4/100 days of productivity☁
in-class humanities + language arts notes🌞
i passed my chinese test!!with an improvement of 19.5 marks lmao- still not an A but i’ll get there
Geometry notes from semester 1
Ig: studyingeries
The first day of December was great! I submitted half of my college applications and went to Muji where they would give you this free canvas bag with every purchase to honor their 10th anniversary!
listening to: Martin Garrix + Troye Sivan - There For You
16/40 weeks of senior year
some photos from my studygram!!!!
my routine has basically been a mix of reading, writing, studying, and repeating. hopefully I’ll get the chance to do my bullet journal september spread today tho!!
This is a list of German Verbs I sometimes mistake because they look similar.
I hope it can be useful for you too. :)
Schieben: to push sth.
Schießen: to shoot.
Schließen: to close; to shut.
Leihen: to borrow sth.
Leiden: to suffer.
Laden: to load/charge sth.
Fliehen: to escape
Fliegen: to fly
Fließen: to flow.
Denken: to think
Danken: to thank
Liegen: to lie.
Legen: to put.
Rennen: to run.
Regnen: to rain.
Scheiden: to divide.
Scheinen: to shine/ to seem.
Waschen: to wash.
Wachsen: to grow.
Wachen: to be awake
Sitzen: to sit.
Setzen: to set.
Biegen: to bend.
Bieten: to offer
“Gravitational ejection is about 100 times more likely than a random merger, meaning our star and the remaining bound planets will probably be ejected into the abyss of now-empty space after around 10^19 years. But even at that, with Earth orbiting our stellar remnant and with nothing else around, things won’t last forever. Every orbit — even gravitational orbits in General Relativity — will very, very slowly decay over time. It might take an exceptionally long time, some 10^150 years, but eventually, the Earth (and all the planets, after enough time) will have their orbits decay, and will spiral into the central mass of our Solar System.”
Worried about the environment of Earth today? Here’s a sobering fact: we already know how it’s all going to end. Not just when the next ice age will come or the next supervolcano will blow, but on cosmic scales stretching billions of years into the future and beyond. From the death of life on Earth to the end of the Sun, we can predict some major catastrophes our Solar System will face. But even after the Sun has died, the Earth and what’s left of our parent star will likely stick around for more. The matter expelled by our Sun will ignite new stars, which will die as well. White dwarfs will cool off into black dwarfs, and the Universe will go dark. And yet, thanks to gravitational effects, more interactions, on long enough timescales, will still remain.
Come get the long-term story of the future of our Solar System and see how it all will, in the ultra-distant future, come to an end.
Good afternoon! I finished some of my assignments for next week. Also, I just made a youtube channel and I might or might not have uploaded my first video ever. 😂
( https://youtu.be/1RXkfA6N-Xg )
Have a lovely day🌸✨
Studygram: @natastudies
Stationery addict 🤷🏻♀️ all stocked up and ready to start specialising in graphics next week ✏️
bujo spread from two weeks ago!! 🌊💧🚲 art is by hokusai
more posts | studygram
PHOTO FROM MY INSTAGRAM: @rotina_de_estudo 👌 go check it out Blue and white is my aesthetic! 💕 I love studying history, i could study history 24/7 (*i’m not jk*)