Some Memes I Made To Express My Current Frustrations With Academia Feel Free To Add Your Own

Some Memes I Made To Express My Current Frustrations With Academia Feel Free To Add Your Own
Some Memes I Made To Express My Current Frustrations With Academia Feel Free To Add Your Own
Some Memes I Made To Express My Current Frustrations With Academia Feel Free To Add Your Own
Some Memes I Made To Express My Current Frustrations With Academia Feel Free To Add Your Own
Some Memes I Made To Express My Current Frustrations With Academia Feel Free To Add Your Own
Some Memes I Made To Express My Current Frustrations With Academia Feel Free To Add Your Own

some memes I made to express my current frustrations with academia feel free to add your own

More Posts from Astrosciencechick and Others

6 years ago
‘That Was A Quick Flight’: How Astronauts Kept Ice Cool While Their Rocket Malfunctioned At 4,970mph
‘That Was A Quick Flight’: How Astronauts Kept Ice Cool While Their Rocket Malfunctioned At 4,970mph
‘That Was A Quick Flight’: How Astronauts Kept Ice Cool While Their Rocket Malfunctioned At 4,970mph
‘That Was A Quick Flight’: How Astronauts Kept Ice Cool While Their Rocket Malfunctioned At 4,970mph

‘That was a quick flight’: How astronauts kept ice cool while their rocket malfunctioned at 4,970mph and plummeted back to Earth in harrowing 7G 'ballistic re-entry’ before hugging their loved-ones on the landing pad as Russia opens CRIMINAL probe.

Two astronauts kept ice cool as their rocket traveling at thousands of miles an hour malfunctioned on the edge of space while carrying them to the International Space Station, cockpit audio reveals.

Russian Aleksey Ovchinin and American Nick Hague made it back to Earth alive this morning after the booster on their Soyuz rocket broke at 164,000 feet and the rocket automatically turned back during a dramatic 7G 'ballistic re-entry’.

Ovchinin retained an enviable sang-froid as he realised what was happening, after they were rocked violently around in their seats by the force of the booster malfunction.

'An accident with the booster, 2 minutes, 45 seconds. That was a quick flight,’ he said in a calm voice in a streamed video of the incident.  

'We’re tightening our seatbelts,’ Ovchinin said on the video.

At that moment the two astronauts were experiencing weightlessness, when in an ordinary launch they should still have been pinned to the back of their seats by the force of the rocket surging upwards at 4,970mph.  

Russia says it has opened a criminal investigation and grounded all Soyuz flights. The accident comes weeks after a hole was discovered in the International Space Station amid talk from the Russian space authorities of deliberate sabotage.  

Video footage from the launch at the Baikonur Cosmodrome shows a large plume of smoke coming from the rocket at the moment it failed and footage from inside the capsule shows the two astronauts being violently shaken about.

The accident bears similarities to the 1986 Challenger disaster when one of its boosters failed at lift-off causing an explosion that killed seven.

Astronauts have been involved in Soyuz malfunctions twice before, one in 1983 when a crew was forced to eject from a Soyuz rocket as it exploded on the launchpad. In 1975 a Soyuz capsule crashed back to Earth from 90 miles up after a rocket failure, but the crew survived.

The rocket, which was designed in the 1960s, has also had one booster fail in similar fashion to today’s malfunction. In 2002 a booster rocket malfunctioned and the rocket which was carrying a satellite crashed in Kazakhstan killing one person on the ground.

In total Soyuz rockets have been launched 745 times of which 21 have failed. Thirteen of those failures have been since 2010, calling into question the continued reliability of the rocket.

Search and rescue teams were scrambled to the touchdown location as NASA revealed the descent meant the Russian-built Soyuz MS-10 spacecraft had to take 'a sharper angle of landing compared to normal’.

The Russians have suspended Soyuz flights to the space station while they investigate the cause of the booster failure.

The Soyuz is the only way to get people to the space station at the moment but officials insist the astronauts currently on the space station have enough supplies.  

NASA rookie Nick Hague and second-time flyer Aleksey Ovchinin of the Russian space agency were setting off for a six-month mission at the International Space Station Thursday, on a relatively rare two-man launch.

A spokesperson for NASA said that rescue teams have now reached Hague and Ovchinin and they’ve been taken out of the capsule and were in 'good condition’.

The craft’s landing engines and parachute system were said to have done their job as normal despite the enormous G-force acting on both the shuttle and crew during the landing.

Shortly after the incident rescue crews and paratroopers were rushed the emergency landing site in the barren Kazakh steppe to provide support for the crew.

NASA had issued a worrying tweet on Thursday morning saying: 'There’s been an issue with the booster from today’s launch. Teams have been in contact with the crew.’

'The capsule is returning via a ballistic descent, which is a sharper angle of landing compared to normal. Search and rescue teams are heading towards the expected touchdown location of the spacecraft and crew.’  

Cosmonaut Alexander Volkov commented: 'The guys are lucky that they remained alive. They had reached a good height so it was possible to descend in their capsule.’

More info, pictures, diagrams, videos at this link:  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6264339/Rocket-launch-booster-malfunction-forces-astronauts-return-Earth-ballistic-entry.html

6 years ago

i feel bad for math. its such a calm and friendly discipline full of beautiful and complex patterns and theres absolutely nothing inherently bad or oppressive about it but ppl treat it as though its evil and malicious. a lot of pure math lacks any kind of practical application or end goal, and just exists for the sake of stimulating peoples minds and pushing the limits of the medium as far as is possible. much like almost every kind of art

math means u no harm friends

6 years ago

I love these comics! Thanks so much to @cosmicfunnies for doing an asteroid comic this week! 😍

Starry Greetings!
Starry Greetings!
Starry Greetings!
Starry Greetings!
Starry Greetings!
Starry Greetings!
Starry Greetings!
Starry Greetings!

Starry Greetings!

Here is a comic on Asteroids!

https://www.space.com/51-asteroids-formation-discovery-and-exploration.html

6 years ago
Cherenkov Radiation: When Electrons Go Faster Than The Speed Of Light!
Cherenkov Radiation: When Electrons Go Faster Than The Speed Of Light!

Cherenkov Radiation: When Electrons go Faster than the Speed of Light!

Well faster than light is an overstatement in the sense that it only happens in water. Basically the speed of light in water is 0.75c and although matter can be accelerated faster than that it is still below the speed of light in a vacuum. And that’s what basically causes the blue light or Chernenkov radiation, particles in a medium moving faster than the speed of light in that medium. 

How does that happen though? Well that is due to very excited neutrinos produced by the nuclear reactor colliding with the nuclei of the water that is surrounding it. The collision produces muons and electrons which have the resulting momentum faster than the speed that light can travel in water. Which in turn brings the electrons in the surrounding water atoms/molecules to a higher state, and when they return back to the ground state they emit light in the wavelength of the resulting momentum transfer from those excited particles. 

A common analogy is the sonic boom of a supersonic aircraft or bullet. The sound waves generated by the supersonic body propagate at the speed of sound itself; as such, the waves travel slower than the speeding object and cannot propagate forward from the body, instead forming a shock front. In a similar way, a charged particle can generate a light shock wave as it travels through an insulator.

More science and gifs on my blog: rudescience Gif made from: This video References: (x), (x). You can donate to support more science content on tumblr: here

6 years ago
The Space Station Transits Our Sun Via NASA Https://ift.tt/2RFTo9W

The Space Station Transits Our Sun via NASA https://ift.tt/2RFTo9W

6 years ago
The Aurora And The Sunrise : Auroras Are One Of The Many Earthly Phenomena The Crew Of The International

The Aurora and the Sunrise : Auroras are one of the many Earthly phenomena the crew of the International Space Station observe from their perch high above the planet. (via NASA)

6 years ago
I Did Some Drawings On My Ipad Using The Goodnotes App And Referencing Google Images.
I Did Some Drawings On My Ipad Using The Goodnotes App And Referencing Google Images.
I Did Some Drawings On My Ipad Using The Goodnotes App And Referencing Google Images.
I Did Some Drawings On My Ipad Using The Goodnotes App And Referencing Google Images.

I did some drawings on my ipad using the goodnotes app and referencing google images.

6 years ago
Bow Tie Moon And Star Trails : On January 31, A Leisurely Lunar Eclipse Was Enjoyed From All Over The

Bow Tie Moon and Star Trails : On January 31, a leisurely lunar eclipse was enjoyed from all over the night side of planet Earth, the first of three consecutive total eclipses of the Moon. This dramatic time-lapse image followed the celestial performance for over three hours in a combined series of exposures from Hebei Province in Northern China. Fixed to a tripod, the camera records the Full Moon sliding through a clear night sky. Too bright just before and after the eclipse, the Moon’s bow tie-shaped trail grows narrow and red during the darker total eclipse phase that lasted an hour and 16 minutes. In the distant background are the colorful trails of stars in concentric arcs above and below the celestial equator. via NASA

6 years ago
NGC 6960: The Witchs Broom Nebula : Ten Thousand Years Ago, Before The Dawn Of Recorded Human History,

NGC 6960: The Witchs Broom Nebula : Ten thousand years ago, before the dawn of recorded human history, a new light would have suddenly have appeared in the night sky and faded after a few weeks. Today we know this light was from a supernova, or exploding star, and record the expanding debris cloud as the Veil Nebula, a supernova remnant. This sharp telescopic view is centered on a western segment of the Veil Nebula cataloged as NGC 6960 but less formally known as the Witch’s Broom Nebula. Blasted out in the cataclysmic explosion, the interstellar shock wave plows through space sweeping up and exciting interstellar material. Imaged with narrow band filters, the glowing filaments are like long ripples in a sheet seen almost edge on, remarkably well separated into atomic hydrogen (red) and oxygen (blue-green) gas. The complete supernova remnant lies about 1400 light-years away towards the constellation Cygnus. This Witch’s Broom actually spans about 35 light-years. The bright star in the frame is 52 Cygni, visible with the unaided eye from a dark location but unrelated to the ancient supernova remnant. via NASA

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