Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text

gojo because I only just realized that he has an undercut
[id: it’s a doodle page of Gojo wearing a white shirt, his usual uniform pants, and his bandages that he donned in JJK 0. On the left, he is standing with his hands in his pockets and a blue popsicle in his mouth. Next to this, he is (presumably) looking off to the side with his hand pinching his cheeks together. Last is a chibi drawing of him pointing to himself. It should also be noted that he has gold earrings. /end id]
4K notes
·
View notes
Photo
Jujutsu Kaisen Vol 0 Movie PV - Yuuta & Rika
8K notes
·
View notes
Photo
There are 5 eras in the universe’s lifecycle. Right now, we’re in the second era.
Astronomers find these five chapters to be a handy way of conceiving the universe’s incredibly long lifespan.
If you’re fortunate enough to get yourself beneath a clear sky in a dark place on a moonless night, a gorgeous space-scape of stars waits. If you have binoculars and point them upward, you’re treated to a mind-bogglingly dense backdrop of countless specks of light absolutely everywhere, stacked atop each other, burrowing outward and backward through space and time.
Such is the universe of the cosmological era in which we live. It’s called the Stelliferous era, and there are four others.
The 5 eras of the universe
There are many ways to consider and discuss the past, present, and future of the universe, but one in particular has caught the fancy of many astronomers. First published in 1999 in their book The Five Ages of the Universe: Inside the Physics of Eternity, Fred Adams and Gregory Laughlin divided the universe’s life story into five eras:
Primordial era
Stellferous era
Degenerate era
Black Hole Era
Dark era
The book was last updated according to current scientific understandings in 2013.
It’s worth noting that not everyone is a subscriber to the book’s structure. Popular astrophysics writer Ethan C. Siegel, for example, published an article on Medium last June called “We Have Already Entered The Sixth And Final Era Of Our Universe.” Nonetheless, many astronomers find the quintet a useful way of discuss such an extraordinarily vast amount of time.
Read more: https://bigthink.com/surprising-science/5-universe-eras
81 notes
·
View notes