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morn1415 @UC8w7ynzLYXpRbPrfpDbMHlw@youtube.com

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Hello, world! This is morn1415. I will try to open your eye


morn1415
3 months ago - 68 likes

Happy Pi Day! #morn1415 #piday #pi #pie

morn1415
11 months ago - 51 likes

Playing an electric guitar in space would totally work. Someone should do it. ^^
While Astronauts around you wouldn't hear anything through the vacuum, the electric signal can be recorded and the sound transmitted. :D

morn1415
1 year ago - 38 likes

This just happened to me. Not even kidding. Should I be worried?

morn1415
1 year ago - 34 likes

Stills from another AI experiment from my other social media. The possibilities increase daily. I've been anticipating these days for a while, but now that they're here, I really realize how different everything will soon be. I see how AI is already having an impact on all aspects of life. The question is, of course, will it get better or worse?
And I don't know. Can't know at all. I think the whole thing is nothing more than something that amplifies things already there. Creative people become more creative, smart people become more brilliant and stupid people become dumber. Hate, misinformation, and destruction will be amplified just as much as logic, knowledge, and improvement.
So it doesn't matter so much what AI is, it matters what we are, and ultimately what humanity is.



#morn1415 #art #AIRevolution #CreativeAI #AIandHumanity #ArtificialImplications #MankindMirror #HumanitysFuture #AIDichotomy #technology #future #knowledge #space #cosmos #mindblown

morn1415
1 year ago - 36 likes

We can still do it!

The Orion capsule of the Artemis 1 Mission we sent around the Moon for a test is back and splashed safely into the ocean just now!
It gives me hope that I will be seeing people walk on the Moon again within my lifetime. Go, Humans! 🤗


#splashdown #artemis #moonmission #orion #spacecraft #moonprogram #apollo #space #science #spaceflight #capsule

morn1415
1 year ago - 67 likes

This just happened.

For the first time in 50 years, we saw an image of the full earth live with a standard camera.
During the Apollo program back then the Astronauts on the way to the Moon could just take snapshots out of the window because the distance was sufficient.
Later we only had satellites in orbit of the earth, they were too close, so we had to stitch the images together. Missions to other planets were mostly space probes with special cameras that hibernate until reaching their destination.
In 2015 we put a satellite (DSCOVR) at a special point 4 times farther away than the Moon in the direction of the sun, aimed at earth. So, we had the first images of the whole earth again. It took pictures around the clock since then. But only from the sunny side of the earth.
Currently, we are sending a capsule around the Moon (Artemis 1) to test it for the upcoming manned mission.
Today, a camera mounted on it tilted around and filmed this. Live.
A beautiful half-lit earth. 😮This is an amazing step towards humanity grasping that we are on a small boat together. More, please!

Can't wait for the pictures going around the Moon!

morn1415
1 year ago - 53 likes

Today is the first possible launch day for the beginning of the Artemis Program. One that, like the Apollo Program a long time ago, has the aim to bring people to the surface of the moon!
Artemis 1 will send equipment around the Moon and back, to see if we can still do it. If it works, we will already see images that nobody saw for 50 years.
Fingers crossed!

#artemis #apolloprogram #moon #space

morn1415
1 year ago - 172 likes

This is the moment many people have waited for the last 20 years. The James Webb Space Telescope made its first proper image. It´s a deep field. This means an attempt to look at a dark spot between all the stars of our galaxy you see at night to observe the other galaxies outside.
All the thousands of bright spots you see on it are not stars but whole galaxies containing billions of stars each. The visual area of the whole image is the equivalent of a grain of sand held at arm’s length. So that may give you a glimpse of what you are surrounded by.
While the Hubble space telescope took days or weeks to produce a blurrier version, the James Webb did this in half a day. The light it collected is very old. You are looking at a scene 4.6 billion years ago when the planet you are standing on just formed. In the end, the telescope will be able to observe the first stars and galaxies after the Universe was born.
Also, in this image you can observe something in detail we knew about for some time. Gravitational Lensing. Some of the galaxies seem to be elongated and distorted, like looking through a magnifying glass. This proves the concept of Einstein that huge masses can bend spacetime and the trajectory of light with it.
Now James Webb is out there, and this is just the beginning. May this achievement be a grain of clarity in blurry times.

Credit:
NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI

#jameswebbspacetelescope #deepfield #galaxies #gravitationallensing #timemachine

morn1415
2 years ago - 76 likes

Mozart, Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin, Vangelis... All of these are equally masters of a kind for me.
The only difference is that Vangelis died ...this week.
With him, I feel like a part of what made me who I am has left the world. His Music has been used many times in movies, but also in space-related documentaries a long time ago. For example, in Carl Sagan’s "Cosmos" series I watched as a kid, which made me interested in space. Later, when I made my animation Star Size Comparison 2, I only knew one melody that was perfect for it. "Alpha" by Vangelis. Millions of people agreed.
Thank you for your work that inspired me on so many levels and gave some meaning to my life. The language of the Cosmos might be music after all.

morn1415
2 years ago - 104 likes

Nearly 27 thousand Light years away, in the center of our Galaxy, there is Saggitarius A*. A Supermassive Black Hole with a mass of 4 Million times that of our sun. It bends space and time to the extent that both basically end there. Our sun, when going around the galaxy, takes 230 million years to circle it one time (Basically, all stars you see in the sky at night do the same). This week we got an image of Saggitarius A*!
The second image we got of a black hole. As it is extremely difficult obtaining these images, even a fuzzy blob like this is amazing. The light you see is just superheated matter falling in. You cannot see the black hole itself of course. It is way smaller in the center, but rest assured what you cannot see there in the middle is something that is basically not graspable for a human mind.