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До сих пор нет тохотреда? Что за непорядок?
>>5458Хумм, что-то мне это напоминает. Пикрилейтед, наверное.
Аниме-обои #2 тред
Не обои, но думаю стоит сохранить.
Вот четыре работы одного и того-же художника. Кто-нибудь знает соус?
Это явно коллаж из фотографий. Сделано не идеально, но общая атмосфера доставляет. Хочу моар, и соус!
>>5262>>5265где-то в ЖЖ видел моар и соус, но теперь уж хуй найду. полуркай художников игры сталкер, может найдешь автора среди них, >>5263 арт явно оттуда, да и стиль очень похож.
>>5262>>5265
где-то в ЖЖ видел моар и соус, но теперь уж хуй найду. полуркай художников игры сталкер, может найдешь автора среди них, >>5263 арт явно оттуда, да и стиль очень похож.
Действительный, реально существующий космос.
Another view of Enceladus' southern ice plumes, seen on November 21, 2009. The moon's cryovolcanic activity was first discovered by Cassini in 2005, and continues to be a focus of research. Primarily made up of water vapor, the plumes also contain trace amounts of nitrogen, methane, carbon dioxide, propane, ethane, and acetylene. (NASA/JPL)
N00154034.jpg was taken on May 18, 2010 and received on Earth May 18, 2010. The camera was pointing toward ENCELADUS, and the image was taken using the CL1 and CL2 filters. This image has not been validated or calibrated. A validated/calibrated image will be archived with the NASA Planetary Data System in 2011.
Saturn's rings, made dark in part as the planet casts its shadow across them, cut a striking figure before Saturn's largest moon, Titan. The night side of the planet is to the left, out of the frame of the image. Illuminated Titan can be seen above, below and through gaps in the rings. The moon Mimas (396 km, 246 mi across) is near the bottom of the image. Atlas (30 km, 19 mi across) can barely be detected near the thin F ring just above the center right of the image. (NASA/JPL/SSI)
A closer view of a feature on Enceladus called Baghdad Sulcus, one of four "tiger stripes" that cross Enceladus' south pole, seen on November 21, 2009. Cassini was targeting the area to examine plume sources, the scale is approximately 30m (100ft) per pixel. (NASA/JPL)
An even closer view of Baghdad Sulcus on Enceladus, seen by Cassini on November 21, 2009. With a scale of approximately 12m (40ft) per pixel, relatively small surface features such as icy boulders appear visible. This image covers approximately 12 km (7.5 mi) from side to side. (NASA/JPL)
This image of the surface of Saturn's moon Dione was taken by Cassini on April 7, 2010. The view was acquired at a distance of approximately 2,500 km (1,600 mi) from Dione. Image scale is 15 meters (50 feet) per pixel. (NASA/JPL/SSI)
This mosaic, also by the Mariner 10 spacecraft on the 29 March 1974, was taken while it retreated from the planet. Again consisting of 18 images, these images show somewhat more of the illuminated surface. (Size: 180K)
анонимные обои тред
- wakaba 3.0.7 + futaba + futallaby -