Space Quarry
from fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz on 10 Apr 19:33
https://mander.xyz/post/27939743

#science_memes

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tdawg@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 19:54 next collapse

Shit I take photos better than this when I’m wasted. Stupid scientists

Kichae@lemmy.ca on 10 Apr 20:31 next collapse

Look, in their defence, they’re wasted too

lennivelkant@discuss.tchncs.de on 11 Apr 05:17 collapse

If I’d managed to stick a robot landing on a rock hurtling through space, you bet I’d be celebrating hard too

Bezier@suppo.fi on 10 Apr 20:50 next collapse

Well, have you asked them if they could send you there instead?

GluWu@lemm.ee on 10 Apr 22:43 next collapse

Blown out whites and shadows, out of focus, disgusting vignetting, and lens flares on lens flares. Smh why even try, this is a horrible pfp. Not going to get any matches.

aegis_sum@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 01:52 collapse

Sounds like freshman year of art school!

MintyFresh@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 05:06 next collapse

Didn’t even use the cat ear filter. Amateurs…

chiliedogg@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 20:51 collapse

JJ Abrams aimed the camera.

doug@lemmy.today on 10 Apr 20:11 next collapse

I always thought this one was more haunting.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.today/pictrs/image/35e03a38-9969-46f3-aed9-59374e69a14b.webp">

addie@feddit.uk on 10 Apr 20:41 next collapse

Hey! The images of Ryugu that were taken from Hayabusa2. What a sad lonely rock that place is - a loose collection of boulders in an endless orbit, in which it will probably continue without further interaction from now until the end of time. You could sneak a few ghosts onto that place, right enough, and no-one would notice.

SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org on 11 Apr 04:37 collapse

Somebody please draw this and give the space rock some ghost friends.

Hex@hexbear.net on 10 Apr 20:42 next collapse

Is it weird that that picture is somehow shocking to me? Like intellectually I know that asteroids are just rocks flying through space, but they always had some sort of “specialness” to them that this picture strips away. It really is just a rough hunk of whatever the fuck flying through space at mach jesus

doug@lemmy.today on 10 Apr 20:57 next collapse

Yeah I felt the same way when I saw it. Just kinda sobering, really. I’m learning Unreal Engine right now for work but I kinda wanna make an experience of a VR “game” for myself where you’re just on a slowly-rotating rock in the void of space, like a stranded astronaut.

YoiksAndAway@lemmy.zip on 10 Apr 21:32 collapse

I played a C64 game where you had missions to visit different spots in the solar system. The space travel part wasn’t realistic, but the scale of the solar system was. I remember having to accelerate to high speeds to cover the distance between objects, then decelerate rapidly to avoid zipping past them. I’m still proud of the fact that I was able to land on Phobos. I think I landed on Ceres, too.

muntedcrocodile@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 07:13 collapse

Mach Jesus I’m stealing that

gressen@lemm.ee on 10 Apr 21:18 next collapse
Frozengyro@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 23:40 next collapse

Something beautifully haunting about seeing the endless abyss from another rock traveling the cosmos.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 19:50 next collapse

That one will stick with me a for a long time. Something about it reminds me of some cosmic perspective of our cold, lonely universe, the vast, VAST fucking stretch of time those rocks and gravel have drifted through boggles the mind. Utter darkness, glittering stars, cold infinity in all directions for billions of years.

Agent641@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 20:38 next collapse

I’m jealous of them

Donkter@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 23:58 collapse

To that point, I think it’s also unnerving how natural it is. This isn’t some alien world. I could go to the Mojave and walk around for 5 minutes to find a photo identical to this. Earth is indistinguishable to one of these rocks hurtling through space, there’s just something growing on it very briefly.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 00:05 collapse

Yes, but I still think there is something more haunting about a landscape that you know hasn’t been touched by anything since maybe before Earth existed, every dust-grain on that surface has sat there for millions and millions of years without being disturbed by so much as starlight. And it will continue to hurtle through space undisturbed long after we’re all gone.

LovableSidekick@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 00:53 next collapse

That shot is definitely creepy.

ImmortanStalin@lemmygrad.ml on 12 Apr 01:02 collapse
NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone on 10 Apr 21:18 next collapse

Next time I’m back in England I want to visit the Blake’s Seven/Doctor Who quarry.

ThePyroPython@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 21:54 collapse

Then go to ZipWorld. That way you get to zoom over the typical North Wales Quarrys used for Dr. Who.

Also whilst you’re there, check out Bounce Below and Surf Snowdonia.

NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone on 11 Apr 02:51 collapse

There’s a particular one, I think in Hampshire, I’ve never been to. Could always visit Snowdonia for a rainy weekend though!

stevedice@sh.itjust.works on 10 Apr 21:23 next collapse

I mean, space also looks like this:

<img alt="1000025306" src="https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/8b52910e-0d29-4632-9df3-fe5472c0d6c1.jpeg">

Point being: the statement “space looks like X” doesn’t make any sense because space looks like literally everything.

Shareni@programming.dev on 10 Apr 22:30 next collapse

I mean, space doesn’t look like anything.

stevedice@sh.itjust.works on 10 Apr 23:13 next collapse

Also true. Even truer, in fact. Still validates classic Dr. Who having trash production design.

Zacryon@feddit.org on 11 Apr 02:25 collapse

What do you mean “Dr. Who trash production design”? I really can’t understand why you would say “Dr Who trash production design”! /s

tdawg@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 01:44 collapse

Then what are the lines on on my graph for huh!? Dummy

Comment105@lemm.ee on 11 Apr 03:27 next collapse

Most surfaces in space look like a quarry. So that’s fair. You could also include the ones that are on fire and the ones inside of some sort of toxic cloud.

But the exceptions are the most interesting parts. There’s a reason there’s not much entertainment out there about people stranded in deserts, mountains, and open oceans that feature not a single encounter with life.

I’ve played Star Citizen, roaming dead space and lifeless planets gets old fast.

explodicle@sh.itjust.works on 12 Apr 00:22 collapse

Is most surface area on planets/asteroids, or on stars?

Comment105@lemm.ee on 12 Apr 03:59 collapse

Walkable and filmable? It would be the rocky ones.

MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml on 11 Apr 19:08 next collapse

Tecnically, this photo is taken in space.

stevedice@sh.itjust.works on 11 Apr 23:08 collapse

All photos are

logos@sh.itjust.works on 12 Apr 04:26 collapse

I like your point, but to be pedantic, I think in this context “space” is short for outer space.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 10 Apr 22:02 next collapse

yo but it IS incredible though.

i can’t describe the feeling i get when i see stuff like this.

Maultasche@lemmy.world on 10 Apr 22:04 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://media1.tenor.com/m/4hw5aZHeQHIAAAAC/oh-look-rocks-doctor-who.gif">

Zacryon@feddit.org on 11 Apr 02:21 next collapse

Suddenly a finger cramped on the shift key.

andros_rex@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 04:55 next collapse

The Rock Yard at NASA Houston was used for for testing out the Mars rover - lots of volcanic rocks to model Mars. Looked really fucking cool to see a couple of interns drive around on a “fake” Mars.

werefreeatlast@lemmy.world on 11 Apr 05:17 next collapse

Banana for size?

MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml on 11 Apr 19:07 next collapse

Rock and stone.

anonproxy00@lemm.ee on 12 Apr 01:03 collapse

FOR CARL!

LovableSidekick@lemmy.world on 12 Apr 00:56 collapse

And real quantum computers look like overdone sci fi props.