Milky Way & meteor at Yellowstone Park
nevermind i resolved it
I SWEAR IT WAS WORKING FIVE SECONDS AGO AAA
f=ma exam…. either i cooked or completely flunked lol
GUESS WHO'S BACK!!
Not me.
I've finished writing my dissertation (no beta we die. we just die) but I still have my whole ass presentation to prepare.
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I'll defend this shit in two days.
28/jan/2025, tuesday
tiring day as usual but i pushed through!!
woke up at 6 (maybe i should try not falling asleep for hours after skl if that results with me waking up early without any alarm despite going to bed past 1 a.m.)
light stretching + exercise
did ok on the eng group presentation in school today but at least it's done
searched for poetry contest
physics lab record
duolingo lesson
practiced playing keyboard
I wanted to lock in before the new year, so I finally got through the final part of my circuits lecture!!! I think this one was the longest yet (it took me like the whole day).
I did stop for a walk outside though (that’s the picture I took on the left) so that helped me clear my mind a little bit. Definitely a goal of mine will be to focus more when it’s time to work and then relax guilt free in order to prevent days like this.
Overall, I’m not disappointed since it’s difficult material. I really like the problem solving aspect of it since it’s like working a puzzle— especially the multi-loop ones.
there's nothing more satisfying than the program finally working!! i went through multiple breaks of despair only for the stupidest line in the code to be the issue
“learning is never done without error, and defeat,"
The Soul Nebula taken by Kurt Wallberg on Februrary 1 2024
This image depicts The Soul Nebula (IC 1848) on the left and Westhout 5 (IC 1848) on the right. Westhout 5 is part of the bigger Soul Nebula. It’s an emission nebula— consisting of the star forming regions with ionized hydrogen gas and dark nebula. Dark nebulas are when the stellar medium is so dense that the light from objects behind it cannot pass through.
As you can see in the image, there are cavities in the gas. These were carved out by stars due to radiation and stellar winds. There is a theory of triggered star formation, which describes that these cavities compress the gas around it to trigger star formation. Images such as these have been used to help prove this theory, showing that the closer the star is to the cavity, the younger it is.
academia moodboard
6/feb/2025, thursday
wasted most my time after school
subsequently had a lil mental breakdown & then pulled myself out of spiraling in a lowk mature way
washed my hair
prepared for psychology practical/viva
💤 3-4 hrs - maybe this is the reason my mental health has been a bit shit. looking forward to sleeping properly & FINISHING MY PORTIONS BEFOREHAND SO THAT I DON'T HAVE TO STAY UP LATE STRESSING