Science
Interstellar Communicator
Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so they say. Almost 400 years P.P.S. proved this theory wrong. All Binary Sheets and databases required rectification of our ignorance. Thoughts of This will be quick and simple morphed into the content of nightmares. Undoing the disaster of 2006 A.D. is perhaps part of Pluto’s revenge.
By Stephanie J. Bradberry4 years ago in Earth
Moonlight
Many people wonder how the moon casts its shadow on the earth, before answering this question we must know that the moon is a celestial body that is believed to be the result of a collision, and therefore astronomers and scientists called it the giant collision, and this results from The collision of the planet with a giant body as large as Mars, which led to the presence of a dense cloud of vaporized rocks, which consists of a mixture of the giant body and the planet, which revolves around the earth in a fixed orbit and eventually becomes a moon, and the moon consists of 3 layers represented in the iron core and the mantle rocky and his thin crust.
By Eliza Castaneda4 years ago in Earth
This trick will help you summon an army of worms
In the Florida's Apalachicola National Park, a strange seemingly mysterious scene is unfolding. By sliding a strip of metal over a stake of wood and a master summoner emits high-pitched croaking sounds echoing through the region. As if in the trance, thousands of earthworms start emerging out of the earth. It's worm grunting often referred to as worm-charming or fiddling. This is a custom that's been in use for over 100 years, yet its inner workings remained unexplored until recently.
By Sourav Pan4 years ago in Earth
Shooting Stars to Set Your Clock By
The Perseids Meteor Shower only comes around once a year and it is quite a sight to see. Usually. The Perseids Shower will reach its height on August 12th and 13th this year (2022) under rather unappealing circumstances for most viewers, casual or otherwise. The moon will be full.
By Kathryn Paay4 years ago in Earth
Space Quest
Space Quest by Stephen Koons Nobody can hear a scream in the vacuum of space, or so the ay. After the vibrant hum of a space motor, the violent landing, a man is relieved to release his safety belt. The stellar push through and among stars, where light seldom shines from a distant sun. Glad to be home, among trash piles albeit. There are men and women happening by the blue and red light districts. They buy Ramen noodles, smoke cigarettes. Women gesture, scantily clad out to passerby’s, soliciting their bodies. Roger Wilco is not so stressed. He has landed, crappily, a space scow, has filled in another workday at a landfill site. He flys overhead, again and again vaporizing garbage. He is a custodian for the business “Clean Sure” , and works every day to maintain cleanliness. He is paid scant wages, deals with the variety of beings, aliens, machines equipped to talk and do mundane things.
By Stephen K Koons4 years ago in Earth
Four weird things science can't explain right now
1. In the remote mountain village of Namirore in northern India, There is A man in his 60s named Baya Mitchell. He had been practicing Yoga for more than 40 years. It was said that his body floated over the forest like a demon. Professor Karemans, an American physicist who had travelled around India for many years, decided to visit the "superman". The next day, with the old man's permission, Professor Clemans and others gathered in front of the cottage and set up video cameras and detectors. Baya Mitchell sat cross-legged on a thin blanket in front of her door, her eyes closed. All eyes, video cameras and detectors were focused on Mitchell. About 2 ~ 3 minutes later, I saw his body rose gently, about 10 meters high, he changed the cross-legged posture, stretched out his arms, like the wings of a bird, began to spin and fly. Mitchell seemed to drift into oblivion as he floated in midair. It was a stunning sight. After about 30 minutes in the air, Mitchell's body began to shake, then slowly lowered horizontally. The camera filmed him at every Angle in the air. When Mitchell hit the ground, several scientists noticed that his body had become as soft as cotton. As Mitchell slowly ascended, the detector detected a jet of air blowing from his body to lift him up. It takes a lot of energy for a person weighing 80 kilograms to get airborne. Where does this flow and energy come from? Scientists are scratching their heads.
By Na Dunshie4 years ago in Earth








