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Fascinating
fascinating@nostrplebs.com
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Curating and selecting images and videos while providing context, sources, and explanations on science, technology, art, and weather topics.
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Fascinating 2 weeks ago
An incredible aerial view of the natural scenery along the Lonavala–Mumbai–Pune highway in India.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
8 year old takes breakdancing to the next level.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Snow rabbit runs over an avalanche to safety
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Erik Schmitt crafts clever videos using perspective and editing to create the illusion that he’s moving cars with his hands—like he’s conducting traffic. [📹 erik__schmitt]
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
First direct evidence of “monster stars” 1,000–10,000 times more massive than the Sun Astronomers may finally have an answer to how supermassive black holes formed so quickly after the Big Bang — something normal stars cannot explain. Using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, researchers have uncovered the first clear evidence that ultra-massive “monster stars,” weighing between 1,000 and 10,000 solar masses, existed in the early universe. These enormous stars lived fast and died young, collapsing directly into massive black holes. By studying the chemical makeup of a distant galaxy, GS 3073, scientists found an unusual nitrogen-to-oxygen ratio that cannot be produced by ordinary stellar processes. Instead, the excess nitrogen matches predictions for supermassive primordial stars that generated large amounts of nitrogen through helium- and carbon-driven reactions. When these stars reached the end of their lives, they didn’t explode — they collapsed straight into black holes. Such collapses may have seeded the supermassive black holes observed at the centers of galaxies today. This breakthrough offers a new window into the universe’s first generation of stars and provides crucial clues to how early black holes and heavy elements formed during the “cosmic Dark Ages.” Researchers hope the James Webb Telescope will uncover more traces of these colossal stars in the years ahead. The simulated video depicts the birth of a primordial quasar made possible by one of these giant stars. [Nandal, D. et al., “1000–10,000 M⊙ Primordial Stars Created the Nitrogen Excess in GS 3073 at z = 5.55,” The Astrophysical Journal Letters]
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
This is why you tap early: a BJJ practitioner demonstrates the breaking mechanics of an ankle lock using three baseball bats.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
An unexpected view in Alaska [📹 johnderting]
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
This road passage using a natural cave as a tunnel in China.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Rolling a molten glass sphere through bits of colored glass to create an ornament.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
A high-angle view embracing the brilliant Christmas lights of Đức Bà Saigon Church, Vietnam.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Queen Elizabeth II first stepped onto the Buckingham Palace balcony as monarch in 1953, greeting the public shortly after her coronation. Her final balcony appearance came in 2022 during her Platinum Jubilee — a brief yet historic moment marking 70 years on the throne.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Traditional Romanian dance 🇷🇴 🎄 Long live the beauty of preserving our traditions! ✨ [📹 ro_rollwithcami]
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Sand skiing in Peru on one of the world’s tallest dunes, standing 1,630 meters high. [📹 Mahe Freydier]
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
A 22-million-year-old termite perfectly preserved in amber. [📹 Rocks for the Spirit]
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Naples, Italy 🇮🇹 Teatro di San Carlo — the world’s oldest continuously operating opera house. And it’s absolutely stunning.
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Fascinating 3 weeks ago
Decades-old palm trees in Rio de Janeiro are flowering for the first — and only — time. Native to India and Sri Lanka, these palms can reach heights of up to 100 feet and produce millions of blossoms that may develop into new seedlings if successfully pollinated.