“Intimate Moments With Bella Hadid” Shot By Alana O’Herlihy

“Intimate Moments With Bella Hadid” Shot By Alana O’Herlihy

“Intimate Moments with Bella Hadid” shot by Alana O’Herlihy

More Posts from Kynttiila and Others

6 years ago
I Would Embrace Them.
I Would Embrace Them.
I Would Embrace Them.
I Would Embrace Them.
I Would Embrace Them.

I would embrace them.

7 years ago

Shoutout to the male rape victims that suffer in silence out of fear of embarrassment or feeling publicly emasculated. Your pain is valid. Your trauma is valid. Your trust issues are valid. Your emotions are valid. They do not emasculate you. You are still strong. You are always going to be strong. And your story matters.

7 years ago
Blue Supergiant Star

Blue supergiant star

Blue supergiant stars are hot luminous stars, referred to scientifically as OB supergiants. They have luminosity class I and spectral class B9 or earlier.

image

Blue supergiants (BSGs) are found towards the top left of the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram to the right of the main sequence. They are larger than the Sun but smaller than a red supergiant, with surface temperatures of 10,000–50,000 K and luminosities from about 10,000 to a million times the Sun.

image

Formation

Supergiants are evolved high-mass stars, larger and more luminous than main-sequence stars. O class and early B class stars with initial masses around 10-100 M☉ evolve away from the main sequence in just a few million years as their hydrogen is consumed and heavy elements start to appear near the surface of the star. These stars usually become blue supergiants, although it is possible that some of them evolve directly to Wolf–Rayet stars. 

image

Expansion into the supergiant stage occurs when hydrogen in the core of the star is depleted and hydrogen shell burning starts, but it may also be caused as heavy elements are dredged up to the surface by convection and mass loss due to radiation pressure increase.

image

Blue supergiants are newly evolved from the main sequence, have extremely high luminosities, high mass loss rates, and are generally unstable. Many of them become luminous blue variables (LBVs) with episodes of extreme mass loss. Lower mass blue supergiants continue to expand until they become red supergiants. In the process they obviously must spend some time as yellow supergiants or yellow hypergiants, but this expansion occurs in just a few thousand years and so these stars are rare. Higher mass red supergiants blow away their outer atmospheres and evolve back to blue supergiants, and possibly onwards to Wolf–Rayet stars. Depending on the exact mass and composition of a red supergiant, it can execute a number of blue loops before either exploding as a type II supernova or finally dumping enough of its outer layers to become a blue supergiant again, less luminous than the first time but more unstable. If such a star can pass through the yellow evolutionary void it is expected that it becomes one of the lower luminosity LBVs.

The most massive blue supergiants are too luminous to retain an extensive atmosphere and they never expand into a red supergiant. The dividing line is approximately 40 M☉, although the coolest and largest red supergiants develop from stars with initial masses of 15-25 M☉. It isn’t clear whether more massive blue supergiants can lose enough mass to evolve safely into a comfortable old age as a Wolf Rayet star and finally a white dwarf, or they reach the Wolf Rayet stage and explode as supernovae, or they explode as supernovae while blue supergiants.

Properties

image

Because of their extreme masses they have relatively short lifespans and are mainly observed in young cosmic structures such as open clusters, the arms of spiral galaxies, and in irregular galaxies. They are rarely observed in spiral galaxy cores, elliptical galaxies, or globular clusters, most of which are believed to be composed of older stars, although the core of the Milky Way has recently been found to be home to several massive open clusters and associated young hot stars.

image

The best known example is Rigel, the brightest star in the constellation of Orion. Its mass is about 20 times that of the Sun, and its luminosity is around 117,000 times greater. Despite their rarity and their short lives they are heavily represented among the stars visible to the naked eye; their immense brightness is more than enough to compensate for their scarcity.

Blue Supergiant Star

Blue supergiants have fast stellar winds and the most luminous, called hypergiants, have spectra dominated by emission lines that indicate strong continuum driven mass loss. Blue supergiants show varying quantities of heavy elements in their spectra, depending on their age and the efficiency with which the products of nucleosynthesis in the core are convected up to the surface. Quickly rotating supergiants can be highly mixed and show high proportions of helium and even heavier elements while still burning hydrogen at the core, and these stars show spectra very similar to a Wolf Rayet star.

While the stellar wind from a red supergiant is dense and slow, the wind from a blue supergiant is fast but sparse. When a red supergiant becomes a blue supergiant, the faster wind it produces impacts the already emitted slow wind and causes the outflowing material to condense into a thin shell. In some cases several concentric faint shells can be seen from successive episodes of mass loss, either previous blue loops from the red supergiant stage, or eruptions such as LBV outbursts.

image

Astronomers suggest that blue supergiant stars may be the most likely sources of ultra-long GRBs. These stars hold about 20 times the sun’s mass and may reach sizes 1,000 times larger than the sun, making them nearly wide enough to span Jupiter’s orbit.

Source

Rigel

Fourth image: Hubble Space Telescope image of nebula M1-67 around Wolf–Rayet star WR 124. (source).

Fifth image:  Rigel and the IC 2118 nebula which it illuminates. (source).  

Sixth image: Spectrum of a B2 star. (souce).

Seventh image: Star cluster NGC 3572 and its surroundings. (source).

Eighth image: Orion constellation (The star Rigel is at the top right of the image. by: Joseph Brimacombe)

images of star comparisons. (nasa).

7 years ago
I’ve Been Staring At This For Five Minutes Wondering Why The Fuck Im Still On This Site

I’ve been staring at this for five minutes wondering why the fuck im still on this site

7 years ago
Bastet

Bastet

7 years ago
Https://www.instagram.com/p/BYRX1Y9A8lO/
Https://www.instagram.com/p/BYRX1Y9A8lO/
Https://www.instagram.com/p/BYRX1Y9A8lO/
image

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYRX1Y9A8lO/

7 years ago
kynttiila - Untitled
Fuck Rick & Morty.

Fuck Rick & Morty.

  • jjellyycuhh
    jjellyycuhh liked this · 7 months ago
  • jjellyycuhh
    jjellyycuhh reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • divisuns
    divisuns liked this · 6 years ago
  • we-used-to-rule-the-world
    we-used-to-rule-the-world liked this · 7 years ago
  • quitecute
    quitecute liked this · 7 years ago
  • gleedegrassi-bigfan
    gleedegrassi-bigfan liked this · 7 years ago
  • vanillaeh
    vanillaeh liked this · 7 years ago
  • robynrihanna
    robynrihanna reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • mexicanthot
    mexicanthot liked this · 7 years ago
  • ialwayswas
    ialwayswas reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • acuzena
    acuzena liked this · 7 years ago
  • finnafinemy
    finnafinemy reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • moontothetides
    moontothetides reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • unresistant
    unresistant reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • larryssays
    larryssays liked this · 7 years ago
  • kynttiila
    kynttiila reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • kynttiila
    kynttiila liked this · 7 years ago
  • visualpoison
    visualpoison reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • gizelletorres4evr
    gizelletorres4evr reblogged this · 7 years ago
  • amores36
    amores36 reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • amores36
    amores36 liked this · 8 years ago
  • temblr
    temblr liked this · 8 years ago
  • 0xym0r0n
    0xym0r0n reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • drugsncum
    drugsncum reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • drugsncum
    drugsncum liked this · 8 years ago
  • urameshi-san
    urameshi-san liked this · 8 years ago
  • trippmaximus
    trippmaximus reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • trippmaximus
    trippmaximus liked this · 8 years ago
  • hey-its-felix-the-cat
    hey-its-felix-the-cat reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • hey-its-felix-the-cat
    hey-its-felix-the-cat liked this · 8 years ago
  • heroinlemons
    heroinlemons reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • grl666
    grl666 reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • toxicamie
    toxicamie reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • xplorerbot
    xplorerbot liked this · 8 years ago
  • brothersroom
    brothersroom liked this · 8 years ago
  • ishiganto
    ishiganto liked this · 8 years ago
  • lunacykiss
    lunacykiss reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • dylandressel
    dylandressel reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • prumskacz-blog
    prumskacz-blog liked this · 8 years ago
kynttiila - Untitled
Untitled

49 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags