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Ever seen The Blob This is sort of like that 鈥?only the blob doing the absorbing is a ball of putty, infused with millions of micron-sized ferromagnetic particles. The putty is nothing special on its own, but watch what happens when you stick it next to a powerful neodymium iron bo stanley usa ron magnet. YouTuber Scott Lawson explains what you ;re seeing: stanley cup The presence of the strong neodymium iron boron magnet the silver cube in the video magnetizes the ferromagnetic particles in the putty. When this happens, the ferrous particles align with each other and this alignment generates north and south magnetic poles, making the putty into a temporary magnet stanley thermos mug . Once magnetized, the putty will remain magnetized even after the rare-earth magnet has been removed from the putty. This effect persists for a few hours until thermal agitation shakes the particles and they lose their alignment. The video was shot at 3fps over the course of 1.5 hours, and played back at 24fps. It hypnotizing to watch 鈥?even if things do get weirdly sphincteral towards the end there. We know you were thinking it. NOW IN GIF FORM! [Scott Lawson] magnetismPhysicsScience Tbzu Gifts For The Aspiring, But Untalented, Artist
The script for the dark fantasy flick Snow White and the Huntsman didn ;t just spring up out of the fairy tale fever over the last stanley kubek few years. When screenwriter Evan Daugherty was in film school at NYU, he penned this gritty take on the girl with skin as white as snow. We chatted with the fairy tale scribe about the Huntsman long journey from grizzled old man to sexy but still grizzled Chris Hemsworth. Plus, Daugherty elaborated on a few of our favorite characters from the movie, like the tribe of scarred women and the smiling pixies. Let talk about the long road with this screenplay. How many years a stanley cup go did you start writing this Evan Daugherty: It was jun stanley mug ior year of college. That was 2003. I went to film school at NYU and part of that was learning screenwriting. There ; s a big learning curve for screenwriting. I went into NYU not knowing anything about it or the format, the structure, or the craft. And we learned a lot of that in the the first couple years. I wrote a couple of not great ones. Then I wrote Snow White, which I thought was pretty cool. It sort of came from one of our assignments, which was to take an old folk tale and update it. And I didn ;t do it with Snow White, I did it with Thor and played around with Norse mythology. I think that got my brain percolating about revising full fairy tales in new ways. That was part of it; the other part was thinking about this Huntsman character that I remembered from the Disney movie an |
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