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Heya my names Zo, I love drawing, photography, writing and Astronomy....I hope you like my blog and feel free to follow me and read away! =)
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loveyourchaos:

elephantinthepicture:

This colorful cosmic portrait features glowing gas and obscuring dust clouds in IC 1795, a star forming region in the northern constellation Cassiopeia.
Cassiopeia was the wife of Cepheus, the Ethiopian king of Joppa (now known as Jaffa, in Israel), and the mother of Andromeda. The queen was both beautiful and vain, and the story of how her vanity caused great distress is told in relation to the constellation Andromeda.
After promising her daughter in marriage to Perseus, Cassiopeia had second thoughts. She convinced one of Poseidon’s sons, Agenor, to disrupt the ceremony by claiming Andromeda for himself. Agenor arrived with an entire army, and a fierce struggle ensued.
In the battle Cassiopeia is said to have cried “Perseus must die”. At any rate it was Perseus who was victorious, with the help of the Gorgon’s head.
A contrite Poseidon put both father and mother in the heavens. But because of Cassiopeia’s vanity, he placed her in a chair which revolves around the Pole Star, so half the time she’s obliged to sit upside down.

loveyourchaos:

elephantinthepicture:



This colorful cosmic portrait features glowing gas and obscuring dust clouds in IC 1795, a star forming region in the northern constellation Cassiopeia.

Cassiopeia was the wife of Cepheus, the Ethiopian king of Joppa (now known as Jaffa, in Israel), and the mother of Andromeda. The queen was both beautiful and vain, and the story of how her vanity caused great distress is told in relation to the constellation Andromeda.

After promising her daughter in marriage to Perseus, Cassiopeia had second thoughts. She convinced one of Poseidon’s sons, Agenor, to disrupt the ceremony by claiming Andromeda for himself. Agenor arrived with an entire army, and a fierce struggle ensued.

In the battle Cassiopeia is said to have cried “Perseus must die”. At any rate it was Perseus who was victorious, with the help of the Gorgon’s head.

A contrite Poseidon put both father and mother in the heavens. But because of Cassiopeia’s vanity, he placed her in a chair which revolves around the Pole Star, so half the time she’s obliged to sit upside down.