Henok
1.59K subscribers
838 photos
122 videos
165 files
172 links
Henok here. Just a messy collection of interesting things to improve or make your life worse!
Reach me at @StoicallyAwake.
Download Telegram
It's the last day of november. And tomorrow is the last month of the year.

Its time to reflect on the year and try to make the most out of it๐Ÿ”ฅ
โค6
Imagine two particles, intimately linked at birth, flung across the cosmos. No matter the distanceโ€”light-years apart, evenโ€”measuring the property of one instantly reveals the corresponding property of its entangled twin, even before any information could possibly travel between them. It's as if they're whispering secrets across the fabric of spacetime, defying the very notion of locality. This spooky action at a distance, as Einstein called it, is quantum entanglement. It's a bizarre, counterintuitive phenomenon where two particles become intertwined, their fates inextricably linked, their destinies shared across the vast emptiness of space. It challenges our classical understanding of reality, hinting at a deeper, more interconnected universe than we ever imagined. And the weirdest part? We still don't fully understand how it works.
โค7
Now, imagine a tiny subatomic particle encountering a seemingly insurmountable barrierโ€”a wall of potential energy taller than it has energy to climb. Classically, it should bounce back. But in the quantum realm, the rules are different. There's a chance, a non-zero probability, that the particle will tunnel right through the barrier, appearing on the other side as if it had simply walked through a doorway. This is quantum tunneling, a ghostly ability that allows particles to escape confinement and traverse energy barriers they shouldn't be able to overcome. It's the reason nuclear fusion occurs in stars, a fundamental process that lights up the universe. Both entanglement and tunneling show us that at the tiniest scales, reality behaves in ways utterly foreign to our everyday experience. They are testaments to the mind-bending strangeness of the quantum world, and yet, they are real.
โค6๐Ÿ‘2
Discipline >> Motivation
โค15๐Ÿ‘1
Forwarded from Cosy Pages ๐Ÿ“–
๐Ÿคฃ11
Cosy Pages ๐Ÿ“–
Photo
Literally me.

How could I explain to you that I'm fluent in writing and very terrible at speaking english? My english speaking skills are almost close to zero because I never had the opportunity to speak english except for presentation classes in highschool๐Ÿ’”

Its one of the things about myself that i really want to improve.

Actually, my speaking skills suck in any language but-
๐Ÿ˜7๐Ÿ‘Œ4
She Knows
J. Cole
โค5๐Ÿ”ฅ1
I have a mid exam in a week and here im lying on my bed with no purpose.
The studying havent even kicked off.
๐Ÿ˜ญ8๐Ÿ‘1
Henok
I have a mid exam in a week and here im lying on my bed with no purpose. The studying havent even kicked off.
The most laziest student out there? Its gotta be me.
๐Ÿ˜7
Someone please give me a one week challenge that makes me productive (academic-wise)๐Ÿ˜ญ๐Ÿ™
Im open to take any of it.
๐Ÿค—4
One word for this man
๐Ÿ‘25๐Ÿ‘Ž2๐Ÿ’ฉ2
She is the only creature that can bring down the heaven to Earth.
โค6๐Ÿ‘1๐Ÿคฃ1
Henok
She is the only creature that can bring down the heaven to Earth.
Dont ask me who๐Ÿซฃ๐Ÿคซ
๐Ÿ˜6
Consider the possibility that the fundamental constants of the universe (like the speed of light, gravitational constant, Planck constant, etc.) aren't truly constant, but rather slowly vary over cosmological timescales. What observable effects, if any, might this subtle variation have on the large-scale structure of the universe, the evolution of stars, or even the fundamental forces themselves? And what implications would this have for our understanding of the universe's past, present, and future? Could such variation be a key to unifying quantum mechanics and general relativity, or to understanding the nature of dark energy and dark matter?
๐Ÿค”6
Henok
One word for this man
People who are reacting negatively are "gays"๐Ÿ™‚
๐Ÿคฃ11
Work Song
Hozier
Good night fellasโค๏ธ
โค9
Henok
https://youtu.be/bCmwCkNY85g
So, there is a plan to construct a bigger and more advanced particle accelerator at CERN which is 2 times deeper and roughly 4 times larger than the large hadron collider (LHC). Some pundits are saying its a waste of money and time but scientists at CERN are a little bit confident that it will unleash something about dark matter or maybe pose another fundamental question about our universe and the grand scheme of reality.

The future circular collider (FCC) could come with a price tag of around 17 billion dollars, but countries are hesitating to invest. Meanwhile, global military spending in 2023 hit a staggering 2 trillion dollars.
โค5๐Ÿ‘1
แŠ แŠซแˆŒ
แŠคแแˆฌแˆ แ‰ณแˆแˆฉ แŠฅแŠ“ แˆฎแˆ แ‰ฃแŠ•แ‹ต
Time to chill with amharic music๐Ÿซ 
โค5๐Ÿ˜2
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
The erratic behavior of double pendulum
๐Ÿคฏ5
Time travel. The very concept crackles with impossible energy, a siren song luring physicists and fantasists alike. We've all pondered the implications: altering history, meeting our ancestors, preventing tragedies. But what if the most unsettling aspect of time travel isn't the potential for chaos, but the chilling possibility of inevitability?

Imagine a future where time travel is not just theoretical, but commonplace. Sophisticated algorithms predict the past with astonishing accuracy, charting every sneeze, every whispered secret, every pivotal moment. These predictions aren't merely probabilities; they're deterministic. The past, it seems, is a fixed point, unchangeable, unyielding.

This presents a terrifying paradox. If the past is perfectly predicted, what role does free will play? Did we ever truly have a choice? Did every seemingly spontaneous act, every 'what if' moment, lead inexorably to the present? Or is the very act of predicting the past, a paradoxical anchor that prevents any alteration? The time travelers, armed with their infallible predictions, become mere observers, passive witnesses to a predetermined narrative. Their very existence confirms the unchanging nature of the timeline.

The thrill of altering history dissolves into the cold comfort of knowing everything that will ever happen, already happened. This isn't the exciting adventure of pulp fiction; it's the soul-crushing weight of a universe where even the smallest action is a perfectly orchestrated note in a symphony already played. The question, then, isn't if time travel is possible, but what it truly means to exist within a perfectly predicted past. Is freedom an illusion, or is there a hidden mechanism, a crack in this deterministic facade, waiting to be discovered?
1โค6๐Ÿ‘3๐Ÿพ1