I tried to recreate this feeling I had while lying in the sun yesterday.
[last entry]
it's called "maths" instead of "math" because it's called "mathematics" instead of "mathematic"
hey! it's mad's new blog :)
this is a stem enthusiasm blog with a focus in physics, and mathematics. i also have an interest in literature and foreign language. trying to stay more accountable this year- she/her pronouns are fine. <3
goals for the next year of school:
finish a novel each month
try to submit creative writing to journals
4s and 5s on my AP exams
achieve over a 4.2 weighted gpa :)
My aesthetic is like dark academia but the medieval Iranian / Islamic golden age version
really helpful technique ^ once you know how to divide by halves and thirds it makes drawing evenly spaced things in perspective waaay easier:
my main goal in life is to be wrong about quantum physics in ways that make me sound smarter than the other people inevitably wrong people around me
so international space station astronauts apparently dropped a tool bag during a spacewalk. and if you look outside when the ISS is in your region, you can see it with binoculars
The tool bag is now orbiting our planet just ahead of the ISS with a visual magnitude of around 6, according to EarthSky. That means it is slightly less bright than the ice giant Uranus, the seventh planet from the sun. As a result, the bag — officially known as a crew lock bag — is slightly too dim to be visible to the unaided eye, but skywatchers should be able to pick it up with binoculars. To see it for yourself, first find out when you can find spot the space station over the next few months (NASA even has a new app to help you). The bag should be floating two to four minutes ahead of the station. As it descends rapidly, the bag is likely to disintegrate when it reaches an altitude of around 70 miles (113 kilometers) over Earth.
she's fucking magnificent
| madge | usa | 16 | aspiring physics + maths major |
228 posts