Photo reblogged from YO, make my blood boil ┼ with 131,815 notes
Boom.
Can everyone just reblog this once?
Source: ihopericksantorum
Photo reblogged from Yo! with 563 notes
Spike: Look at my eyes, Faye. One of them is a fake cause I lost it in an accident. Since then, I’ve been seeing the past in one eye, and the present in the other, so I thought I could only see patches of reality, never the whole picture.
Source: suputoniku
Photo reblogged from The Last Airbender Brazil with 1,000 notes
Be the leaf!
Yessss
Source: got-avatar
Video reblogged from The Script=Beast with 29 notes
Danny and Bo duet
Danny rapped……..My life is officially complete
Source: thescriptgifs
Photo reblogged from From Observation to Insight with 31,292 notes
Psychology, how I hate you.
Source: funnyjunk.com
Link reblogged from From Observation to Insight with 31 notes
A boy math whiz has shocked the world by solving a 350-year-old problem once posed by the great mathematician, Sir Isaac Newton.
Sixteen-year-old Shouryya Ray, a boy of Indian origin attending school in Germany, cracked two particle dynamics theories. Ray’s novel solutions can now help scientists calculate the flight path of a thrown ball and predict how it will strike and bounce off a wall, according to the International Business Times.
Ray was told by professors during a school field trip to Dresden University that the problem could not be solved. That notion didn’t sit right with the Calcutta-born student.
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“I just asked myself, ‘Why not?’” Ray told Germany’s Welt Online newspaper. “I didn’t believe there couldn’t be a solution.”
According to Welt Online, Ray has been captivated by math since a very early age and was inspired by his father, Subhashis Ray, who works as a research assistant at the Technical University of Freiburg. His father began teaching Ray calculus at the tender age of six.
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Ray’s family moved to Germany when he was 12. Ray didn’t speak German when they first moved to Germany and now he is fluent in the language.
As for his future career, Ray is debating whether to study math or physics when he moves on to college.
Photo: Sir Isaac Newton Credit: iStockPhoto
Teen genius. I’d love to sit and talk to someone that intelligent.
Source: news.discovery.com
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