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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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A penguin hug for you! And if you want to send something physical, consider sending my book Loading Penguin Hugs to a friend! 🐧💕 It’s a really good gift for birthdays, Valentine’s day, and cheering up bad days, and I wouldn’t be able to make it as an indie artist without your support. Thank you all so much already! 💖
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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Studying and fitness
Whilst many of us will study like mad to get our grades it has only been this past year I've fully understand how fitness can help better my studies. I'm not a sports student, a sports psychology student or studying anything regarding fitness at all. In fact I do a pretty nerdy subject where the stereotype is the kinds of people who study physics is that they are book loving people who stay inside and rarely go for a run. First of all that's totally untrue, you do get a few who check those boxes but for the most part many of us go to the gym or do a sport.
For years I struggled with academic anxiety, and this is mostly due to the fact I didn't take care of myself and my body whilst I've been studying. I would pour 100% into physics and have time for nothing else, the result being poor grades and a negative state of mind. I cannot stress how important exercise is to students.
As it is now January please can I encourage you to go out for that run, join the gym (many have discounts for joining in January) go for a swim, whatever you do go and do it. Get on those new year gains and help your mental state and your grades!
If you're looking to go further with your fitness goals think about your eating too, don't diet like crazy, go and eat a healthy and balanced diet that tastes great and makes you feel good too. I've recently got into diet whey shakes to curb my snacking habits (I use my protein shakes - sign up using the referral code CHARLOTTE-RBHV and get a free snack box worth £20 when you spend £50) and also blending frozen fruit for yummy smoothies. They make just as good a revision snack as toast or chocolate!
I hope this inspires at least someone to get up and get fit to help their grades 💕 happy new year study buddies!
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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First photos of Ultima Thule from New Horizon’s New Year’s fly-by. It is an object 1.5 billion kilometres past Pluto, and is the furthest object to be photographed by a spacecraft.
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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Sciserver
Yo! So anyone who codes in python and some other languages might be interested in this. Sciserver means your code can go anywhere with you! I do a lot of work on some of my code in tutorials and in the uni library, which makes it a bit of an effort to access it when I'm at home. However , Sciserver means my code is stored on the cloud and can be accessed anywhere and from any device! It's made my life so much easier and would 100% recommend to anyone!
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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08/08/2018 - Special Relativity 🔭
I’m really struggling to choose between applying to Jesus college or St John’s college in Cambridge
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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The mini cactus is so surprised and delighted that her flower is blooming! 🌺✨ I hope this comic makes you smile because it sure makes me smile. ;u;
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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your intrusive thoughts don’t define you as a person.
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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Things you should know when starting university
1. Don’t worry about making new friends. There will be so many people and opportunities!!
2. There’s nothing wrong with feeling anxious and afraid. Everyone is new and will be feeling scared like you!
3. Don’t try to change yourself or act as if you’re someone different. You’re fine the way you are – so just be genuine and real.
4. It’s normal to feel lonely and to miss the life you had. It’s part of taking risks, and being brave, and moving on.
5. You’ll wonder if you’ll fit, or find a place in this new world. But that will start to change, and soon this new place will feel good.
6. Don’t only socialise, and go to everything you can. Make some space for being alone, and time for quiet solitude.
7. At the same time, make sure you force yourself to move outside your comfort zone, and try new things with others, and see what you enjoy.
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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That unstoppable girl that you’re envisioning, you’re her. She’s you. Go be her!
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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Mood for the year
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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It’s okay to romanticise the small things about your day-to-day life. It’s okay to romanticise sleeping in, waking up to the sun tickling your skin. It’s okay to romanticise the texture of fingers against a page. Sometimes to save your day you need to romanticise sitting at a desk and working, or romanticise studying hyped up on coffee. It’s okay to picture yourself as if you were the mc in a movie. Watch yourself go through shit and know that it’s just the climax of your own story, and that while you sit in your room sobbing to sad songs, good things are just around the corner.
Sometimes to be okay or get through the day you need to romanticise the simple things.
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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IT DOES GET BETTER. This one is a bit sad because I was having tough day yesterday when I drew this. But even though it can be hard, I want anyone who’s going through a rough time to know that it does get better. 💛 You are strong enough to make it through. Sending lots of positive energy to everyone today!
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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FOUNDATIONS FOR MASSIVE STARS For three years, Jenny Calahan led fellow undergraduate students at the University of Arizona (UA) in research to help unravel the mystery of how the galaxy’s most massive stars are born.
On July 23, just two months after Calahan graduated with a bachelor’s degree in physics and astronomy, the resulting research paper, “Searching for Inflow Towards Massive Starless Clump Candidates Identified in the Bolocam Galactic Plane Survey,” was published in The Astrophysical Journal. Her co-authors include students who assisted with the survey and research.
“There’s still a pretty open question in astronomy when it comes to massive star formation,” Calahan said. “How do stars weighing more than eight solar masses form from clouds of dust and gas?”
Astronomers understand this process for stars the size of our Sun. Particles in clouds are attracted to each other and begin to clump together. Gravity takes hold and the gases flow to the center of the cloud as it collapses. Over millions of years, the gas is put under so much pressure that it begins to burn, and the star is born when nuclear fusion finally begins in the core of the compressed gas.
Theories about how much gas and time it takes to make a star like our Sun can be proven through observations, because each stage of a Sun-like star’s life – from the collapse of gas clouds into a pre-stellar core to the star’s expansion into a red giant and collapse into a white dwarf – can be been seen throughout the galaxy.
But astronomers have yet to understand how stars more than eight times the mass of our Sun form. Stars of this size explode into supernovae at the end of their lives, leaving behind black holes or neutron stars.
“There are a few theories for massive star formation that work in simulations, but we haven’t seen those initial conditions out in the wild universe,” Calahan said.
One theory is the formation of massive cores, says Yancy Shirley, associate professor in the UA’s Department of Astronomy. The massive cores are dense collections of gas several times larger than the star they create. For massive stars, the cores must be at least 30 times the mass of our Sun.
“People are having trouble finding objects like that,” Shirley said.
The other theory is that multiple low-mass cores form within a gas clump. The low-mass cores grow as they compete for material in the clump, and eventually, one of the cores grows large enough to form a massive star.
“This is the debate: which of these two pictures is more correct, or is it some combination of the two?” Shirley said.
The first step in answering the question is identifying the earliest phase of star formation, so Calahan, under the advisement of Shirley, set out to find clumps showing signs of collapsing gas motion, called “inflow.”
Calahan selected 101 subjects from a list of more than 2,000 huge, cold and seemingly starless clouds of gas called starless clump candidates, or SCCs. Though astronomers have studied SCCs in the past, many of them focused on the brightest and most massive objects. Calahan’s study was unique in that it was a blind survey.
Ranging in size from a few hundred times the mass of our Sun to a few thousand solar masses, the SCCs Calahan selected are a representative sample of all gas clouds that have the potential to form massive stars.
Using the Arizona Radio Observatory’s 12-meter radio telescope at the UA’s Steward Observatory on Kitt Peak, Calahan detected and tracked radio waves emitted by the molecular gas oxomethylium (HCO+), which emits a specific radio wavelength.
Once Shirley and the undergraduate students he advises use the telescope to identify objects of special interest, like collapsing SCCs, the clumps of interest are then further studied using ALMA, which can peer deeper into the gas and find stars or other objects that cannot be seen with the 12-meter telescope.
Oxomethylium, one of the more abundant ion molecules in space, is a highly reactive ion that would not survive in our Earth’s atmosphere. When oxomethylium moves towards an observer, the wavelengths are compressed; when the gas moves away from an observer, the wavelengths are stretched.
By analyzing the wavelengths, Calahan identified six SCCs that showed the telltale signs of collapse, suggesting that gas collapse happens quickly, accounting for only 6% of the formation process of massive stars.
“One side is falling away from us and one side is falling towards us,” Calahan said.
Surveys take many dozens of hours to complete. Calahan and Shirley spent 19 weekends over the course of eight months to study the SCCs.
“I’ve now seen every part of this research,” Calahan said. “I got to be part of asking the question, observing and doing the data reduction.”
Groups of undergraduate students traveled with Calahan and Shirley to the telescope, where they learned astronomical observation and data analysis techniques.
“The first time we went up, I learned how to use the telescope and I learned how to analyze the data,” Calahan said. “By the third time, I could teach other students.”
Shirley has served as adviser to several students who have published the research they did at UA, but Calahan is the first student of his whose paper was accepted before graduation.
“I don’t think I could have done this at any other university,” Calahan said. “We have the resources and the faculty to teach us how to reduce real-life data and observe on a real-life telescope. That’s really unique to this institution.”
IMAGE….The yellow balls seen at the center of this image are a phase of massive star formation that comes before the massive stars have cleared cavities in the clouds of gas around them (shown in green) but after the cold, collapsing gas stage that Jenny Calahan and Yancy Shirley searched for in their survey. (Courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech)
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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Black background!
App - GoodNotes Device - iPad Pro 10.5” Stylus - Apple Pencil
xx
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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WHAT TO PACK
packing list by @mathmaticat
things i actually used by @productivecoffee
first aid kit by @wannabeavet
12 things nobody told you to pack for college by @happyjo 
packing list by @introvertstudyism​
things no one tells you to bring to college by @allieswonderland​
definite must haves by @collegerefs​
FIRST DAY
how to college by @danistudies-ir​
things i noticed my first day of college by @arasstudyblr​
picking courses by @the-physics-detective​
STUDYING
things i’ve learned while taking my 1st semester final exams by @studycris​
how to get straight a’s by @bookbearstudies​
study tips straight from my professor by @just-refuse-to-be-stopped​
how i study @ college by @shhhstudy​
tracking college courses in your bullet journal by @the-nerd-bird​
OFFICE HOURS
dear college students by @oldshrewsburyian​
office hours post by @historicalaesthete​
COLLEGE LIVING
working in college by @pawprintedpages
some uni tips for shy people (like me) by @goro-goro-studies
gbm/club season by @alevatross​
living off campus by @honeststudying​
TEXTBOOKS
where to buy college textbooks by @studybuddydotcom
how to save on textbooks by @sandersstudies
sites where you can get free textbooks by @thearialligraphyproject
how i only spent $34 to purchase $1000+ worth of school supplies for college by @dinktea-studymore
CHOOSING A MAJOR
in response to criticism that an english degree is useless by @warmhealer
choosing a major by @collegerefs
GENERAL TIPS FOR SUCCESS
some random uni tips by @goro-goro-studies​
mistakes college freshmen make by @bioluminescent-studier​
what i’ve learned from two semesters of university by @transcendstudy​
five tips by @paperdrop​
5 tips for first year by @highlighterhaven​
questions every college freshman should ask themselves by @studynadia​
a honest university guide by @prodessostudies​
tips for college by @anotherstudyblr17​
college tips by @physicallymath​
advice from a stressed, coffe-addict college student part i by @cafune-s​
things i’ve learned in college (so far) by @trying-to-become-a-good-student​
shitty advice of a college student by @stillstudies​
successful university tips by @candidlyjessica​
a guide to getting your life together by @the-sapphic-desk​
uni tips by @rubythescientist​
college tips from a real live college student by @socsciblr​
things i wish i’d known in my first year of university by @succulentstudy​
things i wish i had known before starting by @andmekb​
what i learned my first semester in college by @studygrl​
OTHER MASTERPOSTS
how to survive in college by @lilypotterr​
college survival masterlist by @college-campuses​
MISC.
double degree by @fuckstudy​
how to prepare for a new semester by @blissfulstudies​
what to expect from your uni experience by @honeststudying​
high school vs college by @collegerefs​
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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educated girls supporting each other gives me life 
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lottestudiesphysics · 6 years
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79/100 Days
I’ve been cooking a lot so expect more recipes 🌿🍽 ft. some pretty photos I took with my SLR
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