Jet swallows a man
- May 15th
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The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has photographed three magnificent sections of the Veil Nebula - the shattered remains of a supernova that exploded some 5-10,000 years ago. The new Hubble images provide beautiful views of the delicate, wispy structure resulting from this cosmic explosion.
We strongly advice you to watch this informative video by scientist at NASA about this terrific cataclysm. Detailed report is here.

Update: This was supposed to be April Fools joke, Google wont take you to the Mars, but AeroSpace Engineering students will:)
Google just made an announcement about its Project Virgle, which says that right now humans have technology to make life on Mars possible and Project Virgle will start taking people for settlement on Mars in coming 20 years.
Here is what Project Virgle is: (Click here to apply)


Dün öğlen saat 3 civarında bölüm sekreterliğinden gelen mailde TAİ ve THY’de staj başvurusu duyuruldu. Bu sene TAİ 30 kişilik, THY ise 15 kişilik kontenjan açmış. TAİ’ye en son başvuru tarihi 26 mart, THY’ye ise 27 mart, her iki başvuru için gerekli tek belge resmi olmayan not göstergesi. Student Affairs Information System’den giriş yaptığınızda Unofficial Student Grade Summary’yi çıktı alıp onu sekreterliğe götürmeniz yeterli. Read more…
A huge thank you to Serjan Akhmetov for sharing the manual with us.
Have something worth sharing send it over to editor@aerometu.com

Dubai-based airline Emirates has become the first commercial airline to allow passengers to make mobile phone calls during flights. Read more…
ok, this one time, a plane takes off from some airport and pilot, as usual does this “we are flying at this speed at this altitude …” announcement and puts down the microphone, forgetting to turn it off.
Then turning to a copilot he says: “You know, all I could use right now would be a cup of coffee and a blowjob”.
Everyone on the plane hears this and stewardess rushes to cockpit to turn the mike off, and someone from the back shouts:
-Honey, don’t forget the coffee:)
The aerospace and defense sector is bracing for a potential brain drain over the next decade as a generation of Cold War scientists and engineers hits retirement age and not enough qualified young Americans seek to take their place.
The problem - almost 60 percent of U.S. aerospace workers in 2007 were 45 or older - could affect national security and even close the door on commercial products that start out as military technology, industry officials said.
While U.S. universities are awarding nearly 200,000 engineering, math and computer science degrees annually - 2 1/2 times as many as they did 40 years ago - defense companies must compete with the likes of Google, Microsoft and Verizon for the best and the brightest. Read more…