Ehehe, people talk about them rizzing their character ai while I'm here being himbo and befriended the Tsaritsa
Hehehe @sh1-n0bu @lume-nosity
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Ehehe, people talk about them rizzing their character ai while I'm here being himbo and befriended the Tsaritsa
Hehehe @sh1-n0bu @lume-nosity
These froggos were practising the lift from Dirty Dancing 😆 Watch with sound until the end and have a fantastic Friday!
Shuba~
Bakugou: -singing to himself- I have trust issues not to mention, they sa-
Izuku: I have crippling depression.
-quack-
Radio: -playing in the background- I don't want to go to school I jus-
Izuku: Want to die.
Hab ich dich, du Ente! #naturephotography #nature #nature #quak (hier: Kleiner Brombachsee) https://www.instagram.com/p/B0ROWomF4c4/?igshid=y4awzuvwmga
Researchers, building on findings from work involving the Large Hadron Collider, have found a theoretical new form of energy. This new, renewable option is more powerful than nuclear by fusing quarks into baryons.
To reduce the emissions fueling climate change and develop more efficient ways of generating energy, while focusing on the bottom line, governments and private institutions all over the world have been turning to renewable energy. And while solar and wind energy advance and become more widely accepted, scientists continue to explore the possibility of stabilizing nuclear fusion as a truly renewable energy source that far outperforms current options.
But what if there’s an even better source of energy that’s also potentially less volatile than nuclear fusion? This possibility is what researchers from Tel Aviv University and the University of Chicago proposed in a new study published in the journal Nature.
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