Wow, I...
Haven't been on here since January...
Stranger Things
YOU ARE THE REASON

pixel skylines

No title available
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
trying on a metaphor

@theartofmadeline

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Monterey Bay Aquarium
KIROKAZE
Misplaced Lens Cap
AnasAbdin

titsay
NASA
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

oozey mess
Jules of Nature

roma★

Janaina Medeiros

blake kathryn

seen from Germany
seen from Ukraine

seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Chile
seen from India
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Taiwan
seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from United States
seen from Poland

seen from Germany
seen from Uzbekistan

seen from Malaysia
seen from Philippines
@theheroofthestars-blog
Wow, I...
Haven't been on here since January...
Super Smash Bro Hetalia!
Pixiv ID: 5380749 Member: 零
Dear diary,
After I saw ‘Up’, I tried to make myself fly with balloons. Don’t ever try that.
Art from: X
Submitted Anonymously.
Blue Police
☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
((Woot! I’m gonna post an unfinished drawing I did while on school. This is my AU for Al ..=w= Umm…He’s an engineer.
And the blue rose is the symbol of his bloodline. It’s like “Jones” is known for inventing things and fixing blah blah blah. Also because of the ability to travel around through time using roses’ thorns. Touching it ‘till a little bit of blood drips down, making the color of the roses change to blue thus activating the “Time Traveling”. Yeaah…That kind of AU I have =w= It’s undeniably corny Let’s just say this AU have a kingdom etc. and he’s a craftsman or something //shot twice.))
theheroofthestars is in the city!
-Blinks, looking her over slowly- Alfred F. Jones….
*blinks as well, still smiling* Well gosh, no wonder you look like my brother! He’s got that name too! *it must be a counterpart* *how is she supposed to explain that?*
*he's kind of freaking out because he's never met another version of himself before, and last he checked, they didn't have that technology yet* H-He's got the same name!?
“Do you think they would have found it?” Arthur asked, trying his best to fake concern. He did actually lose something outside, but he would look for it once he got away. The front desk was close enough to the exit that he could just walk out. Maybe they would try to stop him, maybe not. Either way it didn’t bother him much.
He nodded, "Mhm, I'm sure they will have. Someone will have turned it in, people are always coming and going." He said in a light voice, smiling and cocking his head to the side. After a pause, he looked him up and down, "...So you're not an intern, are you?"
ooc; THANK GOD
I FINALLY GOT AROUND TO CHECKING MY ACCOUNTS FOR THE BETA TESTING AND THIS ONE IS SAFE
BUT MY MACAU RP BLOG HAS FALLEN
THIS IS SHIT
Alfred blinked, frowning for a second. Now he was almost certain he wasn’t an intern… And, he wouldn’t want him getting away before he found out. “Er,… Yeah sure. I’ll show you the back court yard. It’s fenced in n’ everything, so that the aerodynamics lab doesn’t loose anything when they set something off.”
Arthur didn’t want to be fenced in, that just made things unnecessarily hard. “Would the front be okay? I think I lost something out there. That’s why I hadn’t come in sooner.” he said, knowing the other was catching on. Not that it mattered if he figured it out.
Alfred raised an eyebrow, an unsure look upon his face. ".....We can just go down to the front desk, it's not big deal. People are coming and going all the time. They'll have dropped it off there... Oh! And then we could let the office ladies do your papers." He said, smiling almost too proudly and putting his hands in his coat pockets.
It clearly wasn’t Alfred favorite, from the peeved look on his face. He set the book down and flipped a page in the textbook. “So…. I need to write an essay on this… But.. I’m not good at inferencing.” He groaned, scratching the back of his neck.
“Well… I hope you have worked out that the themes are about marriage as an economic institution, as well as the effect of social role on individual happiness, right?” Matthew began, deciding to at least make sure the other had a basic idea of the themes and key facts.
Alfred thought for a moment. "Well... He was happy because he married her for her money, even though she's not happy. That count?"
Alfred looked him up and down again, scooting over the counter and digging around until he found his pager. He clicked it on and stuffed it in his pocket. If Arthur wasn’t really an intern,… Well, he didn’t think he would be mad. Maybe peeved at him for lying.. But it’s not like they were in a top secret lab, or anything. He was one of the more generous scientists there, and let the tourists poke around in his room from time to time. “Right… Now c’mon.” He grumbled, pushing the door open.
If the lab was top secret, Arthur would have been out of sight a while ago, but he could tell the difference. Security wasn’t tight here. “Can we stop outside first?” he asked, but didn’t give a reason. At least he had fun for the day, even if this would possible annoy Alfred. The student seemed kind enough, and Arthur would find some way to thank him for his time later.
Alfred blinked, frowning for a second. Now he was almost certain he wasn't an intern... And, he wouldn't want him getting away before he found out. "Er,... Yeah sure. I'll show you the back court yard. It's fenced in n' everything, so that the aerodynamics lab doesn't loose anything when they set something off."
“I’m a farmer. I’ve been doing it since I was little. It’s all I know.” she said with a slight shrug and smiled.
He blinked. “Oh wow! You must be strong, then—”
“N-Not that strong, I think…” she said with a nervous laugh and a slight smile.
He beamed at her, nonetheless. “Aw, sure you are… So if your a farmer, you have lots of fields n’ stuff right?”
She nodded and smiled in return. “Yes sir, of course I do! Crops need a place to grow and animals a place to graze.”
"That's cool! Cause then there are no trees, 'n you can see the sky, yeah?" He asked, getting shipper as he rocked back and forth on the heels of his feet.
theheroofthestars is in the city!
Hi! I’m doin’ fine, but who’re you?
I’m Amelia F. Jones, dear! Nice to meet you? What’s your name?
-Blinks, looking her over slowly- Alfred F. Jones....
swagtonio wants to see the stars!
Alfred’s eye twitched out of slight annoyance, and he looked a little confused. “Ah,… So you’re very in character then. Gotcha.” He did perk up at the mention of a Star Chart, however, and he tilted his head. “Yeah… I’m good at making those.”
Tonin sighed and shook his head. “I am no actor… I’m a pirata. Now, having a star chart could be useful on my trips to sea. Could you maybe make one for me then?” he tilted his head to the side, tapping his chin with his finger in thought. If he was useful, he wouldn’t have to try and kill him.
Alfred decided not to bother with trying to convince him otherwise. He sighed a little and nodded, pointing back behind the open door to his lab. "Yeah, sure, I can do one real quick. I guess you can come in if you want.... Er, do ya know where you want it aimed from? Or what types of measurements?"
Acoustic Levitation
Using sound waves to levitate individual droplets of solutions containing pharmaceutical drugs and drying them in mid-air. Why do this? This is useful because most of the drugs on the market are either amorphous or crystalline and the crystalline form doesn’t get absorbed by the body. So levitating the solution allows the drug to be made into an amorphous state (by evaporation) because if it were to touch any surface it would simply crystallize. They call this “containerless processing”.
The frequencies used are just above the audible range at about 22 kilohertz and when the two speakers are aligned they create two sets of sound waves, perfectly interfering with each other creating a phenomenon known as a standing wave. This allows the objects to levitate in areas within the waves known as nodes as the acoustic pressure is enough to cancel the force of gravity.
Video Source - Argonne National Laboratory
520-Day Simulated Mission to Mars Reveals Critical Data about Sleep and Activity Needs for Astronauts
In the first study of its kind, a team of researchers led by faculty at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the Baylor College of Medicine, has analyzed data on the impact of prolonged operational confinement on sleep, performance, and mood in astronauts from a groundbreaking international effort to simulate a 520-day space mission to Mars. The findings, published online-first in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, revealed alterations of life-sustaining sleep patterns and neurobehavioral consequences for crew members that must be addressed for successful adaption to prolonged space missions.
“The success of human interplanetary spaceflight, which is anticipated to be in this century, will depend on the ability of astronauts to remain confined and isolated from Earth much longer than previous missions or simulations,” said David F. Dinges, PhD, professor and chief, Division of Sleep and Chronobiology in the Department of Psychiatry at the Perelman School of Medicine, and co-lead author of the new study. “This is the first investigation to pinpoint the crucial role that sleep-wake cycles will play in extended space missions.”
The 520-day simulation, which was developed by the Institute for Biomedical Problems (IBMP) of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and sponsored in part by the European Space Agency (ESA), was initiated on June 3, 2010 when the hatches were closed on a 550-cubic-meter IBMP spacecraft-like confinement facility in Russia. The simulated mission, involving an international, six-man team of volunteers, involved more than 90 experiments and realistic scenarios to gather valuable psychological and medical data on the effects of a long-term deep space flight. The 520-day mission was broken into three phases: 250 days for the trip to Mars, 30 days on the surface, and 240 days for the return to Earth.
“As the only U.S. research team involved with the Mars 520-day simulation, the study required international coordination and strong collaborations to ensure that the experiments were conducted in a thorough and rigorous manner,” said Jeffrey P. Sutton, MD, PhD, professor and director, Center for Space Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, and senior study author. The investigators monitored the crew’s rest-activity patterns, performance and psychological responses to determine the extent to which sleep loss, fatigue, stress, mood changes and conflicts occurred during the mission.
Measurements included continuous recordings of body movements using wrist actigraphy (a noninvasive means of estimating sleep and movement intensity), and light exposure and weekly computer-based neurobehavioral assessments to identify changes in the crew’s activity levels, sleep quantity and quality, sleep–wake intervals, alertness performance, and workload throughout the 17 months of mission confinement.
Data from the actigraph devices revealed that crew sedentariness increased across the mission, as illustrated by decreased waking movement and increased sleep and rest times. The majority of crewmembers also experienced one or more disturbances of sleep quality, alertness deficits, or altered sleep–wake intervals and timing, suggesting inadequate circadian synchronization.
“Taken together, these measurements point to the need to identify markers of differential vulnerability to abnormal decrease in muscular movement and sleep– wake changes in crew members during the prolonged isolation of exploration spaceflight and the need to ensure maintenance of the Earth’s natural circadian rhythm, sleep quantity and quality, and optimal activity levels during exploration missions,” said Mathias Basner, MD, PhD, MSc, assistant professor of Sleep and Chronobiology in Psychiatry at Penn, and co-lead author.
The research team concludes that successful adaptation to such missions will require crews to transit in spacecraft and live in surface habitats that artificially mimic aspects of Earth’s sleep-wake activity cycles, such as appropriately timed light exposure, food intake, and exercise. This dynamic will be necessary to maintain neurocognition and human behavior throughout the flight.