Arjun retweetledi
Arjun
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Arjun
@arjun__sv
25 | Science, sports and stuff
Bengaluru / Chennai Katılım Nisan 2018
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Arjun retweetledi

Fonseca d. Novak Djokovic 4-6 4-6 6-3 7-5 7-5
JOÃO BECOMES THE FIRST TEENAGER IN HISTORY TO BEAT NOVAK IN A SLAM.
The 2nd player in history to beat Novak from 2 sets to 0 down.
The first in 16 years to do it.
Novak was 289-1 when leading 2 sets to 0.
Down 1-3 in the 5th set.
Facing 2 break points to go down 3-5 in the 4th set.
Utterly UNBELIEVABLE what we just witnessed.
He’s into the 2nd week of a Slam for the first time.
The longest match of his life.
The longest match Novak has ever played at Roland Garros.
✅1st top 5 win
✅1st Roland Garros R16
The talent, hunger, & belief to shake up this sport as we know it.
BORA CARALHO.
🇧🇷💛🇧🇷

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Arjun retweetledi
Arjun retweetledi
Arjun retweetledi
Arjun retweetledi

There are places we pass through in life… and there are places that become part of who we are.
Manchester will forever be my home.
To the city, the club, and every supporter, my sincerest thank you. These past four years have been unforgettable, filled with moments my family and I will carry with us for the rest of our lives. There simply aren’t enough words to describe the happiness and warmth we’ve felt here.
Thank you for every cheer, every memory, and for making us feel at home from the very first day.
Forever a Red Devil ❤️




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Arjun retweetledi
Arjun retweetledi

மக்கள் தீர்ப்பைத் தலைவணங்கி ஏற்கிறோம். வெற்றி பெற்றவர்களுக்கு வாழ்த்துகள்!
கடந்த ஐந்தாண்டு காலத்தில் ஏராளமான திட்டங்களை உருவாக்கி, தமிழ்நாட்டு மக்களுக்கு நல்லாட்சியை வழங்கினோம். தமிழ்நாட்டை அனைத்து வகையிலும் உயர்த்தினோம். தேர்தல் களத்தில் எங்களது சாதனைகளைச் சொல்லியே வாக்குகளைக் கேட்டோம்.
மக்களுக்குச் செய்து கொடுத்த நலத்திட்டங்கள் தொடருவதற்கு வாக்கு கேட்டு நாங்கள் பரப்புரை செய்தோம்.
திராவிட முன்னேற்றக் கழகத்தின் தலைமையிலான மதச்சார்பற்ற முற்போக்குக் கூட்டணியை ஆதரித்து வாக்களித்த தமிழ்நாட்டு மக்கள் அனைவருக்கும் நான் எனது மனமார்ந்த நன்றியைத் தெரிவித்துக் கொள்கிறேன்.
வாக்களித்தவர்களுக்கு மட்டுமல்ல, வாக்களிக்க மறந்தவர்களுக்கும் சேர்த்தே ஆட்சி நடத்தினேன்.
அனைத்து மக்களுக்கும் உண்மையாக இருந்தேன். நான் எனது மனச்சாட்சிப்படியே செயல்பட்டேன்.
நான் எனது சக்தியை மீறி உழைத்தேன். என்னைப் போன்றே களத்தில் உழைத்த என் உயிரோடு கலந்திருக்கும் தலைவர் கலைஞரின் அன்பு உடன்பிறப்புகள் அனைவருக்கும் எனது நெஞ்சார்ந்த நன்றி!
எங்களோடு தோளோடு தோள் நின்ற தோழமை இயக்கத் தலைவர்கள், நிர்வாகிகள், தொண்டர்கள்
அனைவருக்கும் நன்றி !
எனது அரசியல் பொதுவாழ்வில் அதிகப்படியான வெற்றியையும் பார்த்துள்ளேன்; தோல்விகளையும் சந்தித்துள்ளேன்.
எனவே இலட்சியமும் கொள்கையும்தான் முக்கியமே தவிர, வெற்றி தோல்விகள் மட்டுமல்ல என்று செயல்படக் கூடியவன் நான்.
அதனால் திராவிட முன்னேற்றக் கழகத்தின் அரசியல் பயணம் தொய்வில்லாமல் தொடரும்.
இதுவரை மக்களுக்காகச் சிறப்பான ஆளும்கட்சியாகச் செயல்பட்ட தி.மு.க. - இனி சிறப்பான எதிர்க்கட்சியாகச் செயல்படும்.

தமிழ்
Arjun retweetledi
Arjun retweetledi

good content, algorithm please give me more of it thank you
Nostalgia@NostalgiaFolder
The very first sunrise of the 2000s, marking the start of a new millennium
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Arjun retweetledi

When chaos crept in, he stood still.
And answered the moment with responsibility. 🦁
#CaptainRutu #WhistlePodu #CSKvGT

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Arjun retweetledi

🚨 EMOTIONAL STATEMENT BY MUKESH CHAUDHARY ABOUT HIS MOTHER 🚨
Mukesh Choudhary said 🗣️,
"This wicket belongs to my mother. I lost her yesterday, but I knew she wouldn’t want me to sit back. She was my biggest strength and my loudest cheerleader. Every ball I bowl today is for her. I can feel her watching over me from heaven. This one is for you, Maa."🕊️

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Arjun retweetledi

Some moments are bigger than the game.
Walking out to play, carrying a loss no words can hold, you show what heart truly means. Not just a cricketer today, but a son playing for his mother.
Every step, every ball, we stand with you.
The team, the fans, all of us, right beside you.
Strength, prayers, and yellove always, Mukesh. 💛
#WhistlePodu #MIvCSK #Respect

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Arjun retweetledi

BLA of a party in #Kannaginagar says that many people are unaware of #SIR, several of them who filled it were also left out, she said, adding that many were unaware that they had to add themselves as new voters if they were deleted following #SIR.
#ElectionsWithTNIE @xpresstn
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Arjun retweetledi

CamScanner been doing this for years now 😭✌️
nic@nicdunz
sent chatgpt two photos, told it to get rid of the creases and make it a scan, it generated two images and theyre both perfect
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Arjun retweetledi

India has splurged billions on metro trains. But where are the commuters? bbc.in/4mIaUcL
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Arjun retweetledi
Arjun retweetledi

Our moon is leaving us. It creeps 3.8 centimeters further from Earth every year, as fast as your fingernails grow. And yesterday, for the first time in 53 years, humans got close enough to fly around it.
70 million years ago, when dinosaurs were still walking around, a day on Earth was only 23.5 hours long. A year had 372 days. Scientists used lasers to count growth rings inside ancient fossilized seashells, where each ring recorded a single day. The shorter days happened because the moon was closer back then, pulling harder on our oceans and slowly braking how fast the planet spins. As it drifts further out, days get longer. Your grandchildren’s days will be a tiny fraction of a second longer than yours.
Artemis II sent four astronauts around it last week. They looped behind the far side on April 6, and the moon blocked every signal between them and Earth for 40 minutes. Total silence. The crew hit 252,760 miles from our planet, about 4,100 miles further than anyone has ever been from home. They splashed down yesterday off San Diego.
The moon is still shrinking. Its interior is cooling, cracking the outer shell into cliff-like fractures. NASA has mapped over 3,500 of these cracks. One near where Apollo 17 landed in 1972 has been causing moonquakes for at least 90 million years. Moonquakes are nothing like what we get on Earth. They rumble for hours instead of seconds, which becomes a serious concern if anyone plans to build a base up there.
Water ice has been quietly accumulating in craters near the south pole, craters that have not seen a single ray of sunlight in billions of years. A team at CU Boulder published findings this week in Nature Astronomy showing the moon has been collecting this water for about 3.5 billion years. One crater called Haworth has probably sat in complete darkness for over 3 billion years straight. Astronauts could eventually mine that ice for drinking water or break the water molecules apart into hydrogen and oxygen for rocket fuel.
I did not know this until I looked it up: Earth has been feeding the moon. A University of Rochester team found that our planet’s magnetic field funnels tiny atmospheric particles outward along its field lines until they stick to the lunar dirt on the near side, the side we see every night. The moon has been soaking up little bits of our atmosphere for billions of years.
600 million years from now, the moon will be too far away to fully cover the sun. Total solar eclipses will stop happening. The Artemis II crew saw what we will eventually lose during their flyby: a solar eclipse from behind the moon, with nearly 54 minutes of total darkness. From down here on Earth, the longest total eclipse you will ever see lasts about 7 minutes.
Moon@moondailys
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Arjun retweetledi
Arjun retweetledi

A $2.5 billion robot has been alone on another planet for 13 years and is still doing science. The scale of that sentence gets worse the longer you think about it.
Curiosity landed in August 2012. Obama was president. Instagram had 80 million users. The iPhone 5 hadn’t shipped yet. The rover was designed for a two-year mission and 20 kilometers of driving. It’s now driven 35.5 kilometers, climbed over 327 meters up the side of a mountain, drilled 46 holes into Martian rock, and is currently running its fifth mission extension.
The computer running all of this has 256 MB of RAM and a 200 MHz processor. Your AirPods have more computing power. Every command sent from Earth takes 14 minutes to arrive. Every photo sent back takes the same 14 minutes. When Curiosity drills into a rock, the team in Pasadena won’t know if it worked for half an hour. They’ve been operating on that delay, every single day, for 4,846 Martian sols.
The power source is 10.6 pounds of plutonium-238 generating about 110 watts. Less than a ceiling fan. It will keep producing electricity for decades because the half-life of Pu-238 is 87.7 years. The rover will run out of moving parts before it runs out of power.
And those wheels. Machined from single blocks of aluminum, 0.75 millimeters thick. Half a dime. JPL watched them get shredded by Martian rock starting in 2013, rerouted the entire mission path, taught the rover to drive backwards, and kept going. The wheels look like they lost a fight with a can opener. The rover is still climbing a mountain.
Every iPhone you’ve owned since 2012 is in a landfill. Curiosity is on Mars, 140 million miles from the nearest repair shop, running on a ceiling fan’s worth of nuclear power, sending data through a 14-minute time delay, on shredded wheels, doing geology that rewrites what we know about whether life ever existed somewhere other than Earth.
We built that. With 0.01% of the federal budget.
Curiosity@CuriosityonX
【Breaking 🚨】 Curiosity wheels taken yesterday, showing the damages caused during the 13 years it has been on the Red Planet
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