They pinned him thats foul lol
noticed that too
time goes by faster as an adult because we measure it in ratios. thats about it
I believe that in 2041, radioactive badgers, created by the Swedish, will rise up and rule the world
time goes by faster as an adult because we measure it in ratios. thats about it
This is pretty much it lmfao. Our perception of time at 5 years old is way different than at 25. That and all the information we have to encode nowadays is crazy, itβs all skewed. Bet if you put your phone down for a year, time would feel slow af
it's facts but it's very small in how much faster it is, literally milliseconds. There's also relative/perceived time
On a quantum level
The magnesium getting to his head
Either that or Jhene got this man in the awoken place
Him and Jhene really are the perfect match
They probably be in the crib talking straight bullshit to each other and vibing out
Need
Life moves faster when you are grown
F***ing thread and someone smack this into woah dere ass ass ass ass ass ass ass man's head
Quick, everybody run really fast in the opposite direction in unison as to create an anti matter geomagnetic vortex
But Earth is not a very reliable timekeeper, says Fred Watson, Australia's astronomer-at-large.
That means the length of the astronomical day varies by a tiny amount that goes unnoticed unless you are an atomic clock.
"When you start looking at the real nitty gritty, you realise that Earth is not just a solid ball that is spinning," Professor Watson says.
"It's got liquid on the inside, it's got liquid on the outside, and it's got an atmosphere and all of these things slosh around a bit."
Over time, Earth has been slowing down by about 3 milliseconds per day, per century, thanks to the tug of the Moon.
"If you don't do anything about it, you are going to gradually get the seasons out of step with the calendar," Professor Watson says.
"That's why the leap seconds are introduced to keep the atomic clocks and the astronomical clocks together."
Around 27 leap seconds have been introduced since the advent of atomic clocks, the last one in 2016.
But in 2020, the trend reversed as Earth clocked up 28 days that came in under 24 hours.
Millennials stop making everything about themselves challenge (IMPOSSIBLE)