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FundMECFSResearch, do games w Pop it in your calendars

I’ve never bought a game that isn’t indie since 5 years 🫡

FundMECFSResearch, do astronomy w 1.5TB of James Webb Space Telescope data dumped on the internet — new searchable database is the largest window into our universe to date
FundMECFSResearch, do notjustbikes w Not Just Bikes — They Tore Down a Highway and Made it a River (and traffic got better)

Thanks. There are actually quite a lot of good street view of it. Some even on the sidewalk inside.

But yeah you can’t see shit from satellite views because the tall buildings block everything ahah.

FundMECFSResearch, do notjustbikes w Not Just Bikes — They Tore Down a Highway and Made it a River (and traffic got better)

What’s the coordinates or name. I want to explore this from satellite maps.

FundMECFSResearch, do gaming w I'm doing my part (unfortunately)

Why the fuck did I buy PUBG and Rainbow 6.

Cuz my friends played it? And I guess I assumed I would like them. But I never really bothered actually playing them. What a waste.

FundMECFSResearch, do astronomy w Confirmed at Last: Barnard's Star Hosts Four Tiny Planets

Just 6 light-years away, Barnard’s Star is a well-studied 10-billion-year-old M dwarf with a mass of 0.16 solar mass. Finding exoplanets around Barnard’s Star has been something of a white whale for astronomers for more than half a century; starting in the 1960s, researchers have claimed to have spotted various planets around Barnard’s Star, from distant Jupiter-mass companions to close-in super-Earths. Each of these claims has been refuted.

Now, the white whale appears to have been caught at last. Just last November, researchers reported the discovery of a planet orbiting Barnard’s Star with a period of 3.154 days. The data hinted at the presence of three other planets, but these candidates could not be confirmed. In a new research article published today, Ritvik Basant (University of Chicago) and collaborators leveraged years of data to confirm that Barnard’s Star hosts not just one, but four planets.

FundMECFSResearch, do astronomy w Asteroid Ryugu samples suggest presence of salty water in outer solar system

The big discovery was salty water, not water.

FundMECFSResearch, do astronomy w Asteroid Ryugu samples suggest presence of salty water in outer solar system

Instead of an editorialised version — here is the original paper. www.nature.com/articles/s41550-024-02418-1

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