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YubNub News
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1 y

Now Even Viewpoint Diversity Is ‘White Supremacy’
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Now Even Viewpoint Diversity Is ‘White Supremacy’

Do you want a perspective other than the stifling woke orthodoxy being imposed on society through classrooms, TV shows, and corporate boardrooms? Tired of seeing “LGBTQ” this and “BIPOC” or “AAPI”…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

ATF Returns Bump Stock to Rightful Owner After Five-Year Legal Struggle
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ATF Returns Bump Stock to Rightful Owner After Five-Year Legal Struggle

Welcome home! Two minutes after walking in the door with my property retrieved from ATF. (Photo: Maureen Codrea) Agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Independence Ohio Field…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Kamala Harris Wants to Shut Down Pro-Life Pregnancy Centers
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Kamala Harris Wants to Shut Down Pro-Life Pregnancy Centers

Across the country, there are more than 2,750 centers of hope for women and men who unexpectedly learn they have conceived a child. They are called pregnancy resource centers (PRCs) or Crisis Pregnancy…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Try to Spot the Subtle Differences Between These TIME Mag Covers of Trump vs. Harris
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Try to Spot the Subtle Differences Between These TIME Mag Covers of Trump vs. Harris

As we told you earlier today, TIME Magazine put Kamala Harris on the cover and wrote about the effort to "reintroduce" the presumptive Democrat nominee (by "reintroduce" they mean "lie about her positions…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Anti-gun activist David Hogg fundraising for Harris-Walz campaign
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Anti-gun activist David Hogg fundraising for Harris-Walz campaign

Gov. @Tim_Walz: I spent 25 years in the Army and I hunt. I’ve been voting for common sense legislation that protects the Second Amendment, but we can do background checks. We can research the impacts…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Babylon Bee Has a Kamala Harris Headline the MSM Refuses to Go With Because It's WAY Too Accurate
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Babylon Bee Has a Kamala Harris Headline the MSM Refuses to Go With Because It's WAY Too Accurate

Right now, the Kamala Harris campaign's strategy is to lie about where she stands on the issues while giving the media zero access to the candidate but counting on those same people to churn out promotional…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

The Next Solar Cycle Has Started… But the Current One Hasn’t Finished Yet
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The Next Solar Cycle Has Started… But the Current One Hasn’t Finished Yet

We may be already seeing the makings of next solar cycle, peeking out through the current one. It’s been a wild ride. Thus far, Solar Cycle Number 25 has been one of the strongest cycles in recent memory, producing several massive sunspot groups. The current large region turned Earthward (Active Region 3780) is now easily visible with eclipse glasses… no magnification needed. Cycle 25 started back in 2019. Massive sunspot rotates into view. Credit: NASA/SDO A Stormy Year To be sure, the latest solar cycle will be one for the history books, as it heads towards an active maximum in 2025. But even though Cycle 25 will run out through the remainder of the current decade, there are already signs that Cycle 26 could be beginning, just under the roiling solar surface. A study out of the University of Birmingham recently presented at the Royal Astronomical Society’s National Astronomical Meeting in Hull (United Kingdom) shows that key indicators for the start of the next cycle may already be in place. Numbering the solar cycle under current the convention goes all the way back to the start of Cycle 1 in 1755. The pattern for numbering cycles was started in 1852 by astronomer Rudolf Wolf. We know that a new solar cycle has formally started when sunspots appear at higher solar latitudes. These also typically have a reversed polarity, versus the previous cycle. These then push down near the solar equator as the cycle progresses. Spot from two cycles can also mix as the transition gets underway. A large sunspot group from May 2024. Credit: NASA/SDO Laying out spots from successive cycles versus latitude creates a butterfly diagram that demonstrates this effect, in what’s known as Spörer’s Law. A butterfly graph (top) showing sunspots versus latitude over time. Credit: NASA/MSFC Peering Inside the Sun But there’s more to the Sun than meets the eye. As a large ball of hydrogen and helium gas, the Sun does not rotate as a single solid mass. Instead, it rotates faster at the equator (25 days) versus near the poles (34 days). Scientists can probe the solar interior via a method known as solar helioseismology, which looks at waves crossing the solar photosphere in an effort to model the interior. These internal sound waves form bands in a phenomenon known as solar torsional oscillation. Faster-rotation belts appear as a harbinger of the next cycle. These move along with visible sunspots towards the solar equator as the cycle progresses. “The indication of Cycle 26 that we see is that the solar rotation has been speeding up at around 50 degrees latitude and now appears to be leveling off,” Rachel Howe (University of Birmingham) told Universe Today. “This forms part of a pattern called the torsional oscillation, where bands of slightly faster and slower rotation emerge at mid-latitudes before the cycle officially starts and move down to lower latitudes, alongside the sunspot activity, as the cycle develops. In earlier cycles we have seen that the faster-rotating band associated with the cycle can be traced back to around the maximum of the previous cycle, and we think we’re seeing the beginning of the pattern again. It will still be several years before we can expect to see sunspots belonging to the new cycle, though!” A solar cycle map, showing speed and torsional oscillations over time versus latitude for the last three solar cycles… and the start of Solar Cycle 26 (upper right). Credit: Rachel Howe. Monitoring the Sun Around the Clock The Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG) makes the science of helioseismology possible. This is a worldwide network that monitors the Sun continuously. In space, the Helioseismic Magnetic Imager aboard the joint ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) compliments this effort. The Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) on NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) also plays a key role in this campaign. This effort goes back to 1995, spanning the last three solar cycles. Big Bear Lake and Solar Observatory, part of the GONG network monitoring the Sun. This gives researchers a look at the start of the last two solar cycles. It also hints at what might be in store for the start of Solar Cycle 26. “If we can understand how this flow pattern relates to the sunspot cycle, we may be able to do better at predicting how strong the next solar maximum will be and when it will occur,” says Howe. Sunspots from July 31st, 2024. Credit: Eliot Herman. Solar Cycle 25 has thus far been extremely active, far beyond expectations. This follows the historic lull that preceded it between Cycles 24 and 25. Observers saw few sunspots during this profound minimum. Still, this fell in line with many predictions made by astronomers who study the Sun, suggesting a stronger than usual cycle on rebound. Looking Ahead to Cycle 26 “The Sun is always surprising,” says Howe. “Some of the most exciting discoveries recently have come from the spacecraft—Solar Orbiter and Parker Solar Probe—that are flying closer to the Sun than ever before, helping scientists to unravel the connections between what we see on the Sun’s surface and the ‘space weather’ events that affect us on Earth. We’re looking at the surface of the Sun in more detail than ever before, but there’s also a place for long-term studies (which this work is a part of) that follow the large-scale patterns inside the Sun over decades.” A magnetic view of the Sun, courtesy of SDO. Credit: NASA/SDO The May 10th solar storm was thus far the most impressive one of the cycle. This storm sent aurora to latitudes far south as Spain and Mexico, areas where aurorae are rarely seen. We were treated to a persistent red glow watching from central Germany, an unforgettable sight. Solar Cycles and More Historically, the Wolf Sunspot Number defines the level of solar activity. Astronomers refer to this as the Relative or Zürich Sunspot Number. One 2013 study suggested that the orientation and strength of the heliospheric current sheet is a better indicator of the health of the current solar cycle, rather than the sunspot number. We usually say it’s an 11-year solar cycle from one minima/maxima to the next… but it’s actually double that length. The Sun’s magnetic field flips every 11-years, returning to the same relative orientation every 22 years. We see ‘starspot cycles’ on other suns as well. It is also unclear why an 11-year cycle is ‘baked in’ to our Sun. We’re also unsure if this has always been the case throughout its 4.6-billion year life span. This research provides a great model to test the next solar cycle, as we struggle to understand and live with our tempestuous star. The post The Next Solar Cycle Has Started… But the Current One Hasn’t Finished Yet appeared first on Universe Today.
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INFOWARS
INFOWARS
1 y

Gay Trans Kamala Harris Rally Attendee Worried Trump Would Ban Abortion https://www.infowars.com/posts..../gay-trans-kamala-ha

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Clips and Trailers
Clips and Trailers
1 y ·Youtube Cool & Interesting

YouTube
Anya Taylor Joy is being abducted in her car | Split | CLIP
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RetroGame Roundup
RetroGame Roundup
1 y ·Youtube Gaming

YouTube
Ultimate Batocera 40 Emulator Frontend Setup Guide For PC 2024 #batocera #emulator #frontend
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