@neurovalia1937: Dejar Ir... #motivation #exito #dinero

Neurovalia1937
Neurovalia1937
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Region: VE
Monday 21 July 2025 23:00:00 GMT
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patricia1997pat
Patri🦋 :
Y si lo estás forzando pk no quieres estar sola?
2025-07-23 20:18:37
0
ivan.antonio.cazo
Ivan Antonio Cazorla Hernandez :
perdiendo también se gana
2025-07-22 02:10:49
12
lupanaval
Lupanaval :
pero no es fácil
2025-07-27 12:00:32
0
margari.cruz2
Margari Cruz :
por lo menos perdiendo se siente mucha paz interior .
2025-07-23 16:05:32
2
inma.189
funky funky :
todo fluye sin necesidad de forzar sino fuera
2025-07-24 19:03:55
1
perikin104
perikin :
perdiendo se aprende mucho
2025-07-22 22:23:05
3
federicoclimentma
Federico Climent mar :
grande
2025-07-24 00:14:23
1
nonitaguerrerovalarezo
nonitaguerrerovalarezo :
MUCHA RAZÓN
2025-07-22 03:42:34
1
lupanaval
Lupanaval :
eres el mejor 🥰
2025-07-27 12:00:10
0
hadamagica32
nubecilla :
es que perder tiene dos caras,una mala y otra muy buena
2025-07-22 16:36:38
1
maribelramrom
user1354148111900 :
Dejar ir es ganar
2025-07-23 21:26:23
1
patricia.lpez43
Patricia López :
tiene mucha razón
2025-07-22 11:40:48
1
josecastillo.200
josecastillo39868 :
el mejor
2025-07-27 00:59:16
0
juan.jos.amador.m
Juan José Amador Medina :
es correcto 🤣
2025-07-25 21:18:26
0
ainhoaazcarragaoyarzabal
ainhoaazcarragaoyarzabal :
ezagutzan. Eso es lo q yo siento q fuerzo,es decir q me t ngo q esforzar, porque a el no le nace ni preguntar. Siento q estoy en una entrevista y paso
2025-07-26 06:41:37
0
maria.gravas
Maria Gravas :
y no le des vueltas
2025-07-25 15:41:32
0
ana.beln.rayo.oje
Ana Belén Rayo OJEDA :
cuesta xo verdad
2025-07-24 22:41:22
0
paqui9190
Paqui :
A veces no se trata de forzar ,sino se ayudar para que fluyan las cosas . El tiempo pasa ,y con el se pierden muchas cosas.
2025-07-24 21:22:00
0
carmelojavier4
carmelojavier4 :
cierto 🙏👏
2025-07-25 15:04:08
0
jazmin.juan5
Jazmin Juan :
totalmente de acuerdo "👌
2025-07-24 19:33:37
0
manuelcriadomayer
manuelcriadomayer :
Es cierto, las cosas tienen que fluir solas,si tiene que ser así!!
2025-07-23 21:25:30
0
a45680706
A. :
tal cuál
2025-07-23 06:12:13
0
carmen.espinoza301
Carmen Espinoza :
Muy de acuerdo 👌🤗
2025-07-22 01:24:49
0
candyros41
Candy Ros :
Tal cual💜
2025-07-24 16:52:11
0
inma.189
funky funky :
hay que ser valiente
2025-07-24 19:04:14
0
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Other Videos

This collision of two galaxies could demonstrate that theorized “direct collapse black holes” exist. Researchers—who are based at the universities of Yale and Copenhagen—have nicknamed their discovery the “Infinity Galaxy” and have detailed their discovery in a paper published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. The images were taken through the James Webb Space Telescope and then enriched with information from the Chandra X-ray Observatory, the most powerful X-ray telescope ever created. “During the collision, the gas within these two galaxies shocks and compresses. This compression might just be enough to form a dense knot, which then collapsed into a black hole,” Pieter van Dokkum, a professor of astronomy and physics at Yale and a coauthor on the paper, said in a post on his university’s website. “While such collisions are rare events, similarly extreme gas densities are thought to have been quite common in the earliest cosmic epochs, when galaxies began to form,” Van Dokkum added. Scientists are also considering other, less spectacular alternatives as to what’s going on in the Infinity Galaxy. Rather than being created through a direct collapse of gas, that potential extra black hole—the green spot in the image—could instead be the signs of a black hole ejected from another galaxy as “Infinity” passes through it. Another possible scenario is that this image actually shows the collision of three galaxies, with the third eclipsed by the other larger ones. For the moment, the team says the preliminary results are exciting. “We can’t say definitively that we have found a direct collapse black hole. But we can say that these new data strengthen the case that we’re seeing a newborn black hole, while eliminating some of the competing explanations,” Van Dokkum concluded in a blog for NASA. Via @wiredenespanol
This collision of two galaxies could demonstrate that theorized “direct collapse black holes” exist. Researchers—who are based at the universities of Yale and Copenhagen—have nicknamed their discovery the “Infinity Galaxy” and have detailed their discovery in a paper published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. The images were taken through the James Webb Space Telescope and then enriched with information from the Chandra X-ray Observatory, the most powerful X-ray telescope ever created. “During the collision, the gas within these two galaxies shocks and compresses. This compression might just be enough to form a dense knot, which then collapsed into a black hole,” Pieter van Dokkum, a professor of astronomy and physics at Yale and a coauthor on the paper, said in a post on his university’s website. “While such collisions are rare events, similarly extreme gas densities are thought to have been quite common in the earliest cosmic epochs, when galaxies began to form,” Van Dokkum added. Scientists are also considering other, less spectacular alternatives as to what’s going on in the Infinity Galaxy. Rather than being created through a direct collapse of gas, that potential extra black hole—the green spot in the image—could instead be the signs of a black hole ejected from another galaxy as “Infinity” passes through it. Another possible scenario is that this image actually shows the collision of three galaxies, with the third eclipsed by the other larger ones. For the moment, the team says the preliminary results are exciting. “We can’t say definitively that we have found a direct collapse black hole. But we can say that these new data strengthen the case that we’re seeing a newborn black hole, while eliminating some of the competing explanations,” Van Dokkum concluded in a blog for NASA. Via @wiredenespanol

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