and you will be okay.
8216
OK new game. Use this website to see how common your first name is, and then put that number in the tags.
yes
wish my hair grew little flowers on its own how neat would that be
Ethereal
US$13.00 ♡ US$15.00 ♡ US$18.00 ♡ US$17.00
I don’t want you to be temporary
SO PRETTY ID DO ANYTHING TO COME HERE
Purple and orange really look beautiful together I haven’t realized till now
SHES BEAUTIFUL
Sparkling at the centre of this beautiful NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image is a Wolf–Rayet star known as WR 31a, located about 30 000 light-years away in the constellation of Carina (The Keel). The distinctive blue bubble appearing to encircle WR 31a, and its uncatalogued stellar sidekick, is a Wolf–Rayet nebula — an interstellar cloud of dust, hydrogen, helium and other gases. Created when speedy stellar winds interact with the outer layers of hydrogen ejected by Wolf–Rayet stars, these nebulae are frequently ring-shaped or spherical. The bubble — estimated to have formed around 20 000 years ago — is expanding at a rate of around 220 000 kilometres per hour!
Unfortunately, the lifecycle of a Wolf–Rayet star is only a few hundred thousand years — the blink of an eye in cosmic terms. Despite beginning life with a mass at least 20 times that of the Sun, Wolf–Rayet stars typically lose half their mass in less than 100 000 years. And WR 31a is no exception to this case. It will, therefore, eventually end its life as a spectacular supernova, and the stellar material expelled from its explosion will later nourish a new generation of stars and planets.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA Acknowledgement: Judy Schmidt7l
#wolfrayetstar #estrela #star #space #espaço #astronomy #astronomia https://www.instagram.com/p/B2C1GtpJ1LC/?igshid=wys9sipew632
6:00pm ⛅️
surprise, fellow kids. I bet you thought you’d seen the last of chewydrageee
fr man
honestly it bothers me that half my followers are real, actual people and the other half are those pesky pornbots like uncool man uncool