m3adowprincess - randomnesss
randomnesss

https://linktr.ee/brianamendezthis account is just filled with stuff i like

80 posts

Latest Posts by m3adowprincess - Page 3

1 year ago

oh me too

When Franz Kafka said that he is terribly afraid of dying because he hasn’t yet lived, i felt that on a deep emotional level.

1 year ago
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴
2014 Summer In Cali 🌴

2014 summer in cali 🌴

1 year ago

Willow Smith in Atlanta on August 1st. 🖤

1 year ago
 🌹

<october thirty first> 🌹

1 year ago
m3adowprincess - randomnesss

<🌍>

1 year ago
Willow Smith Performing At Coachella 2023
Willow Smith Performing At Coachella 2023
Willow Smith Performing At Coachella 2023
Willow Smith Performing At Coachella 2023
Willow Smith Performing At Coachella 2023

Willow Smith performing at Coachella 2023

2 years ago
Webb Unveils Dark Side
Webb Unveils Dark Side

Webb Unveils Dark Side

An international team of astronomers using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has obtained an in-depth inventory of the deepest, coldest ices measured to date in a molecular cloud. In addition to simple ices like water, the team was able to identify frozen forms of a wide range of molecules, from carbonyl sulfide, ammonia, and methane, to the simplest complex organic molecule, methanol. This is the most comprehensive census to date of the icy ingredients available to make future generations of stars and planets, before they are heated during the formation of young stars.

 This image from the telescope’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) features the central region of the Chamaeleon I dark molecular cloud, which resides 630 light-years away. The cold, wispy cloud material (blue, center) is illuminated in the infrared by the glow of the young, outflowing protostar Ced 110 IRS 4 (orange, upper). The light from numerous background stars, seen as orange dots behind the cloud, can be used to detect ices in the cloud, which absorb the starlight passing through them. 

 Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, and M. Zamani

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