Ecyy Dilapidated observatory looks like the Planet Express building
California s electricity grid manager declared a minor power emergency Wednesday as the state s operating energy reserve dipped below 7 percent.The declaration of the Stage 1 emergency is the least worrisome of three steps preceding rolling blackouts, in which power is cut to certain regions to avoid a systemwide crash. The announcement triggered conservation efforts by state agencies and a general call for California s 37 million residents to turn down air conditioners and restrict the us
stanley cups e of heavy appliances during hot afternoon hours.For a second straight day, energy demand surged 1,000 megawatts above forecasts, according to the California Independent System Operator. If that trend continues on Thursday, California would set a new all-time record for energy demand and come close to using all the available electricity resources that are forecast for the state. We re tapping our operating reserves and we are stepping up our calls for conservation, but we are still a long way from a Stage 3 alert and blackouts, said Stephanie McCorkle, a spokeswoman for the independe
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stanley tumblers San Diego Gas and Electric Co., the state s largest investor-owned utilities. Peak demand for Thursday is expected to be 49,572 megawatts, but McCorkle said that could be revised upward based on the trend of the past two days.California s all-time record energy demand o Fypi A Soul-Snatching Job Goes Hilariously Wrong For Unluckiest Grim Reaper
Eons ago, two
stanley cup of our satellite galaxie
stanley mugs s became locked in a cosmic game of tug-of-war. Their fierce gravitational interactions ripped out a huge ribbon of hot, potentially star-forming gas that now surrounds much of our own galaxy southern hemisphere, as this amazing new Hubble image shows. The so-called Magellanic Stream takes its name from its progenitors, the dwarf galaxies known as the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. First sighted decades ago, the Magellanic Stream had long defied precised explanation, and it only this year that astronomers now feel confident that they understand just where this huge ribbon comes from. There also the question of where it going; it possible that the ribbon will eventually fall into our own galaxy, setting off a new frenzy of star formation. There a good rundown of the story over at Wired, and here some more context on the Hubble image from NASA: This composite image shows the long ribbon of gas, discovered at radio wavelengths in the 1970s, in pinkish hues against an optical all-sky view across the plane of our Milky Way galaxy. Both Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, dwarf satellite galaxies of the the Milky Way, are seen near the head of the stream at the right. Data from Hubble
stanley cup 8217 Cosmic Origins Spectrograph were used to explore abundances of elements along sightlines to quasars that intersect the stream. The results indicate that most of the stream material com