The views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Aerys Sports.

Steph is a 2011 graduate of Gettysburg College (majored in history, minored in Civil War Era studies) and current graduate student at Pratt Institute (library science with a focus in Archival Studies) who loves baseball, anime, writing, drawing, Rogue Squadron, cars (and Top Gear), comedy (especially its history and, naturally, the British variety) and her cats and Old English Sheepdogs. Fond of Stanford even though she doesn't go there. Has Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism. Created the 30-Day Baseball Meme. One time she made a music video about Buster Keaton's love affair with trains. Since she's an archivist-in-training, she often preserves things on her own. See her scans here.

Author of the webcomic The Historians, the excuse to draw dead comedians called Comedian Heaven, and Londinium, a novel in the making set in 1863 London. Scriptwriter for the webcomic Home By Now, a story about time travel, music, history and general hijinks (meet the incredible artist here!).

Very occasionally posts about herself when she's not posting about baseball, dead people, Top Gear or her pets.
Recent Tweets @1863_project
Posts tagged "astronomy"

spaceplasma:

Voyager 1 captured this mosaic on Io on March 4, 1979, as a nearly full-phase Io appeared to travel across Jupiter’s terminator. Viewed near the edge of its disk and at local dusk, only the uppermost blue hazes of Jupiter’s atmosphere are visible.

Io and Jupiter from Voyager 1

The mosaic, which consists of four clear-filter images followed by violet, blue, orange, and green frames, is a great challenge to assemble because in the 11 minutes it took Voyager to record and transmit the 6 images (from 22:36:35 to 22:47:48) Io completely transited the terminator, and because the color frames are not complete, with pieces of Io cut off. Source images can be downloaded here.

Credit: NASA / JPL / Ted Stryk

Absolutely beautiful. Thank you, Voyager 1. <3

section9:

discoverynews:

Me: “Uhhhh…. What the what?! That’s beautiful.”
Hillary: “Huh?” *walks over* “Whoa.”
Me: “That’s it? That’s all you got?”
Hillary: “Yep, I’m really deep like that.”

expose-the-light:

Last Launch: Dan Winters and the Shuttle Program

Epic.

I cried during the final shuttle launch. I was in public, too.

innocentwings:

geromytime:

imgonnagetpunched:

lovinare:

cheerless-cherub:

squishu:

brainbubblegum:

turntechgoddamnit:

exaltedhaze:

I really like Jupiter’s design.

omg jupiter is a kawaii papa

Uranus is extremely surly from all the butt jokes everyone is making about him

OMFG

My god I want to be Io

SATURN

my favorite is pluto

i would do venus

PLU

TO

OMGASJDKFJLSDKFJKJ <#33

I’m such an astronomy geek, but this is so beyond adorable. I love the Galilean moons so much! 

(via bakufuun)

littlenerdychickwithwings:

ofdarklands:

literateunstylishkissableunquiet:

completelybackasswards:

hooked-into-machine:

LOOK AT PLUTO.

PLUTO YOU WILL ALWAYS BE INVITED TO MY PARTIES OKAY

I LOVE YOU PLUTO

PLUUUUTOOOO I LUV YOU!

HEIGHTISM! This is discrimination against dwarf planets!

(via shadowkaru20)

We can now help SETI look for aliens.

Goodbye, productivity. Hello, life on other planets.

not-fun:

basicly what scientists have done here is since the moon is a big reflective thing up in the sky, they’ve studied how it reflects the atmosphere of the earth down below. kind of like drawing yourself from a mirror, i guess. 

however using the same tactics they’ve used to study our earth’s reflection via the moon, we can point the VLA at an alien planet and now, with this new knowledge

we can tell

if there’s life

on the planet

without going there

how awesome is this

This has seriously improved my life. HOLY CRAP.

not-fun:

catbushandludicrous:

i love this man

no seriously did you see him go on a huge rant about the sky being wrong in Titantic? this guy is amazing, and i want this book. I WANT THIS BOOK SO MUCH.

Neil DeGrasse Tyson is definitely one of my personal heroes. He works at my home museum (American Museum of Natural History), too! Eeeee.

Also, he got an honorary degree at my college graduation and I nearly had a heart attack with joy. I didn’t get to meet him, though. I don’t even know why Gettysburg decided to give him an honorary degree, either.

I just watched this on UStream. Good luck to the crew of Endeavor - stay safe, do good work and have fun!

fuckyeahsolarsystem:

Red In Jupiter’s Spot Not What Astronomers Thought
Written by Alexis Madrigal
Story from: Wired Science

The best thermal images of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot yet captured have revealed surprising weather and temperature variation within the solar system’s most famous storm.

The darkest red part of the spot turns out to be a warm patch inside the otherwise cold storm. The temperature variation is slight: “Warm” in this case translates to -250 degrees Fahrenheit while cold is an even frostier -256 degrees F. But even that difference is enough to create intriguing internal dynamics.

“This is our first detailed look inside the biggest storm of the solar system,” said Jet Propulsion Laboratory astronomer Glenn Orton, who led the new study to be published in Icarus. “We once thought the Great Red Spot was a plain old oval without much structure, but these new results show that it is, in fact, extremely complicated.”

The Red Spot has persisted since at least the late 17th century, when astronomers first saw it. If you’d seen it back then, though, you might have been “tempted to call it the great red sausage,” Orton said. “It’s shrinking slowly.” Still, it’s the solar system’s longest-lived and largest storm system, wider than three Earths.

Over the past few decades, astronomers had begun to get a handle on the weather patterns around the Great Red Spot, but not inside of it. Previous measurements have indicated that the spot towered over the surrounding cloud cover, much like supercells on Earth.

Scientists have also noticed that its color changes considerably, but what drives the changes — or the famous ruddy complexion in general — is unclear. A leading theory was that sulfurous molecules from deep in the Jovian atmosphere were being lofted by the storm, exposing them to ultraviolet radiation that would break them apart. The newly freed sulfur atoms would then change color and lend the area its distinctive tinge.

But that might not be the case. This latest work shows a clear correlation between the environmental conditions and color, but doesn’t help the scientists figure out what chemistry is actually at work, Orton said.

“This is the first time we can say that there’s an intimate link between environmental conditions — temperature, winds, pressure and composition — and the actual color of the Great Red Spot,” Orton’s collaborator, Leigh Fletcher, an Oxford astronomer added. “Although we can speculate, we still don’t know for sure which chemicals or processes are causing that deep red color, but we do know now that it is related to changes in the environmental conditions right in the heart of the storm.”

This? Awesome.

Next attempt: …get a better camera, self. This was awful. Your little digital snapshot will not do for your attempts at being an amateur astronomer.

NASA has a live stream of the eclipse up, for those of you who can’t deal with the cold or can’t see it due to cloud cover.

The link comes courtesy of Michael Schlact, who tweeted it. Thank you, Schlact.

If you can’t see it, I’m taking photos every half hour - I just took my first one at 12:30, and my second one will come around 1:00. I’ll post them all tomorrow so you can see the eclipse!

My camera is woefully bad, though, so don’t expect Hubble-grade photographs.

fuckyeahtheuniverse:

NASA has announced the discovery of two planets, slightly smaller than Saturn, orbiting the same star in the Milky Way, which have been discovered by the Kepler Space Telescope.

This. Is. Awesome.

HOLY. SHIT.