Thứ Ba, 5 tháng 9, 2017

Youtube daily Sep 5 2017

Stand down, creature,

and you may still survive this.

I have survived worse, woman.

Who are you?

I am Malekith.

And I would have what is mine.

Ah!

You have taken something, child.

Give it back.

Witch!

Where is the Aether?

I'll never tell you.

I believe you.

No!

For more infomation >> Frigga vs Malekith / Death Scene | Thor The Dark World (2013) Movie Clip - Duration: 2:58.

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Absentia - Trailer AXN [5] (CC português) - Duration: 0:30.

For more infomation >> Absentia - Trailer AXN [5] (CC português) - Duration: 0:30.

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What Is The DACA Program? | Velshi & Ruhle | MSNBC - Duration: 2:27.

For more infomation >> What Is The DACA Program? | Velshi & Ruhle | MSNBC - Duration: 2:27.

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DREAMER: We'll Achieve Goals Without DACA | MSNBC - Duration: 2:50.

For more infomation >> DREAMER: We'll Achieve Goals Without DACA | MSNBC - Duration: 2:50.

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Secretary of State Kris Kobach: DACA Dreamers Should 'Go Home and Get In Line' | MSNBC - Duration: 8:18.

For more infomation >> Secretary of State Kris Kobach: DACA Dreamers Should 'Go Home and Get In Line' | MSNBC - Duration: 8:18.

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Bangla Khobor 6 September 2017, ATN News, Today Bangla Breaking News Update - insan khan - Duration: 10:09.

Bangla Khobor 6 September 2017, ATN News, Today Bangla Breaking News Update - insan khan

For more infomation >> Bangla Khobor 6 September 2017, ATN News, Today Bangla Breaking News Update - insan khan - Duration: 10:09.

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See What happens to your Body When You Eat with your Hands - Eat with your Hands - Duration: 1:54.

Amazing benefits of eating with your hands 1. Makes a sensory experience Eating is a sensory experience that can evoke emotion and passion. According to Ayurveda, each finger of the hands is an extension of the five elements. Specifically: The thumb is related to space. The index finger is related to air. The middle finger is related to the fire. The ring finger is related to water. The little finger is related to the earth. 2. Improves digestion There are "good" and "bad" bacteria present on the palms and fingers. Good bacteria protect you from many harmful microbes in the environment. When you eat with a spoon and a fork, these bacteria do not reach your intestine. In addition, by touching food with your hands, a signal is sent to the mind for the release of juices and digestive enzymes. Depending on the type of food, the mind organizes for metabolism to work accordingly, which is necessary for better digestion. 3. Reduces the risk of type 2 Diabetes Using forks and spoons can make eating easier and faster. But this can also lead to blood sugar imbalances in the body, ultimately putting it at an increased risk of type 2 diabetes. So eating quickly increases the risk of diabetes, but it can reduce the risk of eating with your hands. When you use your hands, you end up putting less food in your mouth at any given time. 4. More Hygienic People who practice eating with their hands always wash their hands before sitting down to enjoy a meal. In addition, we all wash our hands several times a day. Hand hygiene is practiced everywhere. But when it comes to spoons, forks and other utensils, they are often washed quickly and not always thoroughly cleaned.......

For more infomation >> See What happens to your Body When You Eat with your Hands - Eat with your Hands - Duration: 1:54.

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Supermassive Black Holes or Their Galaxies? Which Came First? - Duration: 11:07.

there's a supermassive black hole at the center of almost every galaxy in the

universe how did they get there what's the relationship between these monster

black holes and the galaxies that surround them every time astronomers

look further out in the universe they discover new mysteries these mysteries

require all new tools and techniques to understand these mysteries lead to more

mysteries what I'm saying is that it's mystery Turtles all the way down and one

of the most fascinating is the discovery of quasars understanding what they are

and the unveiling of an even deeper mystery where do they come from now as

always I'm getting ahead of myself so let's go back and talk about the

discovery of quasars back in the 1950s astronomers scanned the skies using

radio telescopes and found a class of bizarre objects in the distant universe

they were very bright an incredibly far away hundreds of millions or even

billions of light-years away the first ones were discovered in the radio

spectrum but over time astronomers found even more blazing in the visible

spectrum the astronomer Hanyu Chu coined the term quasar which stood for quasi

stellar objects they were like stars shining from a single point source but

they clearly weren't stars blazing with more radiation than an entire galaxy

over the decades astronomers puzzled out the nature of quasars learning that they

were actually black holes actively feeding and blasting out radiation

visible billions of light years away but they weren't the stellar-mass black

holes which were known to be from the death of giant stars

these were supermassive black holes with millions or even billions of times the

mass of the Sun as far back in the 1970s astronomers considered the possibility

that there might be these supermassive black holes at the heart of many other

galaxies even the Milky Way and in 1974 astronomers discovered a radio source at

the center of the Milky Way emitting radiation and it was titled Sagittarius

a star with an asterisk that stands for exciting well in the excited atoms

perspective this would match the emissions of a supermassive black hole

that wasn't actively feeding on material our own galaxy could have been a quasar

in the past or in the future but right now the black hole was mostly silent

apart from this saddle radiation astronomers needed to be certain so they

performed a detailed survey of the very center of the Milky Way in the infrared

spectrum which allowed them to see through the gas and dust that obscures

the core invisible light and they discovered a group of stars orbiting

Sagittarius a star like comets orbiting the Sun only a black hole with millions

of times the mass of the Sun could provide the kind of gravitational anchor

to whip these stars around in such bizarre orbits further surveys found a

supermassive black hole at the heart of the Andromeda galaxy in fact it appears

these monsters are at the center of almost every galaxy in the universe but

where did they come from how did they form did the galaxies form first and

cause the black hole to form in the middle or did the black hole form and

build up the galaxies around them until recently this was actually still one of

the big unsolved mysteries in astronomy that said runners have done plenty of

research using more and more sensitive observatories worked out their theories

and now they're gathering evidence to help us get to the bottom of this

mystery astronomers have developed two models to how the large-scale structure

of the universe came together top-down and bottom-up in the top-down model an

entire galactic super cluster formed all at once out of a huge cloud of

primordial hydrogen left over from the Big Bang a super clusters worth of stars

as the cloud came together its spun up kicking out smaller spirals and dwarf

galaxies these could have combined later on to form the more complex structure we

see today the supermassive black holes would have formed as the dense cores of

these galaxies as they came together if one wrap your mind around

this think of the stellar nursery that formed our Sun and a bunch of the stars

imagine a single cloud of gas and dust forming multiple star systems within it

over time the Stars matured and drifted away from each other

that's top down one big event that leads to the structure we see today in the

bottom up model pockets of gas and dust collected together into larger and

larger masses eventually forming dwarf galaxies and even the clusters and

superclusters that we see today the supermassive black holes at the heart of

galaxies were grown from collisions and mergers between black holes over eons in

fact this is actually how astronomers think that the planets in the solar

system formed by pieces of dust attracting one another into larger and

larger grains until the planet sized objects formed over millions of years

bottom up small parts coming together so which is it astronomers think they know

the answer now and we'll get to it in a second but first I'd like to thank Pablo

patty Nathan Dana Baskin and the rest of our 773

patrons for the generous support if you love what we're doing and you want to

get it on the action head over to patreon.com/scishow stood a shortly

after the Big Bang the entire universe was incredibly dense but it wasn't the

same density everywhere tiny quantum fluctuations in the density at the

beginning evolved over billions of years of expansion into the Galactic super

clusters we see today now I want to stop and let this sink into your brain for a

second there were microscopic variations in density in the early universe and

these variations became the structures hundreds of millions of light-years

across that we see today imagine the two forces at play as the expansion of the

universe happened on the one hand you've got the mutual gravity of the particles

pulling one another together and then on the other hand you've got the expansion

of the universe separating the particles from

one another the size of the galaxies clusters and superclusters were decided

by the balance point of those opposing forces if small pieces came together

then you get that bottom-up formation if large pieces came together then you get

that top-down formation when astronomers look out into the universe at the

largest scales they observe clusters and superclusters as far as they can see

which supports the top-down model on the other hand observations show that the

first stars formed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang which

supports bottom-up so the answer is both no the most modern observations give the

edge to the bottom-up process the key is that gravity moves at the speed of light

which means that the gravitational interactions between particles spreading

away from each other needed to catch up going the speed of light in other words

you wouldn't get a super clusters worth of material coming together only as

stars worth of material but those first stars were made of pure hydrogen helium

and could grow much more massive than the stars we have today they would live

fast and die in supernova explosions creating much more massive black holes

than we get today the first protocol exes came together collecting together

these first monster black holes and the massive stars surrounding them into

dwarf galaxies and then over millions and billions of years these black holes

merged again and again accumulating millions and even billions of times the

mass of the Sun and this is how we got the modern galaxies that we see today

there was a recent observation that supports this conclusion

earlier this year astronomers announced the discovery of supermassive black

holes at the center of relatively tiny galaxies in our own Milky Way the

supermassive black hole is 4.1 million times the mass of the Sun but accounts

for only point zero one percent of the galaxy's total mass

but astronomers from the University of Utah found to ultra-compact galaxies

with black holes of 4.4 million and 5.8 million times the mass of the Sun

respectively and yet the black holes account for 13 and 18 percent of the

mass of their host galaxies and the thinking is that these galaxies were

once normal but collided with other galaxies early on in the history of the

universe were stripped of their stars and then they were spat out to roam the

cosmos they're the victims of those early merging events evidence of the

carnage that happened in the early universe when the mergers were happening

we always talked about the unsolved mysteries in the universe but this is

one that astronomers are starting to puzzle out it seems most likely that the

structure of the universe we see today formed bottom-up the first stars came

together into proto galaxies dying as supernovae to form the first black holes

the structure of the universe we see today is the end result of billions of

years of formation and destruction with the supermassive black holes coming

together over time once telescopes like James Webb get to work we should be able

to see these pieces coming together at the very edge of the observable universe

this was a fun episode and I know you're fascinated by black holes were there any

other topics that you'd like me to dig into lemonade your thoughts in the

comments in our next episode we look at the deep-space gateway NASA's plans to

put a Space Station out of the moon which will serve as a stepping stone to

the rest of the solar system it's time for a playlist all about supermassive

black holes first I'd like to direct you to an interview I did with dr. Andrea

guess who found the supermassive black hole at the heart of the Milky Way

followed by TED talk she gave a response from Michio Kaku about the puzzling

mystery scishow space video about the black holes

finally a public lecture about supermassive black holes and that starts

right now yeah you're like sweating profusely and

you're in the Sun oh really

For more infomation >> Supermassive Black Holes or Their Galaxies? Which Came First? - Duration: 11:07.

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Warface : КЛАН -ТУСОМ ИГРАЕТ С ЧИТАМИ НА РМ. РАНДОМНАЯ ТИМА УНИЗИЛ КЛАН В WARFACE: РоуСенс - Duration: 8:21.

Warface

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