~~ I also uploaded it to society6 as every single product they have. Here’s a duffel bag for example. Check them out, and make sure to send pics to me if you do buy anything. Thank youuu!! 💕~~
#restaurant in #rimini #romagna ❤️❤️❤️#food and comfort. Perché darsi tanto da fare? 😂 (presso Rimini, Italy)
Supermoon by cmcneill17 http://ift.tt/1sKa7Wx
my gift to @stardust-mayor-kyra ~
happy new year
| via Tumblr na We Heart It.
Today is Valentine’s Day. What better way to express that you love someone than with an intergalactic love gram? Check out some of our favorites and send them to all of your cosmic companions:
The Hubble Space Telescope revolutionized nearly all areas of astronomical research — and captured some truly lovely images. Here, a pair of intersecting galaxies swirl into the shape of a rose as a result of gravitational tidal pull. What type of roses are you getting for your love — red or galactic?
IceBridge is the largest airborne survey of Earth’s polar ice ever flown. It captures 3-D views of Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets, ice shelves and sea ice. This lovely heart-shaped glacier feature was discovered in northwest Greenland during an IceBridge flight in 2017. Which of your lover’s features would you say are the coolest?
Even though we can’t see them, magnetic fields are all around us. One of the solar system’s largest magnetospheres belongs to Jupiter. Right now, our Juno spacecraft is providing scientists with their first glimpses of this unseen force. Is your attraction to your loved one magnetic?
This heart-shaped feature on the Martian landscape was captured by our Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. It was created by a small impact crater that blew darker material on the surface away. What impact has your loved one had on you?
From three billion miles away, Pluto sent a “love note” back to Earth, via our New Horizons spacecraft. This stunning image of Pluto’s “heart” shows one of the world’s most dominant features, estimated to be 1,000 miles (1,600 km) across at its widest point. Will you pass this love note on to someone special in your life?
Our Solar Dynamics Observatory keeps an eye on our closest star that brings energy to you and your love. The observatory helps us understand where the Sun’s energy comes from, how the inside of the Sun works, how energy is stored and released in the Sun’s atmosphere and much more. Who would you say is your ray of sunshine?
Do any of these cosmic phenomena remind you of someone in your universe? Download these cards here to send to all the stars in your sky.
Want something from the Red Planet to match your bouquet of red roses? Here is our collection of Martian Valentines.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
#bologna a #view of the red #town
Empathy & Compassion in the brain Empathy is a complicated task for the brain.
Reptiles probably can’t do it and it’s going to occur in pretty simple forms for most mammals. But in humans, it really engages the frontal lobes: these newer regions of the brain that are involved in more complex symbolic processes like language, considering alternatives and imagining the future. Empathy requires that you think: there’s someone else out there who has feelings and thoughts that may be different from mine. That’s a complicated cognitive achievement!
Compassion —the caring instinct— is located down in the center of the brain, near the top of the spinal cord where a lot of our basic instincts are regulated. It’s a very old part of the brain called the periaqueductal gray, which is common to mammals when they take care of their young.
So that’s striking: there’s one kind of thing —empathy— that’s really about understanding people (very complicated!) in the frontal lobes. But caring is is really old in the nervous system.
Learn about the evolutionary roots of compassion & empathy →
True color picture of our moon, unfiltered by our nitrogen rich blue atmosphere.