(Source: neilcicierega, via yourpicketfence)








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This is Noah and he is a very solitary curious intellectual with a vast yet unrefined and distracting imagination. He has an unfortunate lack of any deep sense of emotion, passion, or ambition, that will most likely lead to a mediocre life. With a moderate amount of friends, he does not communicate with then often and is somewhat more distanced than others, therefore is one of those people who goes several days without replying to something (on the bright side you could do this to him and he wouldn't mind at all). He likes to compose music and play piano and waste his time tumbling and gaming. Noah has an unnatural affinity to puns that should probably be checked out. His main "fandoms" are displayed on the weird banner scarf things, but also he's been known to frequently reblog...
- Breaking Bad __________________
- Musical things__________________
-Sciencey mathy stuff______________
-Avatar________________________
-Marvel/DC____________________
- Dumb things that are clever________
- Dumb things that are just funny for no apparent reason because they are seated with so much irony on so many levels the fractal nature of the irony is too vast to comprehend.___________
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dead Youtube Channel dedicated to making videos related to Kingdom Hearts
• THAT ASK BOX THING OR WHATEVERWhat’s that? You guys wanted the PokeRap? Well, here you go! :D
Planck Time
What is the smallest unit of time you can conceive? A second? A millisecond? Hard to say seeing as how time is relative. Under the right circumstances, hours can fly by and seconds can feel like a lifetime. But unfortunately for physicists, time is not something that can be delt with so philosophically. And since they deal with cosmological forces both infinitesimally large and small, they need units that can objectively measure them. When it comes to dealing with the small, Planck Time is the measurement of choice. Named after German physicist Max Planck, the founder of quantum theory, a unit of Planck time is the time it takes for light to travel, in a vacuum, a single unit of Planck length. Taken together, they part of the larger system of natural units known as Planck units.
Originally proposed in 1899 by German physicist Max Planck, Planck units are physical units of measurement defined exclusively in terms of five universal physical constants. These are the Gravitational constant (G), the Reduced Planck constant (h), the speed of light in a vacuum (c), the Coulomb constant(ke or k), and Boltzmann’s constant (kB, sometimes k). Each of these constants can be associated with at least one fundamental physical theory: c with special relativity, G with general relativity and Newtonian gravity, with quantum mechanics, with electrostatics, and kB with statistical mechanics and thermodynamics. They were invented as a means of simplifying the particular algebraic expressions appearing in theoretical physics, especially in quantum mechanics.
Ultimately, Planck time is derived from the field of mathematical physics known as dimensional analysis, which studies units of measurement and physical constants. The Planck time is the unique combination of the gravitational constant G, the relativity constant c, and the quantum constant h, to produce a constant with units of time. They are often semi-humorously referred to by physicists as “God’s units” because eliminate anthropocentric arbitrariness from the system of units, unlike the meter and second, which exist for purely historical reasons and are not derived from nature. Some challenges to Planck’s Time have been mounted. For example, in 2003 during the analysis of the Hubble Space Telescope Deep Field images, some scientists speculated that where there are space-time fluctuations on the Planck scale, images of extremely distant objects should be blurry. The Hubble images, they claimed, were too sharp for this to be the case. Other scientists disagreed with this assumption however, with some saying the fluctuations would be too small to be observable, others saying that the speculated blurring effect that was expected was off by a very large magnitude. A unit of Planck Time can be expressed (in the third picture).
Read more: http://www.universetoday.com/79418/planck-time/#ixzz2U4Nz4Ov1
(via bored-and-profane)
we’ve done it kids we got homestuck on the national news
STOP FUCKGNI REBLOGGIN GTHIS
that is like the best post they could have gotten
I don’t see Homestuck…
shhh look closer
(via communicationsinbinary)