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Monterey Bay Aquarium
One Nice Bug Per Day
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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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Solar System by Jian Guo on inprnt
See more illustration
So Super Awesome is also on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram
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A map of modern London drawn in the style of John Rocque’s 1746 Map of London, work in progress
© Mike Hall
Can you flatten a sphere?
The answer is NO, you can not. This is why all map projections are innacurate and distorted, requiring some form of compromise between how accurate the angles, distances and areas in a globe are represented.
This is all due to Gauss’s Theorema Egregium, which dictates that you can only bend surfaces without distortion/stretching if you don’t change their Gaussian curvature.
The Gaussian curvature is an intrinsic and important property of a surface. Planes, cylinders and cones all have zero Gaussian curvature, and this is why you can make a tube or a party hat out of a flat piece of paper. A sphere has a positive Gaussian curvature, and a saddle shape has a negative one, so you cannot make those starting out with something flat.
If you like pizza then you are probably intimately familiar with this theorem. That universal trick of bending a pizza slice so it stiffens up is a direct result of the theorem, as the bend forces the other direction to stay flat as to maintain zero Gaussian curvature on the slice. Here’s a Numberphile video explaining it in more detail.
However, there are several ways to approximate a sphere as a collection of shapes you can flatten. For instance, you can project the surface of the sphere onto an icosahedron, a solid with 20 equal triangular faces, giving you what it is called the Dymaxion projection.
The Dymaxion map projection.
The problem with this technique is that you still have a sphere approximated by flat shapes, and not curved ones.
One of the earliest proofs of the surface area of the sphere (4πr2) came from the great Greek mathematician Archimedes. He realized that he could approximate the surface of the sphere arbitrarily close by stacks of truncated cones. The animation below shows this construction.
The great thing about cones is that not only they are curved surfaces, they also have zero curvature! This means we can flatten each of those conical strips onto a flat sheet of paper, which will then be a good approximation of a sphere.
So what does this flattened sphere approximated by conical strips look like? Check the image below.
But this is not the only way to distribute the strips. We could also align them by a corner, like this:
All of this is not exactly new, of course, but I never saw anyone assembling one of these. I wanted to try it out with paper, and that photo above is the result.
It’s really hard to put together and it doesn’t hold itself up too well, but it’s a nice little reminder that math works after all!
Here’s the PDF to print it out, if you want to try it yourself. Send me a picture if you do!
Nice explanation of projection
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So who else is going to switch from tumblr to pillowfort as soon as possible
@ nerds hearing mysterious music on your dash
It’s your adblock software not completely blocking some ads that include autoplay content.
First off, Tumblr isn’t going to care, because Yahoo wants to make some money off this sinkhole of a site, and more and more intrusive ads are the way to do it, especially if we’re all trying to block them anyway.
However, running the site WITH adblock disabled, I could see the ads, but not mute them (pausing/muting went away if I scrolled up or down), so I’m going to say they’re being fucks anyway and don’t deserve the advertising money if they’re going to assault me with unwanted autoplay sound that I can’t stop.
Open up your ad blocker, create a custom filter for: *.tubemogul.com* and that should stop it. Has worked for me so far, but I literally just did this 10 minutes ago so I don’t know if it’s a complete or correct solution. If anyone’s a bigger nerd about adblock filtering or wants to dig for other sources for the autoplay ads, hit me up.
Bless websites like these, they help me so much during programming the parser of rinex files
Percent of inhabitants of Anglo-Celtic descent
US and Russian military bases abroad
Scheduled for launch on Sept. 8, NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission will travel to an asteroid, study it and return a sample to Earth for analysis. All of these goals depend on accurate mapping of the target, Bennu, so the team is gearing up for the challenges of cartography of an asteroid.
Geological map of Canada, made out of rocks taken from each region (x)
Countries in Europe mentioning other countries in their anthems.
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pretty good tuesday morning so far (please don’t remove credit!)