water please.....

is slipppry rite hear....

 

this place looks like mars...

UFO

India

ok...you asked where u r....

we as humans r lost in a vastness of

stars   planets  and other mysterys

beyond our

ability

"to know...."

worlds and worlds

we will never know a thing of....

and somehow

that just seemss

rite  like star brite

 

The most detailed visible light image ever taken of a narrow, dusty ring unequivocally shows the center is a whopping 1.4 billion miles away from the star; a distance nearly halfway across our solar system. The most plausible explanation is an unseen planet, moving in an elliptical orbit, is reshaping the ring with its gravitational pull. The geometrically striking ring, tilted toward Earth, would not have such a great offset if it were only being influenced by Fomalhaut's gravity.

 

 

This striking spiral galaxy is home to a supernova, SN 2002fk, whose light reached Earth in September 2002. Astronomers are using that supernova to measure the expansion rate of the universe.

 

 

 

 

This image was taken within minutes of Mars' closest approach to Earth in 60,000 years, on Aug. 27, 2003. In this picture, the red planet is 34,647,420 miles (55,757,930 km) from Earth.

 

 

This "double cluster," NGC 1850, is located in the Large Magellanic Cloud. It consists of a large cluster of stars, located near a smaller cluster (below and to the right). The large cluster is 50 million years old; the other only 4 million years old. The cluster is surrounded by gas believed to be created by the explosion of massive stars.

 

 

 

Radiation from hot stars off the top of the picture illuminates and erodes this giant, gaseous pillar. Additional ultraviolet radiation causes the gas to glow, giving the pillar its red halo of light.

 

 

 

Dark clouds of dust, called globules, are silhouetted against nearby, bright stars. Little is known about the globules, except that they are generally associated with areas of star formation.

 

thanks to you Hubble Telescope...

 

 

eye have some milks and cookies hear...