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to nebulae
noun
A cloud in outer space consisting of gas or dust (e.g. a cloud formed after a star explodes).
Exact(2)
Such are the facts that can be gleaned from an utterly delightful data visualisation created by Michael and Cary Huang, which allows you to fly through space comparing the size of everything from neutrinos to nebulae.
Quite naturally, Kant moved from cosmic origins to nebulae to solar systems to planets and biota, and then to rational life.
Similar(58)
There really isn't much to Nebula: just a woody synth motif and a gentle accumulation of half-awake vocals, like a choir of Julee Cruises trapped at the bottom of a cave.
In order to evaluate the drag force due to nebula gas, the disk model is set as follows.
Both the high rates of pay and Hamilton's willingness to work with new authors were designed to encourage writers to submit their work to Nebula before trying the other magazines.
Hamilton was glad to work with beginning writers, and in 1953 several writers who later became very well known, including Brian Aldiss, Barrington Bayley, and Bob Shaw, each sold their first story to Nebula.
There was no moonlight to obscure the sky's bounty, and Mr. Chapin promised to deliver hard-to-find nebulae that he called "faint fuzzies".
He was also able to identify some Cepheid variables that he could use as a benchmark to estimate the distance to the nebulae.
"As a tribute to Kubrick or Nolan's filmography, Novae is a cosmic poem that want[s] to introduce the viewer to the nebulae's infinite beauty," Vanz notes.
The name originates from the 18th century, when telescopes weren't powerful enough to distinguish nebulae from gas giant planets.
Fifty-four feet (16 metres) in length, Lord Rosse's telescope was used primarily to observe nebulae on those rare occasions when weather conditions permitted.
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