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Mashup of the Day: Watch The Muppets Perform Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s ‘Shimmy Shimmy Ya’
YouTuber Mylo the Cat (aka Adam Schleichkorn) has done it again.
We’ve seen Rowlf sing Biz Markie’s “Just a Friend,” Grover “Get Lucky,” and Swedish Chef channel the Beastie Boys.
For his latest muppet mashup, we’ve got Dr. Teeth doing his best Ol’ Dirty Bastard with a performance of the classic song “Shimmy Shimmy Ya.”
Dr. Teeth is the lead singer of Electric Mayhem, and he apparently likes it raw.
The post Mashup of the Day: Watch The Muppets Perform Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s ‘Shimmy Shimmy Ya’ appeared first on The Daily What.
Monstrous Galaxy --"Observed Near the Edge of the Known Universe"
For centuries cartographers were fond of depicting monsters along the edges of their maps. Now, researchers have depicted a monstrous galaxy near the edge of the charted Universe with unprecedented detail using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) with the assistance of a 'natural telescope' known as a gravitational lens.
The galaxy is seen at a time when the Universe was 15% of its current age, only 2.4 billion years after Big Bang. The light has taken over twice the age of the Earth to reach us (11.4 billion years), detouring along the way around a large foreground galaxy that is comparatively close at 4 billion light-years away from our Solar System. The foreground galaxy is acting as a lens, warping SDP.81’s light and creating a near-perfect example of a phenomenon known as an Einstein Ring.The team modeled the lensing effects and corrected for them to reveal the distribution of huge stellar cradles in the monstrous galaxy. As a bonus, the same model indicates, for the first time, the existence of a supermassive black hole at the center of the foreground galaxy.
During its high resolution test observation campaign in October 2014, ALMA imaged the monstrous galaxy SDP.81, located 11.7 billion light-years away from the Earth in the constellation Hydra. A gravitational lens created by a massive foreground galaxy 3.4 billion light-years from us acts as a natural telescope, magnifying the image of SDP.81.
The image becomes brighter but smears into a ring shape, as can be seen in Figure 1. This ultra-sharp image of the ring astounded astronomers around the globe, but it has been difficult to understand the details of its complicated structure. Yoichi Tamura and Masamune Oguri, assistant professors at the University of Tokyo, together with researchers at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), constructed the best model to date for the gravitational lens.
Using this model, they corrected for lensing effects and revealed that SDP.81 is a monstrous galaxy forming stars at hundreds to thousands of times the rate we see in the Milky Way. This is an important step to understand the evolutionary process of starburst galaxies and supermassive black holes in galaxies.
Einstein's theory of General Relativity tells us that a massive object bends space and time. As shown in Figure 2, the light traveling through this curved space-time bends to follow the curve, thus the massive object works as a cosmic lens. In the rare cases that a distant galaxy, an intervening galaxy producing a gravitational lens, and the Earth line up perfectly, the image forms a circle of light known as an Einstein ring. These gravitational lenses make the distant objects look much larger and brighter, helping astronomers to study galaxies, black holes, and dark matter in the distant Universe.
SDP.81 is an excellent example of an Einstein ring. ALMA detected radio waves with a wavelength of one millimeter emitted by cold molecular gas and dust, the ingredients of stars and planets, with a resolution of 23 milliarcseconds, which surpasses the resolution of the Hubble Space Telescope. The image is so sharp that researchers found bends, branches, and small grainy structures inside the ring.
To understand the causes of those fine structures, the research team produced a sophisticated model of the gravitational lens. This model is unique in its ability to precisely adjust for distortions in the lens, like correcting astigmatism.
The model shows that the fine structures in the ring reflect the inner structure of SDP.81. Researchers found that several dust clouds with sizes of 200 - 500 light-years are distributed within an elliptic region 5000 light-years across (Figure 3). The dust clouds are thought to be giant molecular clouds, the birthplaces of stars and planets. The clouds in SDP.81 have sizes similar to those found in our Milky Way and nearby galaxies (Figure 4). This is the first time astronomers have been able to reveal the inner structure of such a distant galaxy.
The high-resolution ALMA image also enables researchers to seek "the central image" of the background galaxy, which is predicted to appear at the center of the Einstein ring. If the foreground galaxy has a supermassive black hole at the center, the central image becomes much fainter (Figure 5). Thus the brightness of the central image reflects the mass of the black hole in the foreground galaxy. The central image of SDP.81 is very faint, leading the team to conclude that the foreground galaxy holds a giant black hole over 300 million times more massive than the Sun.
The gravitational lens acts as a natural telescope, enhancing ALMA's already unprecedented sensitivity and resolution. Using powerful telescopes, the team continues to unravel the mysteries surrounding the formation and evolution of monstrous starburst galaxies and supermassive black holes.
This composite image at the top of the page shows SDP.81; the bright orange central region of the ring reveals the glowing dust in this distant galaxy; the surrounding lower-resolution portions of the ring trace the millimeter wavelength light emitted by carbon monoxide; the diffuse blue element at the center of the ring is from the intervening lensing galaxy.
The Daily Galaxy via National Institute of Natural sciences
Image credit: ALMA / NRAO / ESO / NAOJ / B. Saxton / AUI / NSF / NASA / ESA / Hubble / T. Hunter.
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Vermont ISP Offers 10 Gbps For $400 a Month -

Vermont Telephone (Vtel) has upped the ante in the gigabit wars substantially by offering 10 Gbps fiber service for $400 a month. According to the company announcement, the company's 18,000 home deployment footprint and ultra-fast speeds are thanks in large part to a $85 million VTel telephone network award from the U.S. Department of Agriculture s Rural Utilities Service (RUS).
The company is quick to note that even in instances where ten gigabit speeds are available in Vermont, users will usually pay upwards of $15,000 per month. Back in 2013 we noted how the company was offering gigabit speeds for around $35 a month.
That pricing appears to now be around $60 a month, judging from the Vtel website.
"We were proud four years ago to initiate first-in-Vermont 1 Gigabit Internet, at a billion-bits-per-second, at $35 a month" VTel CTO Justin Robinson said in a statement. "We re even more delighted today to announce first-in-Vermont 10 Gbps Internet."
VTel's 1,700 mile fiber network today serves three of the largest research universities in the northeast, many of Vermont s largest high schools, and recently upgraded Burlington School District's Internet services at speeds up to 10 Gbps.
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This restaurant found out how to make parents watch their kids
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submitted by Doggishmanboy [link] [71 comments] |
Regular Old Sewing Thread Can Be Woven Into Strong Artificial Muscles

Given Disney’s amusement parks are packed full of audio-animatronic characters, it only makes sense that the company’s research division would be hard at work finding ways to make them even more lifelike. Researchers may have found a cheap solution to making artificial muscles, using conductive sewing thread you can find in any fabric store.
This guy is riding a fine line between "derp" and "deranged"
My dog is missing a leg so I made her a new one!
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submitted by kelswii [link] [149 comments] |
Can't be unseen, this word is ruined for me
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submitted by DahrnWahl [link] [63 comments] |
Bring Baby Powder to the Beach to Easily Remove Sand
“Hey Honey? Have You Seen My Slippers?”
“Oh- I saw them by the door. Right there in front. Aren’t they there?”
Filed under: Uncategorized Tagged: Hey Honey, kitteh, Sneaky
Never too young to start learning responsibility and independence.
Yep, Porn Time is Popcorn Time's Very NSFW Cousin

Popcorn Time , aka ‘Netflix for torrents’, has made illegally downloading movies far too easy. And, with pictures of naked ladies notoriously hard to come by on the internet, it was only a matter of time until someone adapted Popcorn Time for porn.




