This Is What I Call Dedication. Reblog If You Agree. 😊

This Is What I Call Dedication. Reblog If You Agree. 😊

This is what I call dedication. Reblog if you agree. 😊

More Posts from Doodleglop and Others

7 years ago
Tell Them Winter Has Come.
Tell Them Winter Has Come.
Tell Them Winter Has Come.

Tell them winter has come.

2 years ago

Humanity.... I see no humanity. How hard is it for one person to just live their life without violence and hate. I may not share the same interests or personal preferences as somebody, but that's what makes us individual people. So good luck to you on your journey through life, I wish you nothing but happiness even if we've never met. But to hate and to wish harm to someone wether it's someone you know or you know nothing about, to willingly and knowingly hate or attack another living being for no reason other than your own ego... is nothing short of the most fundamental primordial evil. As long as this continues humanity will never achieve a state of utopia. If you have the choice to make one person happy or one person sad, and you willingly choose the latter, you are what holds the world back. Choose love. Choose friendship. Choose kindness. Choose to help those who are in need. Let's end this madness. The answer to end all conflicts is not a mystery, it is simple. Compassion. So why... why must we continually live in a world that suffers, when peace is just a single choice away.

2 years ago

♡

2 years ago
Via Https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/us/abortion-laws-roe-v-wade.html
Via Https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/us/abortion-laws-roe-v-wade.html
Via Https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/us/abortion-laws-roe-v-wade.html

via https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/us/abortion-laws-roe-v-wade.html

With Roe Overturned, How State Abortion Laws Are Changing
nytimes.com
The New York Times is tracking abortion laws in each state following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.
7 years ago

Eclipse 2017: A Unique Chance for Science

On Aug. 21, the Moon will cast its shadow down on Earth, giving all of North America the chance to see a solar eclipse. Within the narrow, 60- to 70-mile-wide band stretching from Oregon to South Carolina called the path of totality, the Moon will completely block out the Sun’s face; elsewhere in North America, the Moon will cover only a part of the star, leaving a crescent-shaped Sun visible in the sky.

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Find eclipse times for your location with our interactive version of this map.

A total solar eclipse happens somewhere on Earth about once every 18 months. But because Earth’s surface is mostly ocean, most eclipses are visible over land for only a short time, if at all. The Aug. 21 total solar eclipse is different – its path stretches over land for nearly 90 minutes, giving scientists an unprecedented opportunity to make scientific measurements from the ground.

No matter where you are, it is never safe to look directly at the partially eclipsed or uneclipsed Sun. Make sure you’re prepared to watch safely, whether that’s with solar viewing glasses, a homemade pinhole projector, or online with us at nasa.gov/eclipselive.

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Within the path of totality, the Moon will completely obscure the Sun’s face for up to 2 minutes and 40 seconds, depending on location. This will give people within the path of totality a glimpse of the innermost reaches of the Sun’s corona, the outer region of the atmosphere that is thought to house the processes that kick-start much of the space weather that can influence Earth, as well as heating the whole corona to extraordinarily high temperatures.

In fact, scientists got their first hint at these unusually high temperatures during the total solar eclipse of 1869, when instruments detected unexpected light emission. It was later discovered that this emission happens when iron is stripped of its electrons at extremely high temperatures.

This region of the Sun’s atmosphere can’t be measured at any other time, as human-made instruments that create artificial eclipses must block out much of the Sun’s atmosphere – as well as its bright face – in order to produce clear images.

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We’re funding six science investigations to study the Sun’s processes on Aug. 21. Teams will spread out across the path of totality, focusing their instruments on the Sun’s atmosphere. One team will use a pair of retro-fitted WB-57F jets to chase the Moon’s shadow across the eastern US, extending the time of totality to more than 7 minutes combined, up from the 2 minutes and 40 seconds possible on the ground.

Our scientists are also using the Aug. 21 eclipse as a natural science experiment to study how Earth’s atmosphere reacts to the sudden loss of solar radiation within the Moon’s shadow.

image

One region of interest is Earth’s ionosphere. Stretching from roughly 50 to 400 miles above Earth’s surface, the tenuous ionosphere is an electrified layer of the atmosphere that reacts to changes from both Earth below and space above and can interfere with communication and navigation signals.

image

The ionosphere is created by ionizing radiation from the Sun. When totality hits on Aug. 21, we’ll know exactly how much solar radiation is blocked, the area of land it’s blocked over and for how long. Combined with measurements of the ionosphere during the eclipse, we’ll have information on both the solar input and corresponding ionosphere response, enabling us to study the mechanisms underlying ionospheric changes better than ever before.

The eclipse is also a chance for us to study Earth’s energy system, which is in a constant dance to maintain a balance between incoming radiation from the Sun and outgoing radiation from Earth to space, called the energy budget. Like a giant cloud, the Moon during the 2017 total solar eclipse will cast a large shadow across a swath of the United States.

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Our scientists already know the dimensions and light-blocking properties of the Moon, and will use ground and space instruments to learn how this large shadow affects the amount of sunlight reaching Earth’s surface, especially around the edges of the shadow. This will help develop new calculations that improve our estimates of the amount of solar energy reaching the ground, and our understanding of one of the key players in regulating Earth’s energy system — clouds.

Learn all about the Aug. 21 eclipse at eclipse2017.nasa.gov, and follow @NASASun on Twitter and NASA Sun Science on Facebook for more. Watch the eclipse through the eyes of NASA at nasa.gov/eclipselive starting at 12 PM ET on Aug. 21.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

7 years ago
Winterfelldaily Is A New Blog By @ashavgreyjoy And @sansarya Dedicated 100% To House Stark Of Winterfell

Winterfelldaily is a new blog by @ashavgreyjoy and @sansarya dedicated 100% to House Stark of Winterfell as well as the actors who portray them. Bringing you content related to the Stark from ‘Game of Thrones’ and ‘A Song of Ice and Fire’.

Tag your House Stark edits with #winterfelldaily.

7 years ago
ASOIAF Houses - House Stark
ASOIAF Houses - House Stark
ASOIAF Houses - House Stark
ASOIAF Houses - House Stark

ASOIAF Houses - House Stark

House Stark of Winterfell is a Great House of Westeros, ruling over the vast region known as the North and the Vale as Kings in the North from their seat in Winterfell, recently retaken by the Starks from House Bolton. It is by far one of the oldest lines of Westerosi nobility, claiming a line of descent stretching back over eight thousand years. The head of the house is the Lord of Winterfell.

2 years ago
image

Imagine being the employee who got to do this. I would treasure this memory for the rest of my life.

2 years ago

i hate you subscription services. i hate you streaming. i hate you computers that aren’t made to be able to use dvds or cds. i hate you not being able to have anything as your own. i hate you having to endlessly pay for something you should only have to pay for once.

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doodleglop - DynamicViolence
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