Nsfw (not Safe For Water)

nsfw (not safe for water)

alkali metals

More Posts from Drunkscience4u and Others

8 years ago
In the next 3 weeks, Canada will make a decision that could save the bees for good
We won't see another opportunity like this again. Let's seize it.

um guys?

canada is currently considering banning imidacloprid, which is apparently “one of the most widely used bee-killing pesticides in the world”. this seems pretty huge, so if you’ve got two seconds, add your name to the list! as of posting this link, they need just over 8,000 more signatures by february 21!


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8 years ago
Hey Tumblr Fam, I Need Some Help

Hey Tumblr fam, I need some help

I created this anti-hangover popsicle, have tested the crap out of it, and yes it works amazing. My friends love it, but I’m struggling with sales. Just being honest here. 

Anyway, if you get a chance please check out our website Lushzie.com I would love your feedback.

So for all my tumblr fam we are offering the popsicle that will literally end your hangovers for just $1 (to cover shipping) use code “TUMBLRFAM” at checkout. 

The popsicle contains coconut water, electrolytes, and nutrients to protect your liver and help your body metabolize alcohol faster preventing a hangover.


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8 years ago

Six Things You Don’t Know About Snow

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FACT #1: Snow covers 30 percent of land on Earth.

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FACT #2: More than 1.2 billion people rely on melt from snowpack and glaciers.

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FACT #3: Snowmelt is the main source of water for 60 million Americans.

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FACT #4: Since 1967, 1 million square miles of spring snow cover has disappeared from the Northern Hemisphere – an area the size of the southwestern U.S.

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FACT #5: 70 percent of water from the snow-fed San Joaquin River irrigates California’s Central Valley.

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FACT #6: NASA’s Global Precipitation Measurement mission observes falling snow, even at the tops of hurricanes.

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Measuring how much water is in a snowpack is not easy. Scientists are investigating the best combination of sensors for different terrains. More accurate snow measurements will help scientists and decision makers better understand our world’s water supply and better predict floods and droughts.

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To follow scientists in the field studying snow, follow #SnowEx on Twitter and Facebook 


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8 years ago
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn
The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn

The First Galaxies: What We Know And What We Still Need To Learn

“As we look farther back in time, we find that younger galaxies formed stars at faster rates than galaxies do today. We can measure the star-formation rate, and find that at earlier and earlier times, it was more intense. But then we find it hits a peak when the Universe is about two billion years old. Go younger than that, and the rate goes down again.”

We’ve come incredibly far in our quest to learn how the Universe came to be the way it is today. We can see out in space for tens of billions of light years, to galaxies as they were when the Universe was only a few percent of its present age. We can see how galaxies evolve, merge and the stars inside change. And we can see to even before that, when no stars or galaxies existed at all. But how did we get from there to here? There are still plenty of gaps in the story. We’ve never seen the first stars or galaxies; we’ve never witnessed the start of cosmic reionization; we’ve never seen the star formation rate jump from zero to a real, finite number. Yet with James Webb and WFIRST on the horizon, these gaps in our knowledge may – if we’re lucky – all disappear.

Come get the story on what we know about the first galaxies, and what we hope and have left to still learn!


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8 years ago
Happy Valentine’s Day! 

Happy Valentine’s day! 

From Pluto, with love!

http://www.space.com/35262-pluto-heart-photos-nasa-gallery.html

8 years ago

https://www.facebook.com/drunkscience4u/videos/1418162364863308/

We all know this struggle, Cylinder. We all know. March 4, we make their dreams come true on YouTube! Tune in!


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8 years ago
China's crazy smog-sucking vacuum tower is actually working
Studio Roosegaarde's Smog Free Tower is actually cleaning up the air in Beijing, according to the Ministry of Environmental Protection in China.

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8 years ago

why are the orbeez screaming sdkfskldfl


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8 years ago
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?
Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?

Ask Ethan: Does Dark Energy Mean We’re Losing Information About The Universe?

“The universe’s expansion means our visible horizon is retreating; things faraway are vanishing continuously. (Albeit slowly, right now.) This would seem to imply we are losing information about the universe. So why is it the idea of losing information in a black hole’s event horizon is so controversial, if we’re constantly losing information to another horizon?”

As you look to greater and greater distances, you’re looking back in time in the Universe. But thanks to dark energy, what we can see and access today isn’t always going to be accessible. As galaxies grow more distant with the accelerated expansion of the Universe, they eventually recede faster than the speed of light. At present, 97% of the galaxies in the Universe aren’t reachable by us, even at the speed of light. But that isn’t the same as losing information. As a galaxy crosses over the horizon, its information never disappears from the Universe connected to us entirely. Instead, it gets imprinted on the cosmic horizon, the same way that information falling into a black hole gets imprinted on its event horizon. But there’s a fundamental difference between a black hole’s decaying horizon to the cosmic horizon’s eternal persistence, and that makes all the difference.

Come learn why even with dark energy, we don’t lose information about the Universe, but why the black hole information paradox is real!


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8 years ago
If You Say Drunken Science Bloopers Three Times Fast, A Beaker Full Of Good Whiskey Appears Because Science.

If you say drunken science bloopers three times fast, a beaker full of good whiskey appears because science. Link in bio. #funny #science #stem #experiment #bloopers #youtube http://ift.tt/2lQIguX


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drunkscience4u - Drunk Science
Drunk Science

The official page of Drunk Science! An enthusiastic host performs simple experiments and then humorously explains the science behind the result, all while visibly drunk.

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