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#ETHER
kingjaffejoffer · 22 days
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HEARD ANY GOOD MUSIC LATELY?
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todayinhiphophistory · 5 months
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Today in Hip-Hop History:
Nas released his fifth album Stillmatic December, 18th 2001
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soundsofthameltingpot · 7 months
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All About Lily Chou-Chou (2001) [Dir. Shunji Iwai]
\~<
my first watch was probably a year or two ago and it was beautiful, loved the camera style. The music is amazing, i want the soundtrack on CD.
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itsdefinitely · 3 months
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oc things and stuff
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youremyheaven · 2 months
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Hello,
I'm curious about the predisposition of Purnavasu individuals towards witchcraft and occult knowledge. While these practices are commonly associated with Shravana, Hasta, and Ashlesha nakshatras, I've always speculated that Purnavasu might also exhibit a penchant for spiritual exploration.
imo the nakshatras you mentioned are just some of the ones associated with the occult as per Claire's research, I think there are many more and that each nakshatra has its own unique occult ability as each nak serves its cosmic purpose.
I have always believed that Punarvasu natives tend to have psychic abilities, especially the power of foresight, which may not be a "psychic" ability in and of itself but these individuals have the ability to understand the patterns and interconnections among things in ways others can't with the existing information.
Jupiter is connected to the ether element (called "akasha" in Sanskrit) it is the element that makes everything else possible. Ether is the synergy of all the elements. Ether is space, stillness, that which contains and holds. Ether is the element that connect us to spirit, intuition, other realms and planes.
Ether is both nothing and everything at the same time. It’s stillness, yet it’s the very thing that makes all movement and life possible. 
It is the most subtle, and hardest to perceive and describe. The aether element becomes denser to form an air element, followed by fire, water, and finally earth.
Ether is the first element, the one that makes all other elements possible, Jupiter, the "guru" being associated with this element makes complete sense because knowledge and learning is crucial to living.
But specifically with Punarvasu, whose deity is Aditi, the mother of the universe, the themes of creation and willing one self into existence from nothing, or having always existed and creating everything, space and time (Aditi is the personification of all things including consciousness, fertility, space and time) are very apparent. Punarvasu possessing occult, psychic abilities just sort of makes sense in this context?? like I'd be surprised if they didn't lol after all these themes and mythology
Punarvasu is also connected to the water element (Shravana & Ashlesha are also connected to the water element whereas Hasta belongs to the air element) and water is what gives people psychic abilities imo, it's the most spiritual element because it absorbs everything readily. Life took form for the first time millions of years ago in water.
I feel like Punarvasus have the strongest intuition of anybody because of that ether + water connection. They do have clairvoyant abilities. The ether element is also associated with the ears/hearing so 👀
I'll make a detailed post in the future citing examples hehe<33
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macgyvermedical · 7 months
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trick or treat! (also I have a question- what situations would warrant ether to be used and not any other anesthetics? OwO)
Oooh really good question-
Ether is actually a really, really common anesthetic- especially in the developing world. There are a few reasons it's a good choice in a lower-resource environment:
1- it's the only drug you need for anesthesia
"Modern" anesthesia is a mix of multiple drugs, usually one to render the person unconscious, at least one to kill pain, and one to paralyze the person.
Ether does all three of those things. While you may want a pre-medication like diphenhydramine or midazolam and medications to manage side effects, you really only need the one.
2- It's cheap
Anesthetics are expensive. Ether is like $5 for the amount needed for a short surgery. And that's the medical stuff. There's industrial-grade ether that works just as well for a fraction of that.
3- It's easy to administer
Again, "modern" anesthesia requires a large, expensive machine to mix the gases for anesthesia. Ether requires a wire mesh mask and some gauze. The anesthetist just has to drip the ether onto the mask at a particular rate in order to cause anesthesia.
4- It doesn't cause respiratory depression
"Modern" anesthesia modalities often involve a strong opioid and a paralytic, which means the person must be intubated and placed on a ventilator for the duration of the procedure because they can't breathe on their own.
With ether, the patient continues breathing pretty much normally throughout the whole procedure, and does not require any artificial respiration.
So why don't developed countries routinely use ether? Well, as anesthetics go, it's unpleasant and fairly inconvenient. It smells bad, takes about 20 minutes to start working (an eternity in knocking-people-out time), is extremely flammable, and causes severe nausea and vomiting after waking up.
So generally when you have the option of something more expensive but also more convenient and pleasant, and you can afford it, you go with that. If you don't, but you have time and anti-emetics, ether's a great choice.
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mikenlos · 20 days
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they're in love
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jcmarchi · 1 month
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Researchers detect a new molecule in space
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/researchers-detect-a-new-molecule-in-space/
Researchers detect a new molecule in space
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New research from the group of MIT Professor Brett McGuire has revealed the presence of a previously unknown molecule in space. The team’s open-access paper, “Rotational Spectrum and First Interstellar Detection of 2-Methoxyethanol Using ALMA Observations of NGC 6334I,” appears in April 12 issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Zachary T.P. Fried, a graduate student in the McGuire group and the lead author of the publication, worked to assemble a puzzle comprised of pieces collected from across the globe, extending beyond MIT to France, Florida, Virginia, and Copenhagen, to achieve this exciting discovery. 
“Our group tries to understand what molecules are present in regions of space where stars and solar systems will eventually take shape,” explains Fried. “This allows us to piece together how chemistry evolves alongside the process of star and planet formation. We do this by looking at the rotational spectra of molecules, the unique patterns of light they give off as they tumble end-over-end in space. These patterns are fingerprints (barcodes) for molecules. To detect new molecules in space, we first must have an idea of what molecule we want to look for, then we can record its spectrum in the lab here on Earth, and then finally we look for that spectrum in space using telescopes.”
Searching for molecules in space
The McGuire Group has recently begun to utilize machine learning to suggest good target molecules to search for. In 2023, one of these machine learning models suggested the researchers target a molecule known as 2-methoxyethanol. 
“There are a number of ‘methoxy’ molecules in space, like dimethyl ether, methoxymethanol, ethyl methyl ether, and methyl formate, but 2-methoxyethanol would be the largest and most complex ever seen,” says Fried. To detect this molecule using radiotelescope observations, the group first needed to measure and analyze its rotational spectrum on Earth. The researchers combined experiments from the University of Lille (Lille, France), the New College of Florida (Sarasota, Florida), and the McGuire lab at MIT to measure this spectrum over a broadband region of frequencies ranging from the microwave to sub-millimeter wave regimes (approximately 8 to 500 gigahertz). 
The data gleaned from these measurements permitted a search for the molecule using Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations toward two separate star-forming regions: NGC 6334I and IRAS 16293-2422B. Members of the McGuire group analyzed these telescope observations alongside researchers at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (Charlottesville, Virginia) and the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. 
“Ultimately, we observed 25 rotational lines of 2-methoxyethanol that lined up with the molecular signal observed toward NGC 6334I (the barcode matched!), thus resulting in a secure detection of 2-methoxyethanol in this source,” says Fried. “This allowed us to then derive physical parameters of the molecule toward NGC 6334I, such as its abundance and excitation temperature. It also enabled an investigation of the possible chemical formation pathways from known interstellar precursors.”
Looking forward
Molecular discoveries like this one help the researchers to better understand the development of molecular complexity in space during the star formation process. 2-methoxyethanol, which contains 13 atoms, is quite large for interstellar standards — as of 2021, only six species larger than 13 atoms were detected outside the solar system, many by McGuire’s group, and all of them existing as ringed structures.  
“Continued observations of large molecules and subsequent derivations of their abundances allows us to advance our knowledge of how efficiently large molecules can form and by which specific reactions they may be produced,” says Fried. “Additionally, since we detected this molecule in NGC 6334I but not in IRAS 16293-2422B, we were presented with a unique opportunity to look into how the differing physical conditions of these two sources may be affecting the chemistry that can occur.”
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quayrund · 1 year
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Baroque World Guidance
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nethhiri · 1 month
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notsomeloncholy · 1 year
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~40 minute painting practice of Ether ✨️ Ft. Gradient maps are the shit
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fountainstrangerart · 1 month
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Digimon Day and the Saturday streams always put in the mood to draw Ether, and Grit who belongs to ZarukWindCaller.
George cameo :3
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sadnesshotline · 1 year
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she a baddie w her baddie friend 👯❄️ @aharris00britney x @ayoshi angel now available for early access!
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itsdefinitely · 3 months
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hi definitely! i want to hear more about ur ocs if u wanna share! :)
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i can offer you this
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