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Cool Stuff that can be seen as scary

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Thread replies: 359
Thread images: 58

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Begin
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>>1510746
You gotta post too nigger
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>>1510950
Fuck wrong file
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>>1510954
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>>1510957
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>>1510746
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>>1510963
Creepy story with a 'cool' twist
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>>1510964
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>>1510965
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>>1510969
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>>1510974
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>>1510966
What's happening here?
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>>1510978
cobalt (i think) reactor being fired up in darkness and then lighting the water they use for dampening radioactivity with cherenkov radiation, which is what produces that blue light
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>>1510950
>>1510954
>>1510957
>>1510963
>>1510965
>>1510969
>>1510974
>>1510977
Right thats all I got.
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>>1510983
but i want more
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>>1510981
>>1510978
A pulse of the TRIGA Nuclear Reactor, which demonstrates the negative temperature coefficient of reactivity inherent with the uranium zirconium hydride (UZrH) fuel. The reactor momentarily goes supercritical (meaning the fission reaction is both intensifying and perpetuating, releasing more neutrons than the control rods are absorbing), but the fuel is designed to become less and less reactive as the temperature increases. As the reactor starts heating up, the fuel starts killing the fission process, and at the end the aluminum-boron control rods are inserted to stop the reaction altogether. From 0-240 MW takes about a fifth of a second.

The blue light is Cherenkov radiation, which is produced when the charged particles are travelling faster than the phase velocity of light of a medium. I believe TRIGA is a light-water reactor, so the charged particles would have to be travelling faster than 230,840,190 m/s (rough estimate with refractive index of 1.33) to produce the blue flash/glow.
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Prior thread, "Thought provoking" gifs

>>1476620
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>>1510983
To the normal person, this would sound scary with no context.
But to me, I can't help but laugh.
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>>1510963
Explain this shit right now you fucking technowizard
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>>1510746
so just russia general?
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>>1513286
https://youtube.com/watch?v=RQlrSvnG3dg

https://youtube.com/watch?v=8RB1k8gyVbM
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>>1510969
That's just mercury thiosulfate beneath a pile of ammonium dichromate.
Only thing scary about is that it gives off vapours that are corrosive (sulfur oxides), toxic (mercury) and carcinogenic (chromium).
Chemical smoke - don't breathe this.
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Just made this.
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>>1513730
http://www.universetoday.com/23342/wr-104-wont-kill-us-after-all/
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>>1513748
I know. But think of all the people that will shit their pants when you post this.

I mean in the last thread there were like 15 anons that shat themselves at seeing some completeley harmless black holes.
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>>1510963
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-udfiFZcko
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>>1510974
fuck me
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>>1513748
>Imaged via the keck telescope
>it kek'd us all indeed
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>>1510954
fucking terrifying
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>>1511174
thx nigga
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>>1514177
>implying that's even large
If the supermassive black hole in the center of the milky way simply ceased to exist most of the galaxy would not even notice, it's such a small fraction of the total weight.
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>>1510746
Story?
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>>1510977
>extinction
It's called a (the) Carrington event because a fucker named Carrington recorded such a blast when it hit earth 1859. Unless you count fried phones as an extinction event you're kinda exaggerating.
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>>1514731
That was an X2. The one that missed us was an X5.

Anything higher than an X4 funnels plasma to the surface of the planet.

And due to the way the magnetic field funnels said plasma, being on the dark side of the planet at the time doesn't help.
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>>1514731
>>1514754
Well, that and X2-X4 still fries your whole power grid. Those giant transformers take months to replace, so meantime, with all the infrastructure kaput, a whole lotta people are gonna die.

An M-class flare might just fry your phones and TV though. Dunno if it'd be enough to serve as a wakeup call though. Granted, I suspect an asteroid could wipe out a major city or two, and we'd still be twiddling our collective thumbs.
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>>1510969
Wrong fucking Souls reference, nigger.

It's supposed to be BedOfChaos.webm
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>>1514754
>>1514756

Seems like a whole bunch of wishful, speculative thinking considering every single so called measurement of the earth's magnetic field has been done under it.
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>>1513286
2 scales playing at the same time, if you listen closely in the middle the overall pitch goes down
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>>1514785
Yeah, given what the models show, it is wishful thinking to assume we'd survive one. But, given that evidence suggests that only one of the global extinction events might have been the result of such a flare, it seems unlikely we'd get slammed by an Earth-frying one now - even if we just nearly did. On the other hand, the other four extinction events all have different yet equally disastrous causes, and all evidence shows that most of those events should happen a lot more often than they do. We, similarly, had two KT sized asteroids pass between us and the moon in the 90's, and didn't see either of them until after they had passed. In the 2008, a GRB that at first seemed to be aimed right at us, turned out to be off by a few degrees.

Given everything that can go wrong, both terrestrial and cosmological, the closest thing we've had to evidence of divine providence, is that there's only been five global extinction events, and not five million.
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>>1510963
the first one goes up and the the second one starts low. stupid.
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>>1510954
>>1514177
>>1514720
Is it weird that I've always wanted to be sucked into a black hole just to see what happens?
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>>1510974
Holy shit. I always knew submarines were terrifying, but fuck.
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>>1511174
/sci/ deserves you
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>>1511174
Jesus christ, i've never felt this much dumber than another human before.
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>>1511174
Thanks Nukebro
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>>1514818
Instant death, I expect.
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>>1514818
Spaghettification. You wouldn't really experience it happening since you'd just be stretched out for a long long time. There was this in depth explanation on reddit I think if you fancy searching around.
Sources: A book when I was 16
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>>1514818
as >>1514949 said, because of blackholes bend time and overall everything near it, you would be "stretched" and because of all that time bending mumbojumbo you would probably be dead before you could reach it "edges",

For more "visualized" explanation fill your sink with water, pull the plug out and drop big blob of some paint near vortex and imagine that that paint is solid material, eg spaceship that would be rip apart atom by atom to big blob of matter that would be stretched in time.
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>>1514856
Technically that's just knowledge, not intellect
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>>1510963
Risset Rhythm

by https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Claude_Risset

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQf_tS5WAP4

Probably better quality version: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Risset_accelerando_beat1_MCLD.ogg
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>>1511174
essentially light travels slower in water but by just a little. when the radiation is produced it is able to travel through water faster than light. this is relative to a sonic boom or photonic boom as the radiation breaks the light barrier producing the blue light.
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>>1510746
When the Nazis open the Ark.
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>>1515283
Holy shit, that's actually awesome anon
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>>1515283
>>1515664
here's an explanation closer to the original discovery in 1976 by McGurk.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGurk_effect
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>>1515283

where have I heard her voice before
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>>1516038
Nice propaganda, faggot. The ice caps were supposed to melt 4 years ago. And baton rouge is still dry. Try again
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>>1516060
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/18941-arctic-sea-ice-and-al-gores-prediction-2013

Not that "OMG grobal wermink!" was really the point...
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>>1514949
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pAnRKD4raY

>>1515723
Are you greek? She sounds exactly like a documentary narrator on greek tv.
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>>1515283
>>1515723
Jaye Griffiths
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0341694/?ref_=ttfc_fc_cl_t1

Full episode: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x1y2uep_e04-is-seeing-believing_tv

Other: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Horizon_episodes#Series_47:_2010.E2.80.932011

webm related is Franssen effect demo cropped from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwBychCd9hg
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>>1510965
nice
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>>1516486
is he dead now
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>>1515283
>>1515710
Do I have autism?
I don't hear what they say I'm supposed to hear.
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>>1516516
I heard the same all the time. Maybe this is why I find it hard to listen to people.
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>>1516486
Mexican_Frodo.webm
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>>1511174
nice bro science
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>>1515710
didnt work on me
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>>1515723
She sounds like Gideon from CW's Flash and Legends
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>>1511174
You talk like a fag and your shit's all retarded
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>>1510954
The power of 20 Billion Suns.

I want that mass
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>>1515710
Btw mcgurk effect doesn't work on fags
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>>1516666

out of curiosity
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>>1516516
>>1516521
Are you looking at the man's mouth while listening and is it in focus? Is the image size large enough to clearly see his mouth?

Do you fall into any of the groups on the wikipedia page that tend to show reduced effect?

The effect is quite strong for certain language groups, including English but weak for Chinese and Japanese for example.

I am on the autism spectrum but it's strong and unmaskable for me - even when I understand the effect - if the mouth forms an "f" consonant that's how I'll hear the "b" sound, until I close my eyes.

>>1516709
No evidence for this in the literature.
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Searching through my folder, beginning dump
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That's all I got
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>>1515283
>>1515710
I don't hear Da Da Da, I hear BaBaBa

Does it not work for autism? I have asd if that matters.
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>>1510983
What are the origins of this shout?
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>>1510954
Fuck astronomy.
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>>1516906
Sounds like that black dude with the most ridicolous orgasm screaming.
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>>1516493
IIRC yes. I think the guy in the suit is the same French vulcanologist who was killed with his wife doing this shit on Mt Pernamtubo (sp?) in the Philippines in like 1991 or some shit.
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>>1516990
right person, wrong volcano. It's Maurice Krafft, killed in 1991 on Mt Unzen in Japan.
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>>1516821
thats really cool, I hope that cat's ok though
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>>1516821
There is an error in this. They intercepted the signal from the optical nerve, not the brain.
Now don't get me wrong, this is still quite amazing but the image is nowhere near being processed into "thoughts". Yes, the signal in the optical nerve is already split and processed but it's nowhere near any of the neurons we think are responsible for interpreting an image. Besides reconstructing an image from the thousands of tiny optical stacks in the brain is quite impossible even with todays technology, we don't have the resolution for that yet.
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>>1510957
Found the YT, any luck with the source music?
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>>1510746
Phoenix summoning ritual
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>>1516850
what a fucking hellscape of existence
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>>1516850
This is why the Brotherhood of steel is a viable option
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>>1514856

He's stating in a way more technical than is necessary to get his ideas across. It makes him seem smarter than he is though weather its intentional or not, who knows.
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>>1517147

The "rat brains" are grown in a lab, they aren't removed from living rats.
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>>1517062
Thanks for clearing that up, anon.
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>>1515283
I just kept hearing baa
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>>1516883
What does this mean?
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>>1511174
Jep thats exactli what I was thinking
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>>1517258
that neurons stay alive even outside of the body?!
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>>1517420
>>1517258
It means that behavior can be generated (apparently) randomly. With no input.
It means that animals might not be simple automatons that only respond to external stimuli.
So where does this swimming behavior come from? What is that nervous systems "thinking" without a body?
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>>1517116
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BDMmj5WgB8c
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>>1514818
aids
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>>1516493
>>1516990
>>1516998
I wouldn't mind going out like that, suffocating on lava, my pain receptors overloaded, and finally my flesh, blood and bone become one with the Earth itself as I die.
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>>1516821
Wow shit
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>>1517198
>The "rat brains" are grown in a lab

Now imagine a human brain grown in a lab and put into a robotic body.

IMAGINE!!!

I would requestion everything about consciousness completely utterly and entirely if it was made for real.
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>>1510746
That would have been fucking amazing for a sound effect, if only the cheeki breeks would have stayed quiet.
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>>1516038
I don't know why, but I almost want this translate to an african language.
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>>1515710
This is weird since I'm hearing "Aa Aa Aa" rather than Da Da Da.
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>>1517062
>They intercepted the signal from the optical nerve, not the brain.
No, just the opposite - it's connected to the visual cortex, not the optic nerve.

>>1517030
Which is why this cat is dead.
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>>1517553
wait, what? How was it looking then? Electric stimulation.
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>>1517561
The cat was alive, at the time of the recording, but it's nearly impossible to remove a series of cortex probes that invasive without killing the cat, so said cat is dead now.

>>1517436
It's called "reflex". Common activity patterns are stored in muscle nerves, more so among muscle nerves with only one pattern. A severed left hand will grasp, disconnected hearts will beat, severed right hands will masterbate.
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>>1516850
All I can imagine this whole time is the rat silently screaming now knowing what the fuck is going on. WHERE ARE MY HANDS?!
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>>1517590
>>1516850
I'm not familiar with this particular experiment, but it maybe a culture of rat neurons, rather than an entire rat brain.

Despite the video's claim, it isn't the first time it's been done. There was a similar experiment in 2008 with a culture of rat neurons hooked to a flight simulator. The neurons were only provided with nutrition so long as the plane was kept aloft and at a low altitude. Pretty soon the neurons had "learned" to keep the plane at said altitude and to avoid mountains, even after introducing storms and turbulence to the simulation.
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>>1517587
poor cat, but it really makes sense.

All in the name of science I guess.
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>>1517258
it is hallucinating, basically
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>>1517597
half life in real life confirmed
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>>1517587
No. Reflexes are caused exclusively by external stimuli. Also a severed hand won't grasp because the flexor muscles for closing the digits are in the forearm.
And severed heart beats because of the pacemaker cells in the sinoatrial node. A very specialized structure to create rythmic impulses autonomously.

>>1517553
It's not connected to the visual cortex. They connected the lateral geniculate nucleus, which is not part of the visual cortex. It's a pathway to the VC which processes the signal into little chunks and correlates the split up signal from the left and right hemispheres of the left and right eyes. The LGN basically unfucks the weirdly distorted and split signal from the optic nerve, which is precisely why they tapped their probes into there.
Here is the actual paper: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10479703
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>>1517657
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtnHPNlzCz8
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>>1510950

I pooped a little.
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>>1516893
Huh, same. And with someone else with autism, too. Interesting neuroscience or something.
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>>1516827
godamn agropom
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>>1516852
wieliczka?
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>>1516665
And you almost got quads. Better luck next time
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>>1510746
What the blyat is this?
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>>1517905
STALKER Anomalies.
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>>1516893
>>1517708
You don't have autism, you're just retarded.
Not only do the images not correspond with 'Da', it is clearly explained that the only sound is "Ba, with a B".
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>>1511174
ok
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>>1510746
This is in the zone. I think this is the meatgrinder from the time when Redrick made it to the end.
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>>1516038
is this real?
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>>1513730
Fucking giygas
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>>1515271

Every time I heard this I just imagine my girlfriend sucking my dick in berserker mode while I am not try to cum and holding on until she get tired
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>>1517600
You are correct anon. Ive seen this pop up before. The video is misleading.
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>>1516891
I got that feeling in my balls watching this.
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>>1516928
Fuck you nigger can you even into strings
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>>1518669
is there a name for that feeling?
>>
>>1515710
>>1515283


>those poor fucks who had to do the acting
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>>1516060
no, baton rouge flooded 6 months ago.
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>>1518577
It's really intended to make you think that melting polar ice caps will ruin the US and Korea will somehow be spared due to aisan superiority or some shit, and if you don't want that you have to stop driving, demand we use up all the neodymium in wind turbines that'll last maybe a decade, and quit manufacturing stuff entirely.

The real solution for man made global warming by the way is murder, lots and lots of murder, and any other proposed solutions are just a distraction to keep you buying new things and to keep the grant money flowing.
>>
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>>1510954
>enjoying a nice game session of Space Engine Explorer, when suddenly...
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>>1516827
A rare form of lightning, consisting of a bright, luminous ball that moves rapidly along objects or floats in the air.
>sleep in peace guys
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>>1516597
kek
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>>1516601
>palm-point pushing on your photoromic no-frame glasses just after you declared you'd blow up the world
choke me daddy
>>
>>1510746
The shadows have returned
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>>1517597
Isn't it just a fucking quad drone with a sphere around it
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>>1518838
It's more of an abomination between a plane and a helicopter design with a round cage around it. Quad drones don't have the same wing design. But yes they're similar.
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>>1517680
>>1517587
>>1517436
If you wanted any kind of modern documentary you'd see that there's a number of animals that are complex enough for sentience and emotions besides humans. They're just retarded in comparison to us. I think dolphins and octupus are the ones that come closest to us but still are only as smart as a 3-5 year old. But that summary doesn't really touch up on the real differences. Things like whales have their brains designed in a way that makes them a lot more emotional than us even, but that just means they feel emotion a lot stronger than we do. It has nothing to do with intelligence itself.
>>
>>1510974
I once helped build a guy a midget sub and he took it out for a spin in a big lake in New England and I never saw or heard of him afterwords.
>>
>>1516486
at least he has the high ground
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>>1518740
First time I played space engine I went straight for a Black Hole and then had to nope the fuck away because it freaked me out. It's an odd sensation, like looking at a graphic simulation of satan casually raping your mother. They're not evil, but fuck me if it doesn't feel like it.
>>
>>1514754

Whats this from?
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>>1518849
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
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>>1510954

why cant one of these pass near earth?
>>
>>1514818
You wouldn't see much because it's pitch black.
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>>1513748
FUCK!
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>>1517488
yeah its how i plan to kill myself
>>
>>1516821
shit that spooked me a little
>>
>>1519093
There's no reason one couldn't. However the closest known black holes are thousands of light years away, They'd be detected by their influence on the space surrounding them (nearby stars, gravitational lensing).

There are plenty of more imminent threats to humanity to worry about, like asteroid strikes.


>>1519100
>it's pitch black
If there's material falling into the black hole you might see radiation from that. You'd be dead long before you reach the event horizon though.
>>
>>1510969
imagine going back in time and showing this reaction to some monks in the middle ages
the freakout would be audible from Mars
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>>1510954
this really makes you realize how small and insignificant humans are on a cosmic scale
>>
>>1516821
that ending is spooky as fuck
>cats might actually see people as giant cats
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>>1510977
>2012
you had me for a second
>>
>>1510746
Linking the first flame.
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>>1518762
no
it's the power lines frying
how fuckin stupid are you?
>>
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>>1515054
http://www.sjcrothers.plasmaresources.com/
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>>1510969
What's the song? It's mesmerising.
>>
>>1514756
>and we'd still be twiddling our collective thumbs.
Exactly. The whole universe is trying to wipe us out and we're still arguing about what humans should be allowed to live in what geographical area on a giant ball of rock and ice hurtling through space at 100.000 km/hr.
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>>1519256
why do the lighting looking things stay on the bottom/top of the box thing?
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>>1519270
Why would they move? I'm not sure I understand the question
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>>1517153
Underrated.
>>
>>1519256
What's going on here?
>>
>>1519289
just a lil' dose of lethal radiation on a camera
>>
>>1519282
The video was, i'm assuming, made by building some sort of box out of clear plastic. A camera is inside with the lense facing up and it's run through an x ray machine. When the video first starts, the plastic on top is clear. After the box passes through the xya, the plastic thing on top is almost impossible to see through because it's covered in lines that kind of look like how lighting looks.
>>
>>1519304
ah my bad, i read "lighting".
I don't know much about the test, except that its a sheet of acrylic passing through an electron beam irradiator
>>
>>1519304
>>1519307
did some googling, turns out they're called lichtenberg figures
>>
>>1510965
That's such a good scary story holy shit. Too bad the clip is a little ruined by the dumbshit host needing the twist to be explained to him.
>>
>>1516827
>>1517761
top fucking kek
>>
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>>1516827
these retards where fucking staring at an active arch flash, their vision is permanently damaged
>>
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>>1510746
>>
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>>1510950
This wasn't hard to fap to at all. More like this?
>>
>>1516838
Truly, the future is bright.
>>
>>1517593
Oh, this could not be more satisfying.
>>
>>1519244
I really don't know how to deal with people like this. I see it in a lot of the alzheimer's patients I deal with - they can't be wrong, therefore the world is. Regardless of how many tens of thousands of people and piles of evidence come to show them that they are wrong, they will keep digging up and misinterpreting minutia to prove they aren't in an ever increasingly elaborate web of delusion. It's just tragic and frustrating to watch, but yeah, you can often see similar mindsets going full-bore on the internet.
>>
>>1514818
you'd probably get mugged.
>>
>>1519141
>They'd be detected by their influence on the space surrounding them (nearby stars, gravitational lensing).
You're very unlikely to detect a fast moving even mid-sized black hole. We generally can only find large, relatively stationary ones, and can only pin down ones under a thousand solar masses or so when they are right up against a star and sucking it down.

But yeah, asteroids, solar flares, GRBs, methane pockets, pacific rim fire storms, yellowstone, polar reversal, flipping pulsars, cosmic strings, vacuum decay, massive ocean floor bacterial blooms, solar destabilization, weaponized viruses, plastic eating fungi, nuclear war, and meme magic, are all more or less likely to kill you.

>>1519141
>You'd be dead long before you reach the event horizon though.
Oddly, with the very large ones, assuming there's no other matter or energy being drawn in at the time, you can, theoretically, enter the event horizon intact. You ain't ever coming out again, but the gravitational differential between your various bits would be minimal.
>>
>>1518679
Not that anon, but I'm not sure. I personally always feel it in the tip of my dick instead of my balls.
>>
>>1519350
This will always have my favorite sound in a webm. That hatch opening is by far the best thing I've ever heard.
>>
>>1510746
Why are they burning those horses?
>>
>>1515435
>photonic boom
I like that terminology
>>
>>1518737
>Korea
>>
>>1516838
dat ghost in the shell music
>>
>>1519343
deus exxxxx
>>
>>1519406
>you can, theoretically, enter the event horizon intact.
Wouldn't it feel like you were falling forever, because of time dilation?
>>
>>1519731
Well, sorta - time dilation effects are observer based, so time would seem to move normally for you, if you checked your watch, but assuming you were magically indestructible, long after that odd point where you could see the back of your own head, everything else in the universe, that you could see by looking back up through that ever-shrinking hole of light you came through, would be happening faster and faster, until it kinda happened all at once, from the moment you fell in, to a time beyond the heat death of the universe, just before the black hole will evaporate. As you fell closer to the singularity, that viewport would shrink and red shift out of existence, and yeah, you'd just be eternally falling towards the singularity in the dark, which would be eternally falling ahead of you, making gravitational effects forever more extreme.

From the outside, anything beyond the event horizon effectively never happens. So, from their perspective, you'll be falling eternally, eventually red-shifting out of existence.

The thing would finally evaporate, but, even if you were indestructible, with a large black hole, by the time it did, the rest of the universe would be expanding so quickly that every particle of energy released from said would be moving so quickly that it could never hope to interact with any other, each moving away from every other at, relatively, beyond the speed of light. If you were to follow one, each would effectively be in its own universe.

So, yeah, if you were somehow able to survive it, you would live through the entire life of the universe, in a matter of moments, and watch it through a window.
>>
>>1511174
this post fucking TRIGAs me
>>
>>1517488
God damn it, I already fapped today.
>>
>>1518585
First thing I thought of when the webm started.

I haven't even played Earthbound.
>>
>>1515283
>>1515710
It isn't an illusion. It is lack of enunciation on the speakers part. Like the difference between Dog, Bog, and Fog is quite distinct. Which is why you can tell what word it is when someone speaks and enunciates clearing while talking to your via a phone without the context of a sentence.
>>
>>1516821
That's just badly rendered pixels, not the actual image it sees. As in a problem with the program's interpretation.
>>
everytime i see a blackhole image i think about the similarity with an eye pupil
>>
>>1510969
Could you imagine pulling this shit off back a few hundred years ago claiming you were sent from god or something?
>>
>>1516833
Is there a youtube channel where I can find this?
>>
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>>1516827
RUN ARTYOM
>>
>>1520233
Kurzgesagt.
Too lazy to link.
>>
>>1516048
I fucking love volcanic lightning
>>
>>1516486
It's just telephoto lens compression; He's still pretty close but the camera lens makes it look way closer.
>>
>>1511174
kudos bruh
>>
>>1518710
>no, baton rouge flooded 6 months ago.

We dry again bitch now we just moldy
>>
>>1519833
So then what do you think happens to all of the light that is consumed by the black hole? I have wondered for a long ass time about what the inside of one looks like, but i imagine that if the light doesn't get jettisoned back out it would just sit at the center of the black hole. So if the light becomes concentrated there would it be similar to a star?
>>
>>1519256
This is freaking me out really fucking bad
>>
>>1518977
A really bad Nicholas cage film
>>
>>1519320
You the dummy, that's S and M is telling the story. Their a comedy team and S is dry humor mixed with forced cringe. M of course is the goof.
>>
>>1516827
Jesus Christ, that shit is bright!
Imagine if you're just asleep at night, maybe have left the curtains and window open a bit because it's summer and kinda warm and then THIS crazy thing comes by in the middle of the night...
>>
>>1520288
>>1519406
The newest theory is that the event horizon is a special place after all and passing it would be not a nice experience.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firewall_(physics)
>>
>>1516833
>tardis floats by

got me.
>>
>>1514754
Directions the flare moves in this clip: east to west, north to south, north to south (but over 42nd street a second time), west to east, south to north.
>>
>>1516827
if that arc flash were to go anywhere within 5 feet of a person, the oxygen in their blood would catch on fire.
>>
>>1520508
oxygen doesn't burn
>>
>>1520502
I'm not going to give the movie that much credit - but that could happen (though I'm sure the intent is to show the same event from multiple angles at some point).

In this sorta solar flare, the side of the Earth facing the sun would be among the last to be affected. The first would be around the poles, the equator, and the sunset/rise lines, as the magnetic field forced the plasma built up within it down to the surface at its tessellation points.
>>
>>1520463
It's possible, though I kinda feel like Firewall theory is brute-forcing something from nothing to save one aspect of physics at the cost of another. A lot of the other solutions seem more elegant and less magical, though some of those do bad things to you at the event horizon as well.
>>
>>1520288
The singularity is constantly "falling" and further distorting space within the event horizon, while all the energy that fell past the horizon is constantly falling in after it in turn, but never catching up. Light can only move towards the singularity, so you wouldn't be able to see any concentration of energy closer to the singularity than you are - only that which came after you, and eventually all the energy within the event horizon would be moving so much faster than that in the "next orbit up" that you wouldn't be able to see that either.

So there's nothing to see within the event horizon, save a shrinking window to the universe beyond it - ie. light which entered after you did - accelerating ever more quickly as you near the speed of light, and that, only temporarily, as eventually you'll be falling so quickly that the light from said can no longer catch up with you.
>>
>>1520510
It's an accelerant.
>>
>>1517533
Yeah, me too. I mean, it "worked", but I heard "Aa aa aa", rather than "Da da da".
>>
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>>1511174
>>
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>>1516891
>>
>>1510954
>one of the smallest
Aren't there micro black holes popping up and evaporating all the time?
>>
>>1510954
I thought black holes were theoretical
>>
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>>1520836
>>
>>1520839
What's that noise?
>>
>>1520852
wind through the holes in the building
>>
>>1510746
What is that whining noise?
>>
>>1514949
In the case of supermassive/very large blackholes, the Spaghettification effect would happen way beyond the event horizon so you could technically survive for a while inside of it. (Assuming what's around the black hole is sufficiently "cold" and not frying you with radiation.)
>>
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>>1516906
>>1516933
Big ben
>>
>>1520814
Their effects have been observed many times, so either black holes exist or there's something that behaves exactly like the theoretical black hole would behave.
>>
>>1516060
according to who, you dumb prick?
>>
>>1511174
...well, I understood SOME of those words. I suppose that counts for something...
>>
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>>1520858
that's cool as shit.

imagine it would get annoying though.
>>
>>1519289
Electron Beam Sterilization. basically used to clean shit already in boxes

https://youtu.be/fy1RqXAQoKQ
>>
>>1510963
>That fucking filename
10/10
>>
>>1510954
Boggles the mind man.
>>
>>1513730
I'm sorry but how is noone extremely nervous about this? I'm terrified myself. Knowing that I could die any second is absolutely horrifying.
>>
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>>1513748
Don't SCARE ME LIKE THAT GAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH fuck man I was nearly freaking the fuck out I wanted to scream dear lord. This one takes the fucking cake.
>>
>>1516486
Song?
>>
>>1514754
Ok so this is a long shot, but suppose this is what happened to earth tomorrow, and a thousand years from now, or even more, aliens came to visit earth. Would there be ANY remains or signs of humans for them to find? At all?
>>
>>1516850
EVEN IN DEATH I STILL SERVE
>>
>>1516891
So do, massive ball twitch.
The fuck is wrong with some people.
>>
>>1513748
>http://www.universetoday.com/23342/wr-104-wont-kill-us-after-all/


"one scientist working at the Keck Telescope"

SHADILAY
meme magic saved us
>>
>>1521281
>a thousand years from now
Yes, plenty. Any big stone/concrete structure would still be there more or less intact. I mean even the great pyramids will still be there and those are already more than 4500 years old.
Things like mineshafts and pits will also be around for tens to houndred of thousands of years.
The nuclear material in nuclear reactors and missiles will continue to radiate for hundreds of thousands to millions of years and it would be quite obvious that it has been artificially placed there even if everything else has decayed.
Then there are all the materials that we have created that aren't naturally found on earth. They will all dissolve and spread out but you can always still detect them, even in extremely low quantities.
Then we have also introduced species into ecosystems where they didn't evolve and don't have any way to naturally get to. That will still be obvious in tens of millions of years.
We have extracted so much oil and coal and metallic resources from the ground that it would also be obvious that someone took them out at some point (even though everything will go back at some point there will be layers that have a distinct lack of resources, those that we took). And that will still be obvious hundreds of millions of years from now.
>>
>>1516827

Back feed. Those poor fucks will probably have cataracts now.
>>
>>1516850
>Servitor
>>
>>1520360
knowing?
>>
>>1521048
holy shit
the acceleration in those things is insane
>>
>>1521314
the yes might be the closest to eh fact, everything after that first word is intellecutual fapping to false claims. even thousands of millions of trillions of years from now.
>>
>>1521277
That's Enio Morricone. The music is from the final showdown in 'The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly'.
>>
>>1510954
Man i was laughing my ass off on that last scale comparison. That is just ridiculous
>>
>>1521048
That sounded way fucking cooler than I thought it would
>>
>>1515283
I clearly heard "Bah" and "Fah". I don't get it
>>
>>1519329
>rare footage of a killer whale hunting birds
>>
>>1516843
So this ... Is ... The power of the peecee

Fuck this is amazing what can be done with 3D modelling and animating
>>
>>1519167
desu the whole universe as we know it is pretty boring, however big it may be

a single book in your bookshelf is infinitely more complex
>>
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>>1521590

name one
>>
>>1510969
Where is the song from, I remember hearing it somewhere
>>
>>1521565
He never says "Fah", its always "Bah".
>>
>>1516597
>not knowing where this song comes from

You must be 18 to post here, kiddo.
>>
>>1511174
Wait, so we basically witness a nuke go off within that fifth of a second?
>>
>>1516843
its getting much better, but it still has that uncanny valley feeling.
>>
>>1519350
This is the sound of the world ending.
>>
>>1519343
source pls
>>
>>1516827
>that is not cool

pussy
>>
>>1520238
THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU VIOLATE THE NAP, COMMIES!
PHYSICAL REMOVAL TIME.
>>
>>1521605
>filename not sweden.webm
One job...
>>
>>1521691

read again
>>
>>1516891
my hands are sweaty and my balls are tingling
>>
>>1521261
There are so much things in the universe that can destroy our solar systems in an instant and we would never even know about it.
>>
>>1514949
>>1514926
The gravity in a black hole is strong enough to stretch time. (other big objects do this too, astronauts who've been further away from earth age a tiny bit faster). In the time it takes for you to die probably millions of years pass.
>>
>>1519166
I'm pretty sure the belief of witches/demons stemed from chemical reactions like this one
>>
>>1511174
I bet I could still beat the crap out of you
>>
>>1520852
wind hitting the glass on the building at just the right angle and speed, essentially turning it into an enormous harmonica.
>>
>>1521261
youre just a coward at the core then
>>
>>1520180
Thats obviously exactly what a bunch of ancient 'prophets' did
>>
>>1521261
Man nothing happened for billions of years, I think that for some 10'000s years we're gonna be fine
>>
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>>1521261
i bet youre the type who cant get any sleep because the sun is going to swallow earth in 5 billion years, who gives a shit if some giant piss stream is going to wipe everyone out in a blink of an eye, you should learn about how little everything matters especially on the cosmic scale. Life on earth hasnt existed for even a blink considering the age of the universe and humanity will certainly cease to exist as it is now within the timeframe of that blink, just consider that.

btw you COULD die at any second from anything that statistically has a percentage of happening.
>>
>>1521261
because if it happens we'll have virtually no warning
the radiation front would be moving so quickly that one second everything would be normal, the next you'd be dead
we're all going to die some day and if you believe in an afterlife then great, you can do all the cool stuff you never got to do then, but if there isn't one then it's not like you'll be able to have any regrets after you're zapped into oblivion
>>
>>1521565
Same here, bah and fah.

It is impossible to make a B noise without closing the lips entirely. It requires pressure to be built up in the mouth.
>>
>>1510957
This is my job in California
Looks like Canada(?) was horribly unprepared
>>
>>
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>>1520852
>>1520858
wasn't it actually the sound of a subway tunnel being carved out ? I highly doubt the wind going through anything could make that sound

dont get me wrong I know wind can be incredibly noisy going through shit, but not that kind of sound
>>
>>1516852
Where is this?
>>
>>1515283
Watch this again with your eyes covered.
>>
>>1510969
what is this song please?
>>
>>1521261
You are now aware that you could have a brain aneurysm at any second. You are now aware that a nigger could climb in through your window or kick your door down and kill you at any moment.
>>
>>1510954
>Black holes
>real

Stop fucking promoting the liberal agenda. Name literally one bible verse where black holes are mentioned? Fucking cuck degenerates, can't wait until the Emperor drains the swamp of every last "scientist"
>>
>>1519350
Man, this looks like a C&C1 cutscene
>>
>>1521944
Sup Bjork
>>
>>1510974
Imagine being on one of those things in the middle of the atlantic with no hope of survival
>>
>>1521833
>Life on earth hasnt existed for even a blink considering the age of the universe

age of the universe: 13.8 billion years
age of life on earth: 4.5 billion year

I wouldn't call about 30% "a blink".
>>
>>1521962
stop being a smartass.
you know he meant humanity.
>>
>>1521891
Well the wind could create vibrations in the steel and use the building and all the glass as a kind of resonance box.
>>
>>1511174
just what i was going to say
>>
>>1519396
underrated
>>
>>1516838
creepy as fuck
>>
>>1516891
imagine risking so much for so little
>>
>>1521626
No, the reaction you see is contained and safe due to the reactor's design.

A conventional nuclear bomb works off of the principle of fission, which is the splitting of a large atomic nucleus into 2 smaller nuclei (typically Uranium-235 into Barium and Krypton), accompanied with the release of energy. The difference between a bomb and a reactor is how quickly that reaction and how that energy is contained/controlled.

A nuclear bomb is an uncontrolled and unrestrained nuclear reaction, converting as much of the fuel as possible into energy in a very short amount of time. A reactor allows this nuclear reaction to occur over a long period of time under careful supervision and control.

The video displays the fuel's ability to halt a 'runaway' reaction because of it's design.
>>
>>1510965
holly shit
>>
>>1521598
4chan united some people through pizza
>>
>>1519256
Morphin time
>>
>>1519609
I never asked for this.
>>
>>1520805
smallest "stable" one, most likely.
>>
>>1521281
An X6+ would reduce everything on the surface to slag, but stuff in the depth of the oceans would probably survive, maybe enough for life to begin again. Satellites would be gone, but the Mars probes will probably still be there for a few thousand years, and Voyager I & II and the other deep space probes headed out of the solar system will be around for the foreseeable future.

X10+ would take care of the oceans too and liquify the entirety of the mantle, but we're not apt to see any of those for a few dozen million years yet, when the sun starts entering its next phase, and it'll likely slow cook us before we get hit with one, if we aren't already relocated by then.

The proposed aliens will probably have seen the Earth at a fair distance, and thus may have a record it as it was like thousands of years before. If they have FTL, they could check this data out anytime.

>>1521261
>>1521939
Any number of things can kill you instantly, and a great number of those are more likely to. But what should bother you, is that a lot of these events that could end all mankind, are preventable or avoidable in the long term, and yet very few people are willing to make much of any effort or investment to do anything about them.

Which all indicates the species just doesn't value its collective survival all that much, which likely means it values yours even less, which significantly ups the odds of a good number of those more mundane things likely to kill you actually happening.

So no, all these potential (in some cases inevitable) instant end-of-all-life events don't bother me so much - as does the apathy and lack of focus on them, despite the awareness of them. I dunno if that's some sort of faith in the miraculous track record we've had so far, or just a limit of the average human heart to care of things beyond himself, but either way, a species wide suicidal apathy is a scary thing to be a part of.
>>
>>1520894

gasses escaping from the ground
>>
>>1516833
>The Biblical kind of awesome, which means terrifying
Okay, I keked
>>
>>1515271
that gave me anxiety
>>
>>1516048
Emrakul, is that you?
>>
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>>1523049
kind of spooky

why is it so empty?
>>
>>1510746
You have discovered an eerie cavern...
Horrifying screams come from the darkness below!
>>
>>1522299
To cause "Awe" was the original intent of the word. See #2:
http://www.dictionary.com/browse/awesome
>>
>>1523148
Not sure where that is, but I'd be willing to bet most of those buildings are just for show and are probably empty.
>>
>>1516850

That is all kinds of levels of fucked UP!
>>
>>1523049
>>1523297
>Not sure where that is
Pyongyang Station
>>
>>1518849

And we're bitching about Earth and limited resources, when there is a literal unimaginable sized expanding space.
>>
>>1519423
I like the snow swirling when it opens
>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvG-jqGsWSk
>>
>>1516827
now that is some metro shits right there
>>
>>1516827
>the sound of millions of dead computers
>>
>>1523657
Yeah but good luck transporting all that shit around in the unimaginably empty void
>>
>>1522200

excellently put - especially the bit on human apathy.

While its unlikely (understatement) we'll all die in a gamma burst, something as preventable as 'getting food, water, and basic medical supplies' already kills millions of humans on earth right now.

We just haven't cultivated a sense of collective responsibility.
>>
>>1520238
Do ICBMs have EMP shielding? They're full of electronics so wouldn't they start getting fried if other nukes are going off nearby?
>>
>>1516486
>"It's over lava! I have the high ground!"
>"You underestimate my reach!"
>"Don't try it."
>>
>>1510950
>>1510983
>>1517684
>>1519352
>/k/ fap
Not with all that fake post production audio it ain't.
>>
>>1521858
man this shit just made me cry.
>>
>>1514818
Hope you like creeping on some guy's daughter from behind the wall.
>>
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>>1523728
>race mixing?
dropped
>>
>>1519246
>>1521611
>>1521924

Dark Souls 1, Bed of Chaos theme. best fucking games in existance. The part from the video starts around the 10 minute mark.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70g3exQxR28
>>
>>1510974
this reminds me of the video of a guy... hang on I'll find the video, tried to make the webm but failed
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=um1ym9u8XaA
>>
>>1520262
this
>>
>>1510974
Interesting to hear when I work on a sub.
>>
>>1516850
This is awesome ! I can only imagine a future where we use human sized neuron cultures, educate them about driving and implement them in "smart cars" so that you couldn't blame the people who built it. So much possibilities.
>>
>>1524976
I think that some might be but let's be realistic here, an EMP, giving the current state of technology , takes some time to charge, and if you take in account that you are in the death radius of at least 5 ICMBs, EMPs are pretty much useless.
>>
>>1524621
X6+ ?? X10 ?????????????????? Please educate me.
>>
>>1527927
meant for >>1522200
>>
>>1527927
Ratings for gamma ray bursts or similar such events I would assume. Sort of like how earthquakes are on the Richter magnitude scale.
>>
>>1527927
The biggest flares are known as "X-class flares" based on a classification system that divides solar flares according to their strength. The smallest ones are A-class (near background levels), followed by B, C, M and X. Similar to the Richter scale for earthquakes, each letter represents a 10-fold increase in energy output. So an X is ten times an M and 100 times a C. Within each letter class there is a finer scale from 1 to 9.

And then come the X-class flares. Although X is the last letter, there are flares more than 10 times the power of an X1, so X-class flares can go higher than 9. The most powerful flare measured with modern methods was in 2003, during the last solar maximum, and it was so powerful that it overloaded the sensors measuring it. The sensors cut out at X28. The strongest to strike the Earth directly during the modern era was the 1859 solar storm, recorded by Richard Carrington and Richard Hodgson, estimated to have been within the X2 magnitude, creating aurora that were observed as far north as Queensland, Australia.
>>
>>1526896
You are wrong, this is the sauce
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwmTCIHPRsM
Thread posts: 359
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I'm aware that Imgur.com will stop allowing adult images since 15th of May. I'm taking actions to backup as much data as possible.
Read more on this topic here - https://archived.moe/talk/thread/1694/


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