Astronomy Lecture Powerpoints
Astronomy Lecture Notes (Textbook-Like)
Astronomy Notes
Astronomy Lecture Notes (Alaska)
Astronomy Lecture Powerpoints (Trinity)
Astronomy Lecture Notes (MIRA)
Astronomy Lecture Powerpoints (Rutten)
Modern Astronomy Lecture Notes
Astronomy Lecture Powerpoints (Wickman)
Solar System Astronomy Lecture Notes
Astronomy Lecture Notes
Astronomy Lecture Notes (Mitchell)
Astronomy Lecture Notes (Rochester)
Time Systems Lecture Notes
Earth and Sky Notes
Galactic Structure and Stellar Populations Lecture Notes
Stars, Galaxies, and the Universe Lecture Notes
Astronomical Techniques
Essential Radio Astronomy
Introduction to Astronomy
Equations and Formulas
Essential Physics Equations
MCAT Physics Equations
Frequently Used Physics Equations
General Physics Notes
Physics Lecture Notes (MIT)
University Physics (Textbook-Like)
General Physics I
Physics Lecture Notes (Colorado)
Physics Lecture Notes (Rochester)
Physics Lecture Notes (Cabrillo)
Physics Lecture Notes (Trinity)
Physics Notes
Physics Videos (Flipping Physics)
Physics Ch 1 to 8 Lecture Notes
Feynman Physics Lecture Notes
Electromagnetism
Electromagnetism Lecture Notes
Feynman Electromagnetism and Matter Lecture Notes
Mechanics
Mechanics (Physics) Lecture Notes
Mechanics (Physics) Powerpoint Slides
Feynman Quantum Mechanics Lecture Notes
Physics and Astronomy
Physics of the Interstellar Medium Lecture Notes
Physics for Astronomy Lecture Notes (Textbook-Like)
Radio Astronomy (Physics 728)
Physics: Astronomy, Astrophysics, and Cosmology
Inorganic Chemistry Chapter Notes
Inorganic Chemistry Lecture Notes
Inorganic Chemistry 2 Lecture Notes
Advanced Inorganic Chemistry Lecture Notes
Formulas and Equations
Calculus Cheat Sheet
AP Calculus Basic Formulas and Properties
Calculus 1 Formulas
Basic Calculus: Rules and Formulas (Video)
Differential Formulas
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The Basics
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Single Variable Calculus
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Calculus 1 (Textbook-like)
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Calculus 2 Lecture Notes
Calculus 2 Lecture Notes (Northern Illinois)
Calculus 2 Notes (Illinois State)
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Calculus 2 Lecture Notes (Textbook-like)
Calculus 2 (Textbook-like) (Dawkins)
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Calculus 3 Lecture Notes (Lamar)
Calculus 3 Lecture Videos
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Other Calculus
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Differential and Integral Calculus (Textbook)
Differential and Integral Calculus (Lecture Notes & Old Exams)
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Calculus for Physics C
Analytic Geometry and Calculus 2
Notes on the History of Astronomy
History of Astronomy Powerpoint
Early History of Astronomy
History of Radio Astronomy
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Neolithic Astronomy
Mesopotamian Astronomy
Islamic Astronomy
Indian Astronomy
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Chinese Astronomy
Egyptian Astronomy
Mayan Astronomy
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
South African National Space Agency
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Italian Space Agency
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Korea Aerospace Research Institute
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
UK Space Agency
Australian Space Agency
I see a lot of dark academia aesthetic involving the classics fields, literature and languages and theater and music, but can the STEM kids get in on this too? Where’s my dark science aesthetic at? where’s my STEM gothic?
• It has to be a mistake, on the syllabus your professor e-mailed over yesterday. The lab class can’t possibly start at 8pm. Not that you’d notice the time of night anyway, considering that for some reason it’s held in a basement of the STEM buildings that you were sure was closed off. You’ve never seen anyone emerging from its depths, and honestly you’re not even sure how to get down there. But not to worry, your professor assures you when you reply with your concerns. He’ll send his TA to pick you up. Just try not to stare at their hand. Especially if it sparks. They’re still working out the kinks.
• The transparent lightboard you use in your apartment building for working out math equations that require more room is the only illumination piercing your otherwise dim living room. You’ve been working for hours, and haven’t noticed how late it’s become, mostly because you’re pretty sure that you accidentally just determined exactly when the world is going to end. Before you can grab your phone to tell everyone, there’s a knock at your door. “Well done,” the man and woman in dark clothes and glasses that reflect even the minor light so that you can’t see your eyes as they enter your apartment. “A little too well done, we think. You’ll be coming with us now.”
• H2 = H 2 0 [ Ωm(1+z) 3 +ΩDEexp {3 Z/z 0 dz 1+z [1+w(z)]}
• “We are doctors,” in heart if not yet in degree,” the neurologist teaching your afternoon class says, laughing. “We are the ones who stand between that looming reaper Death and all of our patients, scalpels and syringes in hand, and say “not today, old friend. Not this one.” But then the mirth fades from his voice, and his gaze drifts to the left of the lecture hall for some odd reason, fixed on some dark corner. “That’s why it hates us, you know. Death. All of us. We as doctors must be very, very careful in our everyday lives, because Death despises us for stalling its work time and time again, and it constantly has its eyes on us. Waiting for us to relax, to look away. There are rituals, as we get older and Death steps closer every day…” but then they come back to themselves, shaking their heads and laughing. “Not enough coffee for me today, apparently!” Shadows in the corner where no one sits seem to be shifting.
• The chemistry majors always seem to know something that no one else does. They all keep tiny glass bottles of clove oil in their backpacks at all times, for some reason. You’re starting to wonder if it wouldn’t be smart for you to do the same.
• The engineering majors know exactly what the chem majors think only they know, and they laugh when you mention the clove oil. “They really think that will protect them,” one future robotics pioneer says to you, shaking his head. “They really think they can stop what’s coming.”
• Something in the forensics lab whispers at night, but only when a lone student is working down there alone. One of them snags you in the halls one morning and says, “I know you’re not forensics and you’ve never heard it before, but last night I was working on a paper down there and, well. It knows your name.”
• Your roommate is a biogenetics student. She keeps beakers brimming with bubbling fluids in the fridge, and she often seems restless and distracted. You’ve caught her stealing hair off of your brush before, and one night as you watch her mixing and stirring and taking notes as she’s hunched over her desk, you realize that a single blinking eyeball is staring back at you from the green fluid surrounding it in her glass tube.
• The mathematics students have figured out what the chemistry students know, and what the engineering students have known for years. They all look anxious now, walking around campus and constantly looking over their shoulders. One of them suggests to you that maybe you should start stockpiling bottled water. Just in case.
• An astronomy major comes barreling into one of your classes one dim and dying afternoon, slapping a star chart down onto a desk in front of a newly enlightened mathematics student, sweating and furious. “You weren’t even going to tell us, you bastard?! You were just going to let it happen while we sat around unprepared?!”
• A week later. You sit up in bed and your roommate is gone. Their things are gone. Campus is still and quiet, the chem and engineering and astronomy and mathematics students having all cleared out save for you. The bio, forensics, and med students are left blinking, dazed. Clearly you’ve all missed something important, but your roommate responds to your text with assurance that it’s fine. You’ll all know soon enough.
6,7,8/100
imma put these 3 together because i was at countryside and truly didnt do that much
so academically speaking what i did was
take some notes
lowkey organize the chapters i will be studying for the time i still am away
AND WENT STARGAZING AND IT ACYUALLY WENT ON PRETTY WELL LIKE I SPOTTED JUPITER AND SATURN AND I KNOW ITS NOT A BIG THING IT JUST MAKES ME SO SO BLOODY HAPPY DFHKFDFK
The Mechanisms have so many genders going on, and most of these genders are waistcoat
Academic Earth: Astronomy (multiple courses)
Class Central: Relativity and Astrophysics (course)
NASA Astrophysics (govt. website)
MIT Astrophysics II (lecture notes)
Astrophysics and Cosmology by Prof. Somnath Bharadwaj (lectures)
Matrix Operations by Richard Bronson (maths textbook)
Linear Algebra by Seymour Lipschutz & Marc Lars Lipson (maths textbook)
The End of Everything: (Astrophysically Speaking) by Katie Mack (book)
Astrophysics for People in a Hurry by Neil de Grasse Tyson (book)
A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking (book)
The Elegant Universe by Brian Greene (book)
The Universe in a Nutshell by Stephen Hawking (book)
YouTube channels
Making this for my fellow broke passionate people
https://www.coursera.org/learn/astro
https://www.teachastronomy.com/
https://www.youtube.com/user/astropedia/videos
(these first 3 are basically the same shit but different platforms)
I will keep reblogging each time I find something new
I just want to be an elf and have a human girlfriend and after she dies she would reincarnate into another cute elf girl.
Am I asking for too much?!
who the fuck invented the tag hurt no comfort I just wanna have a little friendly chit-chat with them
we are the universe experiencing itself
why do your homework when you can *reads the entire hurt/comfort section*
Tim | it/they/he | INFJ | chaotic evil | ravenclaw | here for a good time not for a long time
184 posts