sadljf;s reaction compilaton to The Reveal in “A Single Pale Rose”
(SPOILERS AND LANGUAGE WARNING \o/)
[Here’s playlist with all the people who are in this video]
they’ll bring you endless entertainment, your new best friends, spinels
I've never been so in love with a Cartoon Character before 😍
Lil axolotl pals ✨
OMG I wasn't expecting this... THANK YOU so much. I can wait, take your time, and thank you for all your hard work :D T_T
How is the progress of Gemanimate 2? If you have any problems, please tell us... Maybe we could help?
Hey! All clips are finally in which means I can finish up editing it all together. I’m tabling at a convention this weekend, so barring any major issues I should be able to get it done next weekend and have it out shortly after.
Thank you to everyone for your continued support and the many, MANY offers to help out. It means the world!!! ✨😭💕
Here’s an old Lunala drawing that I made. Drawn on paper and colored with color pens
85% of the matter in our universe is a mystery. We don’t know what it’s made of, which is why we call it dark matter. But we know it’s out there because we can observe its gravitational attraction on galaxies and other celestial objects.
We’ve yet to directly observe dark matter, but scientists theorize that we may actually be able to create it in the most powerful particle collider in the world. That’s the 27 kilometer-long Large Hadron Collider, or LHC, in Geneva, Switzerland.
So how would that work? In the LHC, two proton beams move in opposite directions and are accelerated to near the speed of light. At four collision points, the beams cross and protons smash into each other.
Protons are made of much smaller components called quarks and gluons.
In most ordinary collisions, the two protons pass through each other without any significant outcome.
However, in about one in a million collisions, two components hit each other so violently, that most of the collision energy is set free producing thousands of new particles.
It’s only in these collisions that very massive particles, like the theorized dark matter, can be produced.
So it takes quadrillions of collisions combined with theoretical models to even start to look for dark matter. That’s what the LHC is currently doing. By generating a mountain of data, scientists at CERN are hoping to find more tiny bumps in graphs that will provide evidence for yet unknown particles, like dark matter. Or maybe what they’ll find won’t be dark matter, but something else that would reshape our understanding of how the universe works entirely.
And that’s part of the fun at this point. We have no idea what they’re going to find.
From the TED-Ed Lesson Could we create dark matter? - Rolf Landua
Animation by Lazy Chief
Haha XD
Meet Eric, he's a good young boy. He's sad ☹ and has a lot of problems. But he doesn't care about that. He tries to stay positive ☺ and smiles all the time. Be like Eric.👍
Oh, I'm just an ordinary teen (18/Male) who loves everything about art.
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