Auroa
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Auroa
Aurora
by Carsten Meyerdierks
(@pokege-ne-project ; Hope) "F-forgive the intrusion." It felt like the best idea to just apologize, even if theere was a sudden shaft the area. "May I ask, what this place is? Ican assume it's important to the both of you... Correct?"
The Espeon swiveled it's head to Hope. The Espeon whispering amongst itself for a brief moment. An Alolan Ninetails then reappeared from a gust of wind. Though seeming ahdonormaly see-through... Espeon gave the Ninetails a funny look.
"Are they for real? Do they not know where they are rn..."
The Ninetails try to nudge the Espeon, but seemed to have failed. The Ninetails then spoke.
"Shut up Stardust! Mhhmmm- Anyways~ You, mu friend, are standing right smack dab in the middle of the largest peek in the Mountain Range of Imaros! And I am Aurora! Of nothing... I just live here in the Mountain ranges with my awsome gf Stardust... I don't live in a super cool magical forest like my older sis, Venus.. Hmm.. Wonder what she's up to..."
(@pokege-ne-project, Hope)
Philip saying, “ Come on father, this is the 14th century!” In Sleeping Beauty will always live in my mind 24/7
Physicists find “definitive evidence” of mechanism behind brightest auroras
In August and September 1859, there was a major geomagnetic storm—aka, the Carrington Event, the largest ever recorded—that produced dazzling auroras visible throughout the US, Europe, Japan, and Australia. Scientists have long been fascinated by the underlying physical processes giving rise to such displays, but while the basic mechanism is understood, our understanding is still incomplete. According to a new paper published in the journal Nature Communications, electrons in the Earth's ionosphere catch a plasma wave in order to accelerate toward Earth with sufficient energy to produce the brightest types of auroras.
The spectacular kaleidoscopic effects of the so-called northern lights (or southern lights if they are in the Southern Hemisphere) are the result of charged particles from the Sun being dumped into the Earth's magnetosphere, where they collide with oxygen and nitrogen molecules—an interaction that excites those molecules and makes them glow. Auroras typically present as shimmering ribbons in the sky, with green, purple, blue, and yellow hues. The lights tend to only be visible in polar regions because the particles follow the Earth's magnetic field lines, which fan out from the vicinity of the poles.
Meet the Ivy
Here we have three Spanish demon mouse siblings and a jackalope sister
All the kids here are adopted by Laura Ivy
Definitely Not Murder Festival
- Town we are in is having festival in honor of a Goddess. We head out, not before getting asked to murder someone who burns death god statue. Naturally, we say “no”
- Go to the festival and give names to Guards. Imogen tells name is Kelly
- Aurora goes get some blue rock candy that tastes good and shares some with Courage
- Then goes and wins Arm Wrestling Competition, breaks Half-Orc’s hand and gets medallion.
- Courage talks to guy supposed to kill about death and the like
- Aleris goes and burns stables to free some horeses
- Imogen, sorry Kelly.... gets pigs fat and replaces some gel w/ it so that guy supposed to murder shall go up in flames when he does his thing
- Surprisingly, it works.
- Meanwhile, Silas is over singing and dancing in #PartyCamp
- All go back to Soaring Seagull and celebrate another adventure over with
Norway - by Dominic Kurz