Acrobase  

Καλώς ήρθατε στην AcroBase.
Δείτε εδώ τα πιο πρόσφατα μηνύματα από όλες τις περιοχές συζητήσεων, καθώς και όλες τις υπηρεσίες της AcroBase.
H εγγραφή σας είναι γρήγορη και εύκολη.

Επιστροφή   Acrobase > Ελεύθερος Χρόνος και Ψυχαγωγία > Καθημερινά ενημερωτικά θέματα
Ομάδες (Groups) Τοίχος Άρθρα acrobase.org Ημερολόγιο Φωτογραφίες Στατιστικά

Notices

Δεν έχετε δημιουργήσει όνομα χρήστη στην Acrobase.
Μπορείτε να το δημιουργήσετε εδώ

Απάντηση στο θέμα
 
Εργαλεία Θεμάτων Τρόποι εμφάνισης
  #3751  
Παλιά 11-02-17, 11:34
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας
Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

11 February 2017



Solar System Portrait

Image Credit: Voyager Project, NASA

Explanation: On Valentine's Day in 1990, cruising four billion miles from the Sun, the Voyager 1 spacecraft looked back one last time to make this first ever Solar System family portrait. The complete portrait is a 60 frame mosaic made from a vantage point 32 degrees above the ecliptic plane. In it, Voyager's wide angle camera frames sweep through the inner Solar System at the left, linking up with gas giant Neptune, the Solar System's outermost planet, at the far right. Positions for Venus, Earth, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are indicated by letters, while the Sun is the bright spot near the center of the circle of frames. The inset frames for each of the planets are from Voyager's narrow field camera. Unseen in the portrait are Mercury, too close to the Sun to be detected, and Mars, unfortunately hidden by sunlight scattered in the camera's optical system. Closer to the Sun than Neptune at the time, small, faint Pluto's position was not covered.

Tomorrow's picture: close snowball

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3752  
Παλιά 12-02-17, 11:25
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας
Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

12 February 2017



Comet 45P Passes Near the Earth

Image Credit & Copyright: Fritz Helmut Hemmerich

Explanation: A large snowball has just passed the Earth. Known as Comet 45P/Honda–Mrkos–Pajdušáková", or 45P for short, the comet came 10 times closer to Earth yesterday than the Earth ever gets to the Sun. During this passage, the comet was photographed sporting a thin ion tail and a faint but expansive green coma. The green color is caused mostly by energized molecules of carbon. Comet 45P became just bright enough to see with the unaided eye when it came closest to the Sun in December. Now, however, the comet is fading as it heads back out to near the orbit of Jupiter, where it spends most of its time. The kilometer-sized nucleus of ice and dirt will return to the inner Solar System in 2022.

Tomorrow's picture: swirling jupiter

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3753  
Παλιά 13-02-17, 09:49
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας
Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

13 February 2017



Cloud Swirls around Southern Jupiter from Juno

Image Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, SwRI, MSSS; Processing: Damian Peach

Explanation: Juno just completed its fourth pass near Jupiter. Launched from Earth in 2011 and arriving at Jupiter just last July, robotic Juno concluded its latest elliptical orbit around our Solar System's largest planet 11 days ago. Pictured here from that pass is a new high-resolution image of the southern hemisphere of Jupiter featuring a mesmerizing tapestry of swirling cloud systems. The terminator between day and night cuts diagonally across the bottom, meaning that the Sun is positioned off the top right. Large Oval BA is visible in orange on the far right. Reasons for the details and colors of Jupiter's cloud swirls are currently unknown. Juno planned six year mission will study Jovian giant in new ways, including trying to determine if beneath its thick clouds, Jupiter has a solid core.

Tomorrow's picture: space flower in red and blue

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3754  
Παλιά 14-02-17, 10:11
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας
Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

14 February 2017



The Rosette Nebula

Image Credit: Image Credit & Copyright: Evangelos Souglakos (έλα, πατριωτάκι!)

Explanation: Would the Rosette Nebula by any other name look as sweet? The bland New General Catalog designation of NGC 2237 doesn't appear to diminish the appearance of this flowery emission nebula. Inside the nebula lies an open cluster of bright young stars designated NGC 2244. These stars formed about four million years ago from the nebular material and their stellar winds are clearing a hole in the nebula's center, insulated by a layer of dust and hot gas. Ultraviolet light from the hot cluster stars causes the surrounding nebula to glow. The Rosette Nebula spans about 100 light-years across, lies about 5000 light-years away, and can be seen with a small telescope towards the constellation of the Unicorn (Monoceros).

Tomorrow's picture: expanding space fruit

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3755  
Παλιά 15-02-17, 10:26
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

15 February 2017



The Calabash Nebula from Hubble

Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble, MAST; Acknowledgement: Judy Schmidt

Explanation: Fast expanding gas clouds mark the end for a central star in the Calabash Nebula. The once-normal star has run out of nuclear fuel, causing the central regions to contract into a white dwarf. Some of the liberated energy causes the outer envelope of the star to expand. In this case, the result is a photogenic proto-planetary nebula. As the million-kilometer per hour gas rams into the surrounding interstellar gas, a supersonic shock front forms where ionized hydrogen and nitrogen glow blue. Thick gas and dust hide the dying central star. The Calabash Nebula, also known as the Rotten Egg Nebula and OH231.8+4.2, will likely develop into a full bipolar planetary nebula over the next 1000 years. The nebula, featured here, is about 1.4 light-years in extent and located about 5000 light-years away toward the constellation of Puppis.

Tomorrow's picture: black hole flower

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3756  
Παλιά 16-02-17, 09:57
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

16 February 2017



The Tulip and Cygnus X-1

Image Credit & Copyright: Ivan Eder

Explanation: Framing a bright emission region, this telescopic view looks out along the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy toward the nebula rich constellation Cygnus the Swan. Popularly called the Tulip Nebula, the reddish glowing cloud of interstellar gas and dust is also found in the 1959 catalog by astronomer Stewart Sharpless as Sh2-101. About 8,000 light-years distant and 70 light-years across the complex and beautiful nebula blossoms at the center of this composite image. Ultraviolet radiation from young energetic stars at the edge of the Cygnus OB3 association, including O star HDE 227018, ionizes the atoms and powers the emission from the Tulip Nebula. HDE 227018 is the bright star near the center of the nebula. Also framed in the field of view is microquasar Cygnus X-1, one of the strongest X-ray sources in planet Earth's sky. Driven by powerful jets from a black hole accretion disk, its fainter visible curved shock front lies above and right, just beyond the cosmic Tulip's petals

Tomorrow's picture: pixels in space

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3757  
Παλιά 17-02-17, 11:43
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

17 February 2017



Polar Ring Galaxy NGC 660

Image Credit & Copyright: CHART32 Team, Processing - Johannes Schedler

Explanation: NGC 660 is featured in this cosmic snapshot. Over 40 million light-years away and swimming within the boundaries of the constellation Pisces, NGC 660's peculiar appearance marks it as a polar ring galaxy. A rare galaxy type, polar ring galaxies have a substantial population of stars, gas, and dust orbiting in rings strongly tilted from the plane of the galactic disk. The bizarre-looking configuration could have been caused by the chance capture of material from a passing galaxy by a disk galaxy, with the captured debris eventually strung out in a rotating ring. The violent gravitational interaction would account for the myriad pinkish star forming regions scattered along NGC 660's ring. The polar ring component can also be used to explore the shape of the galaxy's otherwise unseen dark matter halo by calculating the dark matter's gravitational influence on the rotation of the ring and disk. Broader than the disk, NGC 660's ring spans over 50,000 light-years.

Tomorrow's picture: many moons

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3758  
Παλιά 18-02-17, 10:56
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

18 February 2017



Penumbral Eclipse Rising

Image Credit & Copyright: Bill Jelen

Explanation: As seen from Cocoa Beach Pier, Florida, planet Earth, the Moon rose at sunset on February 10 while gliding through Earth's faint outer shadow. In progress was the first eclipse of 2017, a penumbral lunar eclipse followed in this digital stack of seaside exposures. Of course, the penumbral shadow is lighter than the planet's umbral shadow. That central, dark, shadow is easily seen on the lunar disk during a total or partial lunar eclipse. Still, in this penumbral eclipse the limb of the Moon grows just perceptibly darker as it rises above the western horizon. The second eclipse of 2017 could be more dramatic though. With viewing from a path across planet Earth's southern hemisphere, on February 26 there will be an annular eclipse of the Sun.

Tomorrow's picture: inverted sun

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
Οι παρακάτω χρήστες έχουν πει 'Ευχαριστώ' στον/στην pazo για αυτό το μήνυμα:
Oasis (18-02-17)
  #3759  
Παλιά 19-02-17, 09:46
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

19 February 2017



Black Sun and Inverted Starfield

Image Credit & Copyright: Jim Lafferty

Explanation: Does this strange dark ball look somehow familiar? If so, that might be because it is our Sun. In the featured image from 2012, a detailed solar view was captured originally in a very specific color of red light, then rendered in black and white, and then color inverted. Once complete, the resulting image was added to a starfield, then also color inverted. Visible in the image of the Sun are long light filaments, dark active regions, prominences peeking around the edge, and a moving carpet of hot gas. The surface of our Sun can be a busy place, in particular during Solar Maximum, the time when its surface magnetic field is wound up the most. Besides an active Sun being so picturesque, the plasma expelled can also become picturesque when it impacts the Earth's magnetosphere and creates auroras.

Tomorrow's picture: three-pronged comet

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3760  
Παλιά 20-02-17, 11:40
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

20 February 2017



Almost Three Tails for Comet Encke

Image Credit & Copyright: Fritz Helmut Hemmerich

Explanation: How can a comet have three tails? Normally, a comet has two tails: an ion tail of charged particles emitted by the comet and pushed out by the wind from the Sun, and a dust tail of small debris that orbits behind the comet but is also pushed out, to some degree, by the solar wind. Frequently a comet will appear to have only one tail because the other tail is not easily visible from the Earth. In the featured unusual image, Comet 2P/Encke appears to have three tails because the ion tail split just near to the time when the image was taken. The complex solar wind is occasionally turbulent and sometimes creates unusual structure in an ion tail. On rare occasions even ion-tail disconnection events have been recorded. An image of the Comet Encke taken two days later gives a perhaps less perplexing perspective.

Tomorrow's picture: active sky

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3761  
Παλιά 21-02-17, 11:23
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

21 February 2017



An Active Night over the Magellan Telescopes

Image Credit & Copyright: Yuri Beletsky (Carnegie Las Campanas Observatory, TWAN);
Music Credit & License: Airglow by Club 220

Explanation: The night sky is always changing. Featured here are changes that occurred over a six hour period in late 2014 June behind the dual 6.5-meter Magellan Telescopes at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile. The initial red glow on the horizon is airglow, a slight cooling of high air by the emission of specific colors of light. Bands of airglow are also visible throughout the time-lapse video. Early in the night, car headlights flash on the far left. Satellites quickly shoot past as they circle the Earth and reflect sunlight. A long and thin cloud passes slowly overhead. The Large Magellanic Cloud rises on the left, while the expansive central band of our Milky Way Galaxy arches and pivots as the Earth rotates. As the night progresses, the Magellan telescopes swivel and stare as they explore pre-determined patches of the night sky. Every night, every sky changes differently, even though the phenomena at play are usually the same.

Tomorrow's picture: saturn ring ringer

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3762  
Παλιά 22-02-17, 09:59
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

22 February 2017



Daphnis and the Rings of Saturn

Image Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, Space Science Institute, Cassini

Explanation: What's happening to the rings of Saturn? Nothing much, just a little moon making waves. The moon is 8-kilometer Daphnis and it is making waves in the Keeler Gap of Saturn's rings using just its gravity -- as it bobs up and down, in and out. The featured image is a wide-field version of a previously released image taken last month by the robotic Cassini spacecraft during one of its new Grand Finale orbits. Daphnis can be seen on the far right, sporting ridges likely accumulated from ring particles. Daphnis was discovered in Cassini images in 2005 and raised mounds of ring particles so high in 2009 -- during Saturn's equinox when the ring plane pointed directly at the Sun -- that they cast notable shadows.

Tomorrow's picture: open space

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
Οι παρακάτω χρήστες έχουν πει 'Ευχαριστώ' στον/στην pazo για αυτό το μήνυμα:
Oasis (22-02-17)
  #3763  
Παλιά 23-02-17, 10:19
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

23 February 2017



Seven Worlds for TRAPPIST-1

Illustration Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, Spitzer Space Telescope, Robert Hurt (Spitzer, Caltech)

Explanation: Seven worlds orbit the ultracool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, a mere 40 light-years away. In May 2016 astronomers using the Transiting Planets and Planetesimals Small Telescope (TRAPPIST) announced the discovery of three planets in the TRAPPIST-1 system. Just announced, additional confirmations and discoveries by the Spitzer Space Telescope and supporting ESO ground-based telescopes have increased the number of known planets to seven. The TRAPPIST-1 planets are likely all rocky and similar in size to Earth, the largest treasure trove of terrestrial planets ever detected around a single star. Because they orbit very close to their faint, tiny star they could also have regions where surface temperatures allow for the presence of liquid water, a key ingredient for life. Their tantalizing proximity to Earth makes them prime candidates for future telescopic explorations of the atmospheres of potentially habitable planets. All seven worlds appear in this artist's illustration, an imagined view from a fictionally powerful telescope near planet Earth. Planet sizes and relative positions are drawn to scale for the Spitzer observations. The system's inner planets are transiting their dim, red, nearly Jupiter-sized parent star.

Tomorrow's picture: pixels in space

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
  #3764  
Παλιά 24-02-17, 10:01
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

24 February 2017



NGC 3621: Far Beyond the Local Group

Image Credit & Copyright: Processing - Robert Gendler, Roberto Colombari
Data - Hubble Legacy Archive, European Southern Observatory, et al.

Explanation: Far beyond the local group of galaxies lies NGC 3621, some 22 million light-years away. Found in the multi-headed southern constellation Hydra, the winding spiral arms of this gorgeous island universe are loaded with luminous blue star clusters, pinkish starforming regions, and dark dust lanes. Still, for astronomers NGC 3621 has not been just another pretty face-on spiral galaxy. Some of its brighter stars have been used as standard candles to establish important estimates of extragalactic distances and the scale of the Universe. This beautiful image of NGC 3621, is a composite of space- and ground-based telescope data. It traces the loose spiral arms far from the galaxy's brighter central regions for some 100,000 light-years. Spiky foreground stars in our own Milky Way Galaxy and even more distant background galaxies are scattered across the colorful skyscape.

Tomorrow's picture: launch and landing

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
Οι παρακάτω χρήστες έχουν πει 'Ευχαριστώ' στον/στην pazo για αυτό το μήνυμα:
Naias (24-02-17)
  #3765  
Παλιά 25-02-17, 10:34
Το avatar του χρήστη pazo
pazo Ο χρήστης pazo δεν είναι συνδεδεμένος
Administrator
 

Τελευταία φορά Online: Σήμερα 10:04
Φύλο: Άντρας

Astronomy Picture of the Day

Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.

25 February 2017



All Planets Panorama

Image Credit & Copyright: Tunç Tezel (TWAN)

Explanation: For 360 degrees, a view along the plane of the ecliptic is captured in this remarkable panorama, with seven planets in a starry sky. The mosaic was constructed using images taken during January 24-26, from Nacpan Beach, El Nido in Palawan, Philippines. It covers the eastern horizon (left) in dark early morning hours and the western horizon in evening skies. While the ecliptic runs along the middle traced by a faint band of zodiacal light, the Milky Way also cuts at angles through the frame. Clouds and the Moon join fleeting planet Mercury in the east. Yellowish Saturn, bright star Antares, and Jupiter lie near the ecliptic farther right. Hugging the ecliptic near center are Leo's alpha star Regulus and star cluster M44. The evening planets gathered along the ecliptic above the western horizon, are faint Uranus, ruddy Mars, brilliant Venus, and even fainter Neptune. A well labeled version of the panorama can be viewed by sliding your cursor over the picture, or just following this link.

Tomorrow's picture: cloudy day

ΠΗΓΗ: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
__________________
VmF Skisters of Mercy ©
An eye for an eye, will make us all blind... Mahatma Ghandi
Απάντηση με παράθεση
Απάντηση στο θέμα


Συνδεδεμένοι χρήστες που διαβάζουν αυτό το θέμα: 2 (0 μέλη και 2 επισκέπτες)
 
Εργαλεία Θεμάτων
Τρόποι εμφάνισης

Δικαιώματα - Επιλογές
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is σε λειτουργία
Τα Smilies είναι σε λειτουργία
Ο κώδικας [IMG] είναι σε λειτουργία
Ο κώδικας HTML είναι σε λειτουργία

Που θέλετε να σας πάμε;


Όλες οι ώρες είναι GMT +3. Η ώρα τώρα είναι 11:32.



Forum engine powered by : vBulletin Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.