Cosmic dust, a new planet, and a career change opportunity.
Showing posts with label astronauts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label astronauts. Show all posts
this weekend
- Buster Keaton
- works in progress
- 5th store-a-versary
- old school hip-hop dance party (last Saturday of every month)
- Christmas in July
- (500) Days of Summer
Film still from Destination Moon.
Labels:
astronauts,
films,
the cleve,
the moon
dropping through space
To fall into the void as I fell: none of you know what that means. For you, to fall means to plunge perhaps from the twenty-sixth floor of a skyscraper, or from an airplane which breaks down in flight: to fall headlong, grope in the air a moment, and then the Earth is immediately there, and you get a big bump. But I'm talking about the time when there wasn't any Earth underneath or anything else solid, not even a celestial body in the distance capable of attracting you into its orbit. You simply fell, indefinitely, for an indefinite length of time. I went down into the void, to the most absolute bottom conceivable, and once there I saw that the extreme limit must have been much, much farther below, very remote, and I went on falling, to reach it. Since there were no reference points, I had no idea whether my fall was fast or slow. Now that I think about it, there weren't even any proofs that I was really falling: perhaps I had always remained immobile in the same place, or I was moving in an upward direction; since there was no above or below these were only nominal questions and so I might just as well go on thinking I was falling, as I was naturally led to think.
Italo Calvino, 'The Form of Space'
Images: Ralph Crane's photos of a trampolinist in a space suit imitating the falling movements of a cat, to find out how astronauts can move in space, 1968. From the LIFE Archive.
Labels:
astronauts,
italo calvino,
photography,
pretty words,
ralph crane,
space travel
40 years ago today
July 20, 1969: Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to walk on the Moon.
Photo of Buzz Aldrin from NASA. You can see restored footage of the moon walk here.
Labels:
astronauts,
in the news,
photography,
space travel,
the moon
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