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FORT PIERCE, Fla. Police have arrested a Florida teen who they say posted a Facebook message threatening to bring a gun to school tomorrow and shoot everyone. The St. Lucie County Sheriff s office said Thursday night that they received a tip from a parent who saw the threat from the 13-year-old student.Ariz. teen accused of threating to kill people at school Neither the teen nor his school has been identified.A sheriff s spokesman says the student did not have access to any weapons. No schools were evacuated or locked down, but security at area schools had already been increased as a result of the mass shooting at a Connecticut school last Friday. The student is charged with a single second-degree felony charge of making a
stanley cup website written threat.Authorities say he is being held at the Juvenile Detention Center in Fort Pierce. ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5 display: none;
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The prospect of finding another planet like Earth is exciting from the perspective of exploration 鈥?and our future as a species. But let consider
termo stanley the bottom line. What would such a discovery really be worth for us in terms of money Astronomy journalist Lee Billings breaks it down for you. Illustration by Ron Miller Billings ; book Five Billion Years of Solitude has just come out in paperback, and we ;re celebrating with this excerpt on the people who are figuring out just how much money we ;d make on an Earthlike exoplanet. Excerpt from Five Billion Years of Solitude: Back in 2009, less than a week after a Delta II rocket launched NASA Kepler space telescope into planet-hunting history, the University of California, Santa Cruz astrophysicist Greg Laughlin had quietly posted a strange, half-whimsical equation on his blog systemic, at oklo.org. In a series of subsequent
stanley website posts, he explained how the long string of obscure variables and weighted functions could be used to crudely quantify the value of any terrestrial exoplanets that Kepler and the handful of other leading surveys might soon discover. It was, he said, an attempt to judge whether any particular Earth-like world was worthy of legitimate scientific excitement, independent of media hype. After plugging in a few key parameters鈥攕uch as a planet mass, its estimated temperature, and the age and type of its star鈥擫aughlin equ
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