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NASA Image Of The Day
A Chameleon Sky
The sands of time are running out for the central star of this the Hourglass Nebula. With its nuclear fuel exhausted, this brief, spectacular, closing phase of a sun-like star's life occurs as its outer layers are ejected and its core becomes a cooling, fading white dwarf. In 1995, astronomers used the Hubble Space Telescope to make a series of images of planetary nebulae, including the one above. Here, delicate rings of colorful glowing gas (nitrogen-red, hydrogen-green, and oxygen-blue) outline the tenuous walls of the 'hourglass.' The unprecedented sharpness of Hubble's images revealed surprising details of the nebula ejection process and may resolve the outstanding mystery of the variety of complex shapes and symmetries of planetary nebulae. Image Credit: NASA, WFPC2, HST, R. Sahai and J. Trauger (JPL)...
Blooded Print E-mail
Poetry Cycles - Doing Sappho
Lisa Jain Thompson   
Monday, 04 December 2006 15:38
Poem attributed to Sappho
in the short story "Blooded"
 
 
The crystal waters of the Aegean Sea,
Warmed by the afternoon sun,
Washed over the poet woman
Who waited for love to seize her.
Beneath the moon’s full risen gaze
She found instead a warrior’s presence
Filled her world with pleasure.
 
 
 
 
 
Copyright Lisa Jain Thompson
May 3, 1998
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