12 comments

  • roelschroeven 1 hour ago
    Dianna got better sometime last year as well, just in time to fly home to Hawaii for her father's funeral (yeah ...), but she got a lot worse again later. I really hope things will keep going well for Dianna now.

    Props for her husband who's been incredible of taking care of her.

    • dataflow 53 minutes ago
      Man... I came here hoping to read she was fine now. Had no idea things got worse again :( I hope things get better for her.
  • ayhanfuat 1 hour ago
    Such amazing news. She’s been bedridden due to long Covid. Got better a few times but after a while attacks came back. Both she and her husband showed great strength. So happy to see a new milestone.
    • patcon 1 hour ago
      thanks so much for the context. I'm glad if she's reclaiming from her losses <3

      i want to be more appreciative every day for my health post-covid... not everyone was so lucky, and I can only imagine the gut-punch it is to know everyone went through a thing, but you got singled out for some perpetual daily punishment :'(

  • jesse_dot_id 17 minutes ago
    Long COVID is a nightmare. I'm glad she's able to fight it off enough to do the things she loves again.
  • cleandreams 1 hour ago
    Wonderful to hear. Her long Covid was heartbreaking (saw the videos). I hope she gets stronger and stronger! Welcome back!
  • Brajeshwar 1 hour ago
    Welcome back. One of my staple YouTube Subscriptions.

    I’m today years old learning that the light that we actually see on earth today came out 100s of thousands of years ago.

    • gosub100 16 minutes ago
      It's not the same photon though. The fusion happens in the core, then takes millennia for the energy to escape. During that time photons are emitted and absorbed by the atoms, until the surface emits one that finally travels to the earth in 8 minutes. Anyway that's taking you from the ELI5 to the ELI9 version. I'm sure someone on here can correct it further.
      • amluto 3 minutes ago
        I haven’t tried to look up the history of this claim, but here are some guesses:

        1. There’s a sort of diffusion process going on. Photons from the core have some mean free path as a function of radial position (and, obnoxiously, of wavelength as well, so maybe we ignore that). You could calculate the mean time for a hypothetical object emitted from the core and traveling according to those mean free paths to escape.

        2. You could imagine you have marked a photon and watched it travel. This is quite problematic. First, photons in thermal equilibrium obey Bose-Einstein statistics because they are indistinguishable bosons, and anything that could mark them would change the statistics to that of distinguishable particles. But whatever, the temperature is high and maybe this doesn’t matter. Also never mind that those core photons are mostly much shorter wavelength than the photons we see. But you can still imagine. (The answer is probably quite similar to #1 since this is sort of the same problem depending on how you think about the interactions with matter in the sun.)

        3. You could calculate how long it would take to notice anything if the core suddenly stopped fusing.

    • PunchyHamster 1 hour ago
      [flagged]
      • MyHonestOpinon 1 hour ago
        Oh, probably skipped physics too. I haven't seen the video (yet), but I would have bet that light on earth came out 8 minutes ago from the sun.
        • pantulis 48 minutes ago
          Light from the sun that is reaching us now escaped the surface of the sun 8 minutes ago, yes.

          But photons are generated in the core through nuclear reactions, where they take their sweet amount of thousands of years bouncing around until they get out.

          • gpvos 37 minutes ago
            And thats a fact you don't need to learn in high school, at least you didn't in my time.
      • JeanSebTr 1 hour ago
        They probably meant, as explained in the video, "light from our sun"
      • smarf 56 minutes ago
        ...did you skip human socialization?
  • jwr 1 hour ago
    So happy to see her back! It was a grueling journey and we were all crossing our thumbs, waiting and hoping…
  • gosub100 10 minutes ago
    I can't remember where I heard of it, but decades ago there was another neutrino detection center, also in Japan I think, that had those vacuum tube detectors, but care wasn't taken in systems design. One of them broke and the implosion caused the neighbors to break. Leading to a catastrophic of almost all the sensors! I feel bad for them, I'm sure someone here knows the exact name and date. But man, what a tough lesson to learn.

    Edit: on another note, way to go on your recovery Diana. We've been rooting for you.

  • alabhyajindal 20 minutes ago
    BOOM! Let's go
  • human_hack3r 57 minutes ago
    Happy to see her back to science!
  • JKCalhoun 1 hour ago
    (Typo in the title.)
  • nickandbro 54 minutes ago
    Is this long Covid or depression or Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)? Because in her earlier videos she talks about becoming bed-bound again due to her emotional state after finding news her friend who had a similar condition died.
    • dirck-norman 42 minutes ago
      As someone who suffers from a complex autoimmune disorder which has caused dysautonomia and suspected mitochondrial dysfunction, stress flares and exacerbates symptoms. This has a physiological basis in the complex way the HPA axis/cortisol affects us at the cellular level. My primary diagnosis is sarcoidosis with small fiber neuropathy, but they don’t fully understand all the mechanisms of auto-immune fatigue and dysregulation.
      • nickandbro 40 minutes ago
        Sorry to hear. Thanks for explaining.
    • nablaxcroissant 51 minutes ago
      It was essentially long covid. me/cfs or chronic fatigue syndrome induced by covid infection
      • nickandbro 48 minutes ago
        Wow, did not know that. Thanks
    • KaiserPro 29 minutes ago
      Dunno, personally I don't think its that much of my business. Sure I'm curious, but that doesn't mean I have a right, or that its a nice thing™ to publicly speculate
    • ChrisClark 17 minutes ago
      I'm quite sure being that terribly sick could cause depression yeah, but that's not the reason