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Flagstaff, Arizona, US Lucknow (King of Oudh's) Observatory 1832–1848 Lucknow, India Lulin Observatory: 1999 Mount Lulin, Taiwan Lund Observatory: 1749 Lund, Sweden Luoxue Mountain Cosmic Rays Research Center: 1953 Luoxue Mountain, Yunnan Province, China Lyon Observatory: 1878 Saint-Genis-Laval, France Macalester College Observatory
Buster serves a menu of “over-the-top” thick sandwiches, fries and onion rings, and ice cream because there’s also an ice cream parlor. Cosmic Fry, a new restaurant on North Broadway, serves ...
The restaurant was sponsored by Coca-Cola from its opening in 1967 until Tomorrowland was redesigned in 1998. The stage's original large planters and space age spires were replaced with a retro-futuristic design to match the Jules Verne-like design of the new Tomorrowland. Suburban Legends performing at Club Buzz in 2005.
The Washington Area Large-scale Time-coincidence Array (WALTA) is a cosmic ray physics experiment run by the University of Washington to investigate ultra high energy cosmic rays (>10 19 eV). The program uses detectors placed at Seattle -area high schools and colleges which are linked via the internet, effectively forming an Extensive Air ...
CosMc’s has a pretty extensive menu, focusing heavily on breakfast and featuring more than 10 new beverages never before seen on a McDonald’s menu. CosMc’s partial drink menu.
In 2021, scientists picked up the new cosmic ray, named Amaterasu, when it triggered 23 of those detectors. The array showed that it was coming from the Local Void, an empty part of space on the ...
The name CosMc originated as a McDonaldland character, appearing in McDonald's advertisements from 1986 to 1992. [6] It is an extraterrestrial who "craves McDonald's food." [4] [7] In the 1990s, McDonald's tried to expand its business by buying Donatos Pizza, Boston Market, and a stake in Chipotle Mexican Grill, but within a decade had sold them off.
The Oh-My-God particle was an ultra-high-energy cosmic ray detected on 15 October 1991 by the Fly's Eye camera in Dugway Proving Ground, Utah, United States. [1] [2] [3] As of 2023, it is the highest-energy cosmic ray ever observed. [4] Its energy was estimated as (3.2 ± 0.9) × 10 20 eV (320 exa-eV). The particle's energy was unexpected and ...