2018-02-17
Bairros de Lisboa - Alfama (2) - Imagens
Alfama tem um dos mais lindos mirantes de Lisboa e abriga o célebre Castelo de São Jorge. O bairro escapou ileso do terremoto de 1755 que devastou parte da cidade. Ao contrário do Chiado ou Bairro Alto, aqui a vida segue em ritmo mais lento sob o cheiro de sardinhas e castanhas portuguesas assadas.
Astronomy picture of the day - 2018 February 17 - Manhattan Skylines

Image Credit & Copyright: Stan Honda
Explanation: City lights shine along the upper east side of Manahattan in this dramatic urban night skyscape from February 13. Composed from a series of digital exposures, the monochrome image is reminiscent of the time when sensitive black and white film was a popular choice for dimly lit night and astro-photography. Spanning 2 minutes and 40 seconds, the combined 22 frames look across the reservoir in New York City's Central Park. Stars trail in the time-lapse view while drifting clouds make patterns in the sky. Traced from top to bottom, the dashed line in the surreal scene is the International Space Station still in sunlight and heading for the southeast horizon. The short time intervals between the exposures leave gaps in the space station's bright trail.
2018-02-16
Bairros de Lisboa - Alfama - Imagens
A capital portuguesa possui bairros emblemáticos e com características próprias. Alfama é o mais tradicional deles e, também, o mais antigo da cidade. A região está cheia de escadinhas e ruelas pitorescas, onde portinhas singelas podem esconder as melhores casas de fado do país.
Astronomy picture of the day - 2018 February 16 - 2018 February 16

Image Credit & Copyright: JoAnn McDonald
Explanation: The comet PanSTARRS, also known as the blue comet (C/2016 R2), really is near the lower left edge of this stunning, wide field view recorded on January 13. Spanning nearly 20 degrees on the sky, the cosmic landscape is explored by well-exposed and processed frames from a sensitive digital camera. It consists of colorful clouds and dusty dark nebulae otherwise too faint for your eye to see, though. At top right, the California Nebula (aka NGC 1499) does have a familiar shape. Its coastline is over 60 light-years long and lies some 1,500 light-years away. The nebula's pronounced reddish glow is from hydrogen atoms ionized by luminous blue star Xi Persei just below it. Near bottom center, the famous Pleiades star cluster is some 400 light-years distant and around 15 light-years across. Its spectacular blue color is due to the reflection of starlight by interstellar dust. In between are hot stars of the Perseus OB2 association and dusty, dark nebulae along the edge of the nearby, massive Taurus and Perseus molecular clouds. Emission from unusually abundant ionized carbon monoxide (CO+) molecules fluorescing in sunlight is largely responsible for the telltale blue tint of the remarkable comet's tail. The comet was about 17 light minutes from Earth.
2018-02-15
Astronomy picture of the day - 2018 February 15 - Enceladus in Silhouette

Image Credit: Cassini Imaging Team, SSI, JPL, ESA, NASA
Explanation: One of our Solar System's most tantalizing worlds, Enceladus is backlit by the Sun in this Cassini spacecraft image from November 1, 2009. The dramatic illumination reveals the plumes that continuously spew into space from the south pole of Saturn's 500 kilometer diameter moon. Discovered by Cassini in 2005, the icy plumes are likely connected to an ocean beneath the ice shell of Enceladus. They supply material directly to Saturn's outer, tenuous E ring and make the surface of Enceladus as reflective as snow. Across the scene, Saturn's icy rings scatter sunlight toward Cassini's cameras. Beyond the rings, the night side of 80 kilometer diameter moon Pandora is faintly lit bySaturnlight.
2018-02-14
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