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Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War (BLEACH 千年血戦篇, Burīchi: Sennen Kessen-hen), also known as Bleach: The Blood Warfare, is a Japanese anime television series based on the Bleach manga series by Tite Kubo and a direct sequel to the Bleach anime series that ran from 2004 until 2012.
Kenpachi Zaraki (更木 剣八, Zaraki Kenpachi) is a fictional supporting character in the anime and manga series Bleach created by Tite Kubo. He is the captain of the 11th Division within the Gotei 13. His lieutenant is Yachiru Kusajishi.
The thirteenth season of the Bleach anime series is based on Tite Kubo's Bleach manga series. It is known as the Zanpakutō: The Alternate Tale arc (斬魄刀異聞篇, Zanpakutō Ibun Hen), [1] is directed by Noriyuki Abe and produced by TV Tokyo, Dentsu, and Studio Pierrot. [2]
Ikkaku shares a number of similarities with his captain such as seeking enjoyment in battles by risking his life, and is reportedly the second strongest man in the squad, [65] strong enough to take a position as a captain should he so choose. Ikkaku, however, maintains that his one mission in life is to die under Zaraki's command.
The JMA scale is expressed in levels of seismic intensity from 0 to 7 in a manner similar to that of the Mercalli intensity scale, which is not commonly used in Japan.. Real-time earthquake reports are calculated automatically from seismic-intensity-meter measurements of peak ground acceleration throughout an affected area, and the JMA reports the intensities for a given quake according to the ...
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Thorium-234 has a mean lifetime of 3 × 10 6 seconds, so there is equilibrium if one mole of 238 U contains 9 × 10 12 atoms of thorium-234, which is 1.5 × 10 −11 mole (the ratio of the two half-lives). Similarly, in an equilibrium in a closed system the amount of each decay product, except the end product lead, is proportional to its half-life.
This is a list of radioactive nuclides (sometimes also called isotopes), ordered by half-life from shortest to longest, in seconds, minutes, hours, days and years. Current methods make it difficult to measure half-lives between approximately 10 −19 and 10 −10 seconds.