Image Dump VII (POST YOUR RANDOM IMAGES HERE)

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**** you guys, i posted that gif twice before and nobody ever said anything about it. MY GIFS AREN'T GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU GUYS?
 
**** you guys, i posted that gif twice before and nobody ever said anything about it. MY GIFS AREN'T GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU GUYS?

And many people posted it before you...

Don't be such a conceded dog.
 
halolzdotcomhadokenbaby.gif
 
**** you guys, i posted that gif twice before and nobody ever said anything about it. MY GIFS AREN'T GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU GUYS?
Sorry doggie, I missed it. I assure you I would have expressed my complete and sincere awe had I seen it.
that's what she said
 
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap081227.html

The Crab Pulsar, a city-sized, magnetized neutron star spinning 30 times a second, lies at the center of this remarkable image from the orbiting Chandra Observatory. The deep x-ray image gives the first clear view of the convoluted boundaries of the Crab's pulsar wind nebula. Like a cosmic dynamo the pulsar powers the x-ray emission. The pulsar's energy accelerates charged particles, producing eerie, glowing x-ray jets directed away from the poles and an intense wind in the equatorial direction. Intriguing edges are created as the charged particles stream away, eventually losing energy as they interact with the pulsar's strong magnetic field. With more mass than the Sun and the density of an atomic nucleus, the spinning pulsar itself is the collapsed core of a massive star. The stellar core collapse resulted in a supernova explosion that was witnessed in the year 1054. This Chandra image spans just under 9 light-years at the Crab's estimated distance of 6,000 light-years.
 
Neutron star? Is that from one of Nasa's 'Astronomy Picture(s) of the Day'?

edit - I mean pulsar. Noob.
 
Nirvana -> Nickelback, Blink 182, Green Day. wat. Papa Roach, wat. Then the Pixies? MAKE UP YOUR MIND MAN.
 
Actually one of the worst images I've ever laid eyes upon.
 
091020-nephila-inaurata-02.jpg

Golden orb-weaving spiders are known for their giant body size and enormous webs. The spider Nephila inaurata can spin a web exceeding 3 feet (1 meter) in diameter, as shown here. Credit: M. Kuntner.

Also known as the largest web spinning spider! spiderman...eat your heart out!

091022-pole-rotation-04.jpg
 
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