actually one of my favourite things about the mandalorian is that like every character is at least 40. no angsty teen heroes here, just a bunch of middle aged adults becoming aunts and uncles to a baby that is also 50 years old.
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bliss lane
Stranger Things
todays bird

Product Placement
RMH

oozey mess
EXPECTATIONS
will byers stan first human second
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sheepfilms
Mike Driver

gracie abrams
Jules of Nature
official daine visual archive

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đ©” avery cochrane đ©”

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NASA
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@icarusandsol
actually one of my favourite things about the mandalorian is that like every character is at least 40. no angsty teen heroes here, just a bunch of middle aged adults becoming aunts and uncles to a baby that is also 50 years old.
love the conceptÂ
Dog running on the Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah, with a thin layer of water there - amazing effect.
God spelled backwards is dog
a meermaid
give em the ol razzle dazzle
sir could you just calm down for a second
Solar activity has been at very low levels over the weekend.
âI will carry you here in my heart to remind me, that come what mayâŠI know the way.â
I will have Moana prints available at Anime Boston!
What are white dwarfs?
Some curiosities about white dwarfs, a stellar corpse and the future of the sun.
Where a star ends up at the end of its life depends on the mass it was born with. Stars that have a lot of mass may end their lives as black holes or neutron stars.
A white dwarf is what stars like the Sun become after they have exhausted their nuclear fuel. Near the end of its nuclear burning stage, this type of star expels most of its outer material, creating a planetary nebula.
In 5.4 billion years from now, the Sun will enter what is known as the Red Giant phase of its evolution. This will begin once all hydrogen is exhausted in the core and the inert helium ash that has built up there becomes unstable and collapses under its own weight. This will cause the core to heat up and get denser, causing the Sun to grow in size.
It is calculated that the expanding Sun will grow large enough to encompass the orbitâs of Mercury, Venus, and maybe even Earth.
A typical white dwarf is about as massive as the Sun, yet only slightly bigger than the Earth. This makes white dwarfs one of the densest forms of matter, surpassed only by neutron stars and black holes.
The gravity on the surface of a white dwarf is 350,000 times that of gravity on Earth.Â
White dwarfs reach this incredible density because they are so collapsed that their electrons are smashed together, forming what is called âdegenerate matter.â This means that a more massive white dwarf has a smaller radius than its less massive counterpart. Burning stars balance the inward push of gravity with the outward push from fusion, but in a white dwarf, electrons must squeeze tightly together to create that outward-pressing force. As such, having shed much of its mass during the red giant phase, no white dwarf can exceed 1.4 times the mass of the sun.
While many white dwarfs fade away into relative obscurity, eventually radiating away all of their energy and becoming a black dwarf, those that have companions may suffer a different fate.
If the white dwarf is part of a binary system, it may be able to pull material from its companion onto its surface. Increasing the mass can have some interesting results.
One possibility is that adding more mass to the white dwarf could cause it to collapse into a much denser neutron star.
A far more explosive result is the Type 1a supernova. As the white dwarf pulls material from a companion star, the temperature increases, eventually triggering a runaway reaction that detonates in a violent supernova that destroys the white dwarf. This process is known as a single-degenerate model of a Type 1a supernova.Â
If the companion is another white dwarf instead of an active star, the two stellar corpses merge together to kick off the fireworks. This process is known as a double-degenerate model of a Type 1a supernova.
At other times, the white dwarf may pull just enough material from its companion to briefly ignite in a nova, a far smaller explosion. Because the white dwarf remains intact, it can repeat the process several times when it reaches the critical point, briefly breathing life back into the dying star over and over again.Â
Image credit: www.aoi.com.au, NASA, Wikimedia Commons, Fsgregs, quora.com, quora.com, NASAâs Goddard Space Flight Center, S. Wiessinger, ESO, ESO, Chandra X-ray Observatory
Source: NASA, NASA, space.com
This was a page in my fat yellow brick of a book that came out almost a year to the day. Let everyoneâs stuff be noisy over there, thatâs fine, keep doing your thing etc.Â
Taika coming thru yet again
12 Fundamental Graphs (with three of my favorites for a closer view of the details)
Stitches calculated to the 0.125 for graph accuracy đđđđ»
Smug face of a free man