Corm Bluey Strike

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Corm Bluey Strike

Corm Bluey Strike

@CBlueStrike

Sumali Ocak 2026
68 Sinusundan3 Mga Tagasunod
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Chris Martz
Chris Martz@ChrisMartzWX·
Everything is a conspiracy when you don’t understand how anything works.
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Corm Bluey Strike
Corm Bluey Strike@CBlueStrike·
@CryptoWhale when you take a picture of a mountain, can you see the ants on the ground? 🫩 you can’t see planes in this picture for the same reason that you’re not able to see people when you’re flying on a plane, above the clouds jeez
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Mr. Whale
Mr. Whale@CryptoWhale·
🌍 | Another photo of Earth released by NASA. And once again: no traces of airplanes, ships, or even satellites. Even though around 10,000-11,000 active satellitesare orbiting our planet, and more than 30,000 orbital objects are being tracked. And still, in these images- nothing.
Mr. Whale tweet mediaMr. Whale tweet media
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Weffrey Jellington
Weffrey Jellington@jeffwellz·
Short story, it’s so you’ll get validation to go to the moon..eventually. This is a crewed test flight, if successful, more missions will be authorized. Longer ish story- during Apollo, the aim was to just get on the moon before the Soviet Union during the Cold War. So they took a lot of risks. This time, they’re being more careful for deeper space expedition in the future.
Among the Wildflowers@deaflibertarian

Ok, I'll ask. Why are we going around the moon?

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Everyday Astronaut
Everyday Astronaut@Erdayastronaut·
This photo of Earth is EXTRA spectacular for a good reason... let me explain. Most images you see of Earth from space are the daylight side of the Earth, and it's obviously very bright (see my last image), this means stars are too dim to be seen with that bright exposure setting (low ISO, high shutter and / or stopped down aperture). BUT this image taken by the Orion crew looks so incredible because you can see the sun is BEHIND the earth, meaning it's night time on the side of the earth facing the crew in this image. So how do you expose a night time earth from space? Same way you do on Earth! A mixture of opening up the aperture (F4 in this case), cranking the ISO (51,200 here), and using a relatively long exposure (1/4 of a second). We can see the settings used by looking at the exif data from the camera. What this means is our camera is also sensitive enough to see stars in the background of Earth, leading to an extraordinary image!!! GREAT WORK!!! These are the kind of images I've been so excited to see!
Everyday Astronaut tweet mediaEveryday Astronaut tweet mediaEveryday Astronaut tweet media
NASA@NASA

We see our home planet as a whole, lit up in spectacular blues and browns. A green aurora even lights up the atmosphere. That's us, together, watching as our astronauts make their journey to the Moon.

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memetic_sisyphus
memetic_sisyphus@memeticsisyphus·
If you show them pictures they’ll say they’ve been doctored, if you show them video they’ll call it AI, if you show them expert testimony they’ll cry conspiracy, if you show them math they won’t understand it. They’re not skeptics, they’re believers in a falsehood that can’t be dislodged.
Michael Shermer@michaelshermer

Dear No Moonies: If we never landed on the moon what is your explanation for these images taken by the Chandrayaan-2 probe from the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), when it mapped the lunar surface in detail in 2021?

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Corm Bluey Strike
Corm Bluey Strike@CBlueStrike·
@Nowhere_Hinni ai mona não me estressa existem três bilhões de maneiras diferentes de visualizar óculos redondos baratos e trens vermelhos me enche o saco não, pqp, nem te conheço
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NASA
NASA@NASA·
Even in darkness, we glow. In this image of Earth taken by the Artemis II crew, we can see the electric lights of human activity. In the lower right, sunlight illuminates the limb of the planet.
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Satan
Satan@s8n·
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NASA
NASA@NASA·
Good morning, world! 🌎 We have spectacular new high-resolution images of our home planet, all of us looking back through the Orion capsule window at our Artemis II astronauts as they continue their journey to the Moon.
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