L.H.Reddy

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L.H.Reddy

L.H.Reddy

@LHReddy1

Semiconductors, EE, Ancient History, Philately, Sarcasm & Sci-fi. Author of THE ECHO ACCORD & The Brahmastra Protocol.

United States 🌎 Katılım Kasım 2011
7.9K Takip Edilen8.2K Takipçiler
Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
JUST IN: A Trump judicial nominee was asked point blank: is Trump eligible to run for a third term? Their answer: “I would have to review the actual wording…” Sen. Chris Coons then asked every nominee in the room to confirm the Constitution bars a third term. Silence. Every single one of them refused to say it. Trump is appointing judges who won’t affirm the 22nd Amendment to his face. Never stop connecting the dots.
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World's Amazing Things
Setenil de las Bodegas is a village near Ronda where some houses and streets are located under the mountain. 📸 blan_kiss
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Supriya Sahu IAS
Supriya Sahu IAS@supriyasahuias·
Here is a wild masterpiece that many have never heard about. Tamil Nadu holds one of India’s most astonishing hidden landscapes, the Theri Kadu or the red sand dune Forests of Thoothukudi. These flame coloured dunes, sculpted by wind over thousands of years from ancient marine sands, are living geological archives of sea, climate and time. Their striking crimson hue comes from iron-rich minerals, making Theri Kadu not just beautiful, but globally significant. Beyond the dunes lies a resilient forest ecosystem protected within Theri Reserved Forest landscapes such as Kuthiraimozhi Theri RF with 5,152 ha and Sathankulam RF. with 899.08 Ha. Though seemingly arid, these porous sands harvest rain, recharge groundwater and sustain precious freshwater springs known as Sunai in a low-rainfall region. This is nature’s water bank hidden beneath a desert of red. Theri is also alive with remarkable biodiversity. Over 500 plant species thrive here, specially adapted to harsh sandy soils. Madras hedgehogs, foxes, pangolins, reptiles, owls, butterflies and the dazzling fan-throated lizard find refuge in this rare habitat. #Theri #TamilNadu #Biodiversity #Conservation #RedSandDunes
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ᅠ ᅠ@greenvibe·
Truly legendary.
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Amazing Nature
Amazing Nature@AmazingNature00·
The Greater Kudu, one of the most beautiful animals in the world, found only in Africa.
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L.H.Reddy
L.H.Reddy@LHReddy1·
@EndWokeness The diamond originally belonged to Golkonda, Telangana, and changed hands over the centuries. Finally, the British stole it from a 10-year-old minor ruler. As per the will of sikh emperor, Ranjit Singh, in 1839 it belonged to the Jaganath Temple, Puri.
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End Wokeness
End Wokeness@EndWokeness·
Mamdani calls on King Charles to give India the Kohinoor Diamond
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The Astronomy Guy
The Astronomy Guy@astrooalert·
An absolute light show over the ocean. ⛈️⚡️ Massive supercells illuminating the clouds from within. The Earth is alive!
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World's Amazing Things
A majestic baobat tree often referred to as the Tree of life
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Birds Colour 🕊️
Birds Colour 🕊️@birdscolour56·
Different Types Of Bird Beaks
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Math Hub
Math Hub@mathhub_vn·
Pierre-Simon Laplace (1749–1827), known as the Marquis de Laplace, was a French mathematician, physicist, and astronomer who made major contributions to celestial mechanics, probability, and mathematical physics. He was born on March 23, 1749, in Beaumont-en-Auge and later moved to Paris to pursue his scientific career. Laplace is best known for his work Mécanique Céleste, where he explained the motion and stability of the solar system using mathematics. He also helped develop probability theory and introduced important concepts such as the Laplace transform and Laplace’s equation. He held government positions under Napoleon Bonaparte and was briefly Minister of the Interior. Later, he was given the title of marquis. Laplace died on March 5, 1827, in Paris. He is remembered as one of the greatest scientists in history, sometimes called the “Newton of France.”
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Earth_Wanderer
Earth_Wanderer@earth_tracker·
The laws of physics don't apply to mountain goats. 🐐
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Indian Infra Report
Indian Infra Report@Indianinfoguide·
🚨India becomes World's largest Rice producer,surpasses China.
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Wonder of Science
Wonder of Science@wonderofscience·
Stunning time-lapse shows the Earth’s rotation through space by stabilizing the Milky Way Galaxy. 📽: Aryeh Nirenberg
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Raghu
Raghu@IndiaTales7·
Glimpse of the spectacular & colourful Indian National Bird ~ Peacock 🦚🩷
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Miscelánea🍀
Miscelánea🍀@MissCelaneaOne·
La belleza de la naturaleza es inigualable…
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Fermat's Library
Fermat's Library@fermatslibrary·
This week's paper is 2 pages long, was conceived on a walk in the snow, and is where the word "fission" enters physics for the first time. It's also the paper that made nuclear reactors and atomic bombs conceivable. In December 1938, Lise Meitner received a letter from her collaborator Otto Hahn that left her intriged. Hahn and Fritz Strassmann had bombarded uranium with neutrons and found something chemically impossible: one of the products was barium, an element roughly half the size of uranium. "As chemists we must conclude that these are barium isotopes" Hahn wrote, "but as physicists we cannot bring ourselves to announce it". Spending Christmas in Kungälv, Sweden, Meitner took a walk in the snow with her nephew Otto Frisch and by the end of the walk, they had worked out the physics on scraps of paper. Nobody had been able to explain this kind of reaction. Every known nuclear process ejected at most an alpha particle (Z=2), so turning uranium (Z=92) into barium (Z=56) would have required emitting ~18 charged particles in cascade, a very unlikely process given the Coulomb barrier, as Gamow's theory of alpha decay had established. Meitner and Frisch proposed something different: treat the nucleus as a charged liquid drop. Surface tension holds it together and Coulomb repulsion tries to tear it apart. For a nucleus as heavy as uranium, the 2 forces nearly balance so a small neutron-capture kick is enough to make the drop deform, stretch, and pinch into two comparable fragments. They named the process "fission", borrowing the word from cell biology. Hahn and Strassmann would win the 1944 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery. Meitner was excluded, in what is widely regarded as one of the worst omissions in Nobel history. Here's the annotated paper: #email-newsletter" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">fermatslibrary.com/s/disintegrati…
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SpaceNews
SpaceNews@SpaceNews_Inc·
AI advances and rising geopolitical tensions are helping usher in a new phase of investment in space infrastructure, according to quarterly research released April 14 by early-stage investor Space Capital. buff.ly/HcpB6wo
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