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Found 3 results for "52189e44e0c06869674c574f8830ad04" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous ID: 87fHZQ6+Finland /pol/508888561#508888561
6/27/2025, 7:48:43 PM
he killed 9 people before getting caught, he found all of them from twitter

https://www.is.fi/ulkomaat/art-2000011327275.html

Takahiro Shiraishi, 33, sentenced to death yesterday. Judges and jury claimed he is responsible for 9 murders.

He got caught because he had body parts of 15 year old girl in his freezer. Back then he was a suspect and police wanted to confiscate his computer for investigations.

But then out of pure luck one officer looked at his fridge as well.

It is practically impossible to get death sentence in Japan from one murder only. Serial murderers are a different story though.
Anonymous ID: z2bCGzZwFinland /pol/508077240#508077240
6/20/2025, 12:08:49 PM
https://www.sciencealert.com/our-galaxys-monster-black-hole-is-spinning-almost-as-fast-as-physics-allows

There's colossal black hole lurking at the center of the galaxy which is spinning almost as fast as its maximum rotation rate. Mathematician showed how it could go even faster altough it doesnt do that. That's just one thing astrophysicists have discovered after developing and applying new methods.

The unprecedented global collaboration spent years working to give us the first direct images of the shadows of black holes, first with M87* in a galaxy 55 million light-years away, then with Sgr A*, the supermassive black hole at the heart of our own galaxy.

Their results show, among other things, that Sgr A* is not only spinning at close to its maximum speed, but that its rotational axis is pointed in Earth's direction, and that

>the glow around it is generated by hot electrons.

Eventhough its black, its not cold, its actually warm.

Perhaps the most interesting thing is that the magnetic field in the material around Sgr A* doesn't appear to be behaving in a way that's predicted by theory. M87*, they discovered, is also rotating rapidly, although not as fast as Sgr A*. However, it is rotating in the opposite direction to the material swirling in a disk around it -- possibly because of a past merger with another supermassive black hole. The findings have been detailed in three papers published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
Anonymous /b/936010507#936014049
6/20/2025, 11:59:17 AM
Jerk to lucy