bubbl 🫧
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@freezingfaerie 's archive
I don't know, I feel like if you call yourself a "super empath" you're the self-absorbed one in the situation
fungible should mean you can turn it into a mushroom
Important if your in an abusive situation you can turn off this alarm
Please reblog to spread awareness
I'm becoming convinced that mycorrhizae are super important & that everyone should know more about them, so here:
Did you know they seem to have unique reactions to some foods they eat? I noticed Ravioli absolutely NOT LIKING blue fruit so i had to test this out more
If your pup really enjoys the food you gave them, they'll bounce around
Meanwhile, if they don't really like it, they'll close their eyes and shake their head a little sometimes (Mayo has this reaction to slime mold)
And if they REALLY dislike it, they'll fall to the ground like they're stunned, like saint's reaction to eating batflies. (Ravioli has this reaction to blue fruit, and Beef Stew with eggbug eggs instead)
And sometimes they just have no reaction to what they eat!
Made from inexpensive, abundant materials, an aluminum-sulfur battery could provide low-cost backup storage for renewable energy sources.
As the world builds out ever larger installations of wind and solar power systems, the need is growing fast for economical, large-scale backup systems to provide power when the sun is down and the air is calm. Today’s lithium-ion batteries are still too expensive for most such applications, and other options such as pumped hydro require specific topography that’s not always available.
Now, researchers at MIT and elsewhere have developed a new kind of battery, made entirely from abundant and inexpensive materials, that could help to fill that gap.
The new battery architecture, which uses aluminum and sulfur as its two electrode materials, with a molten salt electrolyte in between, is described today in the journal Nature, in a paper by MIT Professor Donald Sadoway, along with 15 others at MIT and in China, Canada, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
“I wanted to invent something that was better, much better, than lithium-ion batteries for small-scale stationary storage, and ultimately for automotive [uses],” explains Sadoway, who is the John F. Elliott Professor Emeritus of Materials Chemistry.
Read more.