I think the primary reason there’s so much psychological revulsion in this thread is because the only times you see something like this on Earth is in deep cave footage
And typically these types of ecological niches are completely filled with insects
Evolution primes the brain to pay attention to threats
No insects? They’re hiding. —> Dread/Fear
why this scary
Have you ever thought about what it must be like in space? That shit is scary. We take for granted that we have an atmosphere to disperse light, as well as a ground for light to reflect off of. In space, some shit could be right in front of you and you would have no idea. If there were an asteroid between you and the sun, you wouldn’t realize until it was so close that there was a huge black spot covering the sun up.
Sponsored by Soundgarden.
This makes me feel a bit nauseous.
Perhaps because you can see mountains at the same scale that allows you to clearly see the object’s horizon/curvature. It would be like if Earth had mountains thousands of miles high. It’s a landscape that feels deeply unnatural.
Because of the soildier attempting to hide behind the rock (middle right)
Something about it is a bit nauseating
It looks super cool
It would have been cool if they had named the spacecraft Urashima since they were going to Ryugu, but I guess it wouldn’t make sense because in the story, the gift Urashima brings back from Ryugu ends up fucking him over. At least, that’s how I understood it as a kid.
What do you mean “asteroid”? That’s my basement. /j
Your vacuflo might need a emptied dude
Here’s an article about this rock
This is cool and all, and I am super stoked we can do this…but my brain keeps saying, yeah, so what, it’s a big rock.
It’s not just a big rock, It’s a big rock really far away!
Picture from the lander is neat too
https://www.space.com/asteroid-ryugu-survived-major-catastrophe.html

I expected to see more stars. Maybe the exposure was too short for that or something
Yes

Not even surprised that a hayabusa would be fast enough to make it to an asteroid.
Wait til you find out where the “haya” comes from 😜
?It just means fast lol. Hayabusa is just Japanese for peregrine falcon, the haya probably deriving from fast, busa being some sort of suffix used for animals, I think (don’t quote me on that last bit).
I’m 98% sure my source is correct
98.9% at least
Scientists: Yes, we finally did it! We captured a picture from our probe that touched down on a big rock in space! We are awesome!
Me: Holy shit! That is so cool, you are awesome! What did the rock look like?
Scientists: Like a big fucking rock
Me: Dude, no way!
Don’t forget the endless abyss that was pictured too.
endless abyss with distant pockets of potential wonder!
(Lovecraft vs Star Trek)
Yeah but we can see the endless abyss by looking up any time there isn’t too much light around
Cries in astrophotographer in the suburbs who’s had one cloudless night in a fortnight
I’m not sure why but this fills me with such inconsolable dread. Something about a dead cold rock floating through such vast nothingness.
No, no, no. It actually isn’t lifeless. It contains some small microbes that are virtually undetectable. Their only effect on the human psyche is to create paranoia, delusions of grandeur, and remove all traces of empathy.
It kind of reminds me of the comet from Outer Wilds, which was kinda spooky, in terms of having to land on this tiny object traveling very fast through space and navigate it
Yeah, and knowing the only reason you can see it is because of the lighting from the robot taking the photo. Otherwise it’s just this thing shrouded in darkness flying through space at whatever ridiculously fast speed only to eventually run into something.
You get it. Scary ain’t it.
This image is ripe for an SCP to be written up based on it.
Imagine being one of the first humans to try to mine one of these, and you feel like you saw something moving in the corner of your eye, just where the light meets the shadow of one of the sharp lumps, but you can’t be sure.
So a regular day, just add the vacuum of space, for me then. Good to know
Thanks, I hate it. No chance of any sleep tonight.
😄
You’re welcome friend <3
Wow, this is even more amazing than I first thought
Hayabusa2 was launched on 3 December 2014 and rendezvoused in space with near-Earth asteroid 162173 Ryugu on 27 June 2018.[11] It surveyed the asteroid for a year and a half and took samples. It left the asteroid in November 2019 and returned the samples to Earth on 5 December 2020 UTC.
With pictures like this it’s so hard to convince my brain that it’s not just a picture of a random boulder taken with flash at night.
I worked on Landsat 9 a few years ago, and when I got on-console for my first shift after it launched, I remembered seeing the telemetry come down and thinking, huh, doesn’t look any different than when we simulated the data…how do I know we actually sent it up there?
Then something went wrong that i had to fix and I snapped back to reality.
I mean, you’re not wrong.
Except this specific boulder isn’t stuck in earth’s gravity well, it’s got its own thing going on.
I was looking at pictures of Mars’ surface from Curiosity with my uncle who is a lunar landing and science denier. He said, “That could be taken at any desert on Earth.” I was like NO SHIT! You mean to tell me that other planets have rocks too?!?! No fucking way! What do you expect it to look like?
You and your 6th grade reading level somehow outsmarted two generations of NASA scientists and their massive coverup and lies about space exploration? No, you fucking dunce.
My friend is a flat earther
I feel your pain
Why isn’t this sentence “a guy I know”

I hope he’s not watching David Weiss’ content. He keeps showing an image that was taken on earth, modified to look like Mars, and then claims it’s directly from NASA’s website.
Whenever he’s asked for the direct source he says he’ll send it over, but never does.
Tell him if they faked it. Russia would not waste a moment to point that out.
They congratulated us. If we faked it, Russia would have faked it first.
When you think about it, that’s kinda exactly what it is. Which is very cool :-D
Just a big random boulder in space amongst a whole solar system of random boulders, taken with a light for illumination because it’s dark, yo
It definitely reminds me of a cave.
There are barely visible tiny features that would have eroded away on Earth.
That said, they are barely visible and tiny. If somebody said it’s just some weird concretion, I’d completely believe it.
Except no weathering.
There is lots of weathering on mars
But not on an asteroid
They literally shot it with a 2kg copper slug (bullet) to expose parts that were not weathered to collect samples
There’s absolutely no sense of scale here.
What we see as rocks, could absolutely be boulders…
We’d tend to error of the side of ‘small’ but with no fluid (liquid or air) erosion, these could be massive.
Looks like an old attic with dirty insulation
I’m just thinking about all the technical challenges to land a flying metal cereal box on a moving asteroid…
Man, this rocks.
It just took a collection of bombs and careful aiming. We as a species are really good at throwing things pretty accurately and at messing with controlling fire
I kid, it’s awesome we were able to make it happen and the wealth of knowledge gained by doing it
Alright, this gives me crazy heebie jeebies. Something about how close that horizon is, combined with the fact that beyond it is just nothing, absolute nothing, for light-years in most directions; hits the buttons for claustrophobia, agoraphobia, acrophobia, and thalassophobia at the same time.
I have never felt happy about the fact that I was born too early to go space mining til now. No thanks. Maybe if I get to keep a ton or two of native platinum for myself, otherwise no thanks.
Now also imagine the view when you’re there and you turn off the light.
Black will be really fucking black and you will only see some stars














