Watch How This Caterpillar Reacts to Loud Noises | National Geographic

This caterpillar, found in the Peruvian Amazon, responds to sounds by stretching its tentacles.
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Read more about this bizarre caterpillar.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2015/04/150427-caterpillars-tentacles-rainforests-animals-peru-science/

Watch How This Caterpillar Reacts to Loud Noises | National Geographic

National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

تخاوي ذا اليوتيوبر ولا لأ ؟ مع عبدالاله | #شباب_السوشل_ميديا

اخيرا بناكل ٨ برجرات ! https://goo.gl/9MSM6L
انستقرام: http://instagram.com/mrfahadsal
سناب شات: fahadsal
قناة عبدالاله : بعطيكم خبر لما ينزل الاصدار حقه
https://www.youtube.com/user/GYHUNJ

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تحدي الكتابة بالصوت | فهد سال VS عبدالاله
https://goo.gl/Luj4CM

السب والقذف من مسلمين | #بكاء_حلا_الترك
https://goo.gl/H2r6uE

تقدر تخمن جنسية شخص من اكله ؟؟
https://goo.gl/6Ry3Bw

تحدي اللهجات: اللبنانية مع ليلى مراد
https://goo.gl/8VXFK4

اسئلتكم لأسيل عمران: هل تتزوجي فهد سال ؟؟؟
https://goo.gl/HQACXL

بحل جريمة قتل ؟!
https://goo.gl/MrmSdu

فهد سال VS محمد سال
https://goo.gl/ueG4W3

موقع الاختبار
https://goo.gl/EpGZFc

تحدي اللهجة الكويتية
https://goo.gl/YZa4tO

فهد سال VS بن باز | تحدي الكتابة الصوتية
https://goo.gl/LArwb8

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Fight Scene by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Artist: http://audionautix.com/

مشاهدة ممتعة للجميع وخلينا نكون اجابيين وحلويين .. سلام

Homemade Gummy Brains | TKOR Tests Our Silicone Mold For The Perfect Tasting Gummy Brain

In the first video of this project, Grant took a brain and silicone to show you how to make a silicone brain mold from a real cow brain. So…if you’re wondering how to make homemade gummy brain, brain mold, silicone brain, brain casting…check out that video! The steps Grant Thompson covered for making a silicone brain mold are super easy. If you have a real cow brain and some silicone, you can take brain molding to the next level! In this video we test the silicone mold. Would you eat a gummy zombie brain? I invited my friend Zack over for a snack, but he has no idea what’s on the menu!

This silicone brain mold project is also great for those wanting to know how to make other cool things with silicone: Halloween decorations, zombie decorations, zombie brain, silicon mold, science projects and more! Let us know what cool silicone mold experiments you create!

If you’re looking to try something new or for an activity such as: DIY silicone project, DIY brain mold, cool science experiments, fun weekend project, science brain mold, gummy brain, how to make a real brain mold, silicone casting, or just a fun project with the family, watch the video to learn more.

Here’s Part 1 of this project on how to make the brain cast mold from silicone: https://youtu.be/honikQEuQ2Q

Vat19 brain: https://goo.gl/HW2RR0
SmoothSil Silicone: http://amzn.to/21k9Eex

Endcard Links:

Brass Knuckles: https://goo.gl/uzDIFD
Trash Hack: https://goo.gl/Mp5JkF
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See What Else I’m Up To:

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Music by: Bird Passengers – “See Saw”
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/bird-passengers/id1205165567
https://www.youtube.com/birdpassengers

WARNING:

This video is only for entertainment purposes. If you rely on the information portrayed in this video, you assume the responsibility for the results. Have fun, but

“I need to see Dr Turner, NOW!” – Call the Midwife: Series 6 Episode 7 Preview – BBC One

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Stream original BBC programmes FIRST on BBC iPlayer 👉 https://bbc.in/2J18jYJ

Programme website: http://bbc.in/2m3aPlq Rhoda goes to see Dr Turner with Susan. Nurse Crane examines Carrie

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Blast Wave from a Stellar Explosion: Simulation of Supernova 1987A

This scientific visualization shows the development of Supernova 1987A, from the initial blast observed three decades ago to the luminous ring of material we see today.

The sequence, using data from a computer simulation, begins with the star before it exploded. A ring of material around the star was expelled about 20,000 years before the supernova outburst. A flash of light signals the stellar explosion. The supernova sends a blast wave outward from the dying star. As the blast wave slams into the ring, high-density knots of material become intensely heated and glow brightly, while lower-density gas is blown outward. The computer simulation provides one data set per year, and thus the visualization steps between them at four years per second. Upon reaching the present day, the time development is halted, and the camera circles around the ring to showcase its structure.

Visualization Credit: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers and G. Bacon (STScI)
Simulation Credit: S. Orlando (INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo)

Blast Wave from a Stellar Explosion: Simulation of Supernova 1987A

This scientific visualization shows the development of Supernova 1987A, from the initial blast observed three decades ago to the luminous ring of material we see today.

The sequence, using data from a computer simulation, begins with the star before it exploded. A ring of material around the star was expelled about 20,000 years before the supernova outburst. A flash of light signals the stellar explosion. The supernova sends a blast wave outward from the dying star. As the blast wave slams into the ring, high-density knots of material become intensely heated and glow brightly, while lower-density gas is blown outward. The computer simulation provides one data set per year, and thus the visualization steps between them at four years per second. Upon reaching the present day, the time development is halted, and the camera circles around the ring to showcase its structure.

Visualization Credit: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers and G. Bacon (STScI)
Simulation Credit: S. Orlando (INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo)

Blast Wave from a Stellar Explosion: Simulation of Supernova 1987A

This scientific visualization shows the development of Supernova 1987A, from the initial blast observed three decades ago to the luminous ring of material we see today.

The sequence, using data from a computer simulation, begins with the star before it exploded. A ring of material around the star was expelled about 20,000 years before the supernova outburst. A flash of light signals the stellar explosion. The supernova sends a blast wave outward from the dying star. As the blast wave slams into the ring, high-density knots of material become intensely heated and glow brightly, while lower-density gas is blown outward. The computer simulation provides one data set per year, and thus the visualization steps between them at four years per second. Upon reaching the present day, the time development is halted, and the camera circles around the ring to showcase its structure.

Visualization Credit: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers and G. Bacon (STScI)
Simulation Credit: S. Orlando (INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo)

Blast Wave from a Stellar Explosion: Simulation of Supernova 1987A

This scientific visualization shows the development of Supernova 1987A, from the initial blast observed three decades ago to the luminous ring of material we see today.

The sequence, using data from a computer simulation, begins with the star before it exploded. A ring of material around the star was expelled about 20,000 years before the supernova outburst. A flash of light signals the stellar explosion. The supernova sends a blast wave outward from the dying star. As the blast wave slams into the ring, high-density knots of material become intensely heated and glow brightly, while lower-density gas is blown outward. The computer simulation provides one data set per year, and thus the visualization steps between them at four years per second. Upon reaching the present day, the time development is halted, and the camera circles around the ring to showcase its structure.

Visualization Credit: NASA, ESA, and F. Summers and G. Bacon (STScI)
Simulation Credit: S. Orlando (INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo)