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Create new roses from a bouquet ๐น
๐ฅ Anya Lautenbach
- Dreams N Science -
#plant #gardening
@letsseemore
๐ฅ Anya Lautenbach
- Dreams N Science -
#plant #gardening
@letsseemore
โค5๐3
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Winter Booster Tea ๐ซ Stock in the fridge for your immunity boosterโจ
- Intan Lestari -
#recipe
@letsseemore
- Intan Lestari -
#recipe
@letsseemore
๐10๐1๐ฅ1
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๐5โคโ๐ฅ3
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โค5๐5๐2
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A wrenโs voice is loud and clear, despite its small size.
๐ฝ: Lawrence Chatton
- Wonder of Science -
@letsseemore
๐ฝ: Lawrence Chatton
- Wonder of Science -
@letsseemore
โค2๐2
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How to organize underwear the right way!
- Men's - Fashion | Grooming | Skincare Tips -
#lifehack
@letsseemore
- Men's - Fashion | Grooming | Skincare Tips -
#lifehack
@letsseemore
๐9
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A 125-year-old Naga bed from Nagaland, India, carved from a single piece of wood and hand-chiseled using traditional techniques.
[๐น thegoldentrianglechicago]
- Massimo -
@letsseemore
[๐น thegoldentrianglechicago]
- Massimo -
@letsseemore
๐4๐ฏ1
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Kolam: a traditional South Indian art drawn with rice flour or chalk powder, forming beautiful patterns.
๐นthelotusshakti
- Science girl -
#art
@letsseemore
๐นthelotusshakti
- Science girl -
#art
@letsseemore
๐9โค5๐ฅ1
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๐ฅ4๐1๐1
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Elegant Floral Candle Vase DIY to make your dinner more romantic ๐ฏ๐ฅ
- Bariqlana Joji -
#diy
@letsseemore
- Bariqlana Joji -
#diy
@letsseemore
โค5๐ฟ3๐1
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We just saw the exact moment a star exploded for the first time ever.
Astronomers have achieved a rare feat: imaging the exact moment a massive star detonatedโand the explosion was anything but spherical.
SN 2024ggi, a supernova located 22 million light-years away in the spiral galaxy NGC 3621, was detected a mere 26 hours after ignition. This extraordinarily early discovery allowed researchers to train the European Southern Observatoryโs Very Large Telescope in Chile on the event while it was still in its infancy.
Using the technique of spectropolarimetryโwhich analyzes the polarization of light to reveal geometric structureโthe team uncovered a surprising truth: the expanding shockwave was distinctly aspherical, elongated into an โoliveโ or prolate shape along one primary axis.
This asymmetry means the catastrophic rebound following the starโs core collapse did not propagate uniformly in all directions, directly contradicting the long-standing assumption that the deepest layers of a core-collapse supernova explode spherically.
The progenitor was a red supergiant 12โ15 times more massive than the Sun that had exhausted its nuclear fuel, triggering gravitational collapse of its iron core. In most supernovae, the initial shape of this breakout is quickly obscured as the blast wave slams into the starโs outer envelope. Here, however, astronomers captured polarized light signatures of the still-unobscured ejecta, freezing the explosionโs geometry in time.
The discovery carries far-reaching consequences. It strongly suggests that asymmetry is common, if not universal, in the earliest phases of massive-star deaths. Current theoretical models, which often assume spherical symmetry at the core, will need significant revision. Moreover, these distorted explosions could help explain observed peculiarities in supernova remnants, the production of gamma-ray bursts, and the kicking of neutron stars and black holes to high speeds at birth.
By catching a star in the act of dying asymmetrically, SN 2024ggi has given us a vivid glimpse into the violent, chaotic physics that govern the final heartbeat of the universeโs most massive stars.
[๐๏ธ Artistโs animation of a supernova explosion]
[Unique shape of starโs explosion revealed just a day after detection. ESO, 2025]
- Massimo -
@letsseemore
Astronomers have achieved a rare feat: imaging the exact moment a massive star detonatedโand the explosion was anything but spherical.
SN 2024ggi, a supernova located 22 million light-years away in the spiral galaxy NGC 3621, was detected a mere 26 hours after ignition. This extraordinarily early discovery allowed researchers to train the European Southern Observatoryโs Very Large Telescope in Chile on the event while it was still in its infancy.
Using the technique of spectropolarimetryโwhich analyzes the polarization of light to reveal geometric structureโthe team uncovered a surprising truth: the expanding shockwave was distinctly aspherical, elongated into an โoliveโ or prolate shape along one primary axis.
This asymmetry means the catastrophic rebound following the starโs core collapse did not propagate uniformly in all directions, directly contradicting the long-standing assumption that the deepest layers of a core-collapse supernova explode spherically.
The progenitor was a red supergiant 12โ15 times more massive than the Sun that had exhausted its nuclear fuel, triggering gravitational collapse of its iron core. In most supernovae, the initial shape of this breakout is quickly obscured as the blast wave slams into the starโs outer envelope. Here, however, astronomers captured polarized light signatures of the still-unobscured ejecta, freezing the explosionโs geometry in time.
The discovery carries far-reaching consequences. It strongly suggests that asymmetry is common, if not universal, in the earliest phases of massive-star deaths. Current theoretical models, which often assume spherical symmetry at the core, will need significant revision. Moreover, these distorted explosions could help explain observed peculiarities in supernova remnants, the production of gamma-ray bursts, and the kicking of neutron stars and black holes to high speeds at birth.
By catching a star in the act of dying asymmetrically, SN 2024ggi has given us a vivid glimpse into the violent, chaotic physics that govern the final heartbeat of the universeโs most massive stars.
[๐๏ธ Artistโs animation of a supernova explosion]
[Unique shape of starโs explosion revealed just a day after detection. ESO, 2025]
- Massimo -
@letsseemore
๐2๐คฃ2โค1๐ฅ1
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โค4๐2๐2
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๐7โค1๐ฅ1
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When I need to clean under large appliances or furniture, I do this ๐
- Grace Gym๐๏ธโโ๏ธ -
#lifehack
@letsseemore
- Grace Gym๐๏ธโโ๏ธ -
#lifehack
@letsseemore
๐5โค3๐1๐1