DN42 access
本服务为那些无法轻松访问自身网络的用户以及希望体验 dn42 但又不想承担维护自有网络成本的用户提供 dn42 连接
默认情况下,地址从/96地址块中分配,如果您希望租用独立的/96前缀或更大的地址空间,请按照联系方式联系我
所有公开的PoP均已屏蔽来自中国境内的 IP 地址。如果您确实需要dn42 access,请与我联系并提供合理的理由
该服务由AS4242423377提供
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The service provides DN42 connectivity to members who cannot easily access their own networks, as well as to those who would like to explore DN42 without the overhead of maintaining their own network.
By default, addresses are allocated from a /96 block. If you wish to lease a dedicated /96 prefix or a larger address space, please contact me using the methods provided in the contact information.
All publicly accessible PoP are blocked for IPs originating from within China. DN42 access from within China is not publicly available. If you genuinely require access, please contact me and provide a valid justification.
Hosted by AS4242423377.
Policy
本服务需要花费时间和金钱才能运行,但为了您的利益,我们免费提供。使用本服务是一种特权,而非权利。您必须合理使用本服务,以确保其他用户也能继续享受同样的便利。任何滥用、误用或干扰服务或其他用户的行为都可能导致您的访问权限立即被暂停或终止。
滥用行为包括但不限于:
- 过度使用资源
- 黑客攻击、病毒、木马等,或任何其他可能损害服务或对服务及其用户造成风险的干扰行为
- 传播可能导致民事或刑事责任的不良内容
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This service require real time and financial resources to operate, yet are provided free of charge for your benefit. Access to the services is a privilege, not a right. You must use the services responsibly and considerately to ensure that other users can continue to enjoy the same opportunities. Any misuse, abuse, or activities that disrupt the service or other users may result in immediate suspension or termination of access.
Abuse could include, but is not limited to:
- Excessive use of resources
- Hacking, viruses, trojans etc or any other disruption that could harm or create risk to the services or its users
- Distribution of objectional content that could create a civil or criminal liability
PoP
## Toronto, Canada
Prefix: fdb6:fc6a:e66c:724f:fad1:d2cf::/96
Zerotier: 4753cf475f65b0fb
## Los Angeles, USA
coming soon
#announcement#service
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🪐 In 2016, scientists using the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) made history by detecting gravitational waves from the collision of two black holes over a billion light-years away. Gravitational waves are actual ripples in the fabric of space itself, created when massive objects like black holes or neutron stars crash together, letting astronomers "hear" cosmic events that were invisible before. ✨
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🪐 In 2023, astronomers announced the very first detection of gravitational waves coming from the collision of two supermassive black holes—giant black holes millions of times heavier than the Sun—located in distant galaxies. These faint ripples in space-time were picked up using pulsar timing arrays, which rely on ultra-precise measurements of radio pulses from rapidly spinning neutron stars, revealing a whole new side of the universe where invisible titans shape the cosmos with their dances and crashes. ✨
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🪐 In 2023, scientists using the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) Pathfinder technology prepared for future space-based detection of gravitational waves—tiny ripples in space made by massive events like black hole collisions. Unlike Earth-based detectors, LISA will measure these waves from space, opening a new window to observe cataclysmic events in galaxies millions of light-years away and revealing secrets hidden by cosmic dust and distance. ✨
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🪐 In 2019, gravitational wave detectors LIGO and Virgo picked up GW190814—a signal from the merger of a black hole about 23 times the mass of the Sun and a mysterious compact object weighing just 2.6 solar masses. This lighter object is too heavy for known neutron stars but lighter than any confirmed black hole, creating a real cosmic mystery and challenging scientists to rethink what kinds of objects can exist in the universe. ✨
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🪐 In 2020, astronomers made a pioneering discovery by detecting gravitational waves from the merger of a black hole and a neutron star in a distant galaxy. Gravitational waves are ripples in space caused by massive objects accelerating or colliding, and finding this "mixed" merger—between a dense neutron star and a black hole—helped confirm that such pairs really exist and can dramatically reshape the universe. ✨
#gravitationalwaves⚡#blackholes⚡#neutronstars⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space
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🪐 In July 2023, the NANOGrav collaboration announced the detection of a subtle, continuous "hum" of gravitational waves rippling through the Milky Way, likely created by pairs of supermassive black holes orbiting each other in distant galaxies. Gravitational waves are tiny ripples in space itself, first predicted by Einstein, and their detection with pulsar timing arrays—using rapidly spinning stars that act as cosmic clocks—opens a new era for exploring invisible giants and the history of galaxy mergers across the universe. ✨
#gravitationalwaves⚡#pulsars⚡#blackholes⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space
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🪐 In 2023, scientists using pulsars—ultra-dense, spinning stars that emit radio pulses like cosmic clocks—detected a faint background hum of gravitational waves rippling through our galaxy. These gravitational waves, created by supermassive black holes merging in distant galaxies, gently stretch and squeeze the fabric of space, opening an entirely new window into the universe’s most titanic collisions. ✨
#gravitationalwaves⚡#pulsars⚡#blackholes⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space
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🪐 In 2015, the twin LIGO detectors in the United States made a groundbreaking discovery by directly detecting gravitational waves—tiny ripples in the fabric of space itself—caused by two black holes merging about 1.3 billion light-years away. This event, called GW150914, proved that space can literally shake, confirming a century-old prediction by Einstein and opening a whole new way to "listen" to the universe beyond just observing light or radio waves. ✨
#gravitationalwaves⚡#blackholes⚡#discovery⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space
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🪐 In 2023, astronomers using gravitational wave observatories detected GW230307, a signal from the merger of two neutron stars in a distant galaxy. Neutron stars are the incredibly dense cores left behind after supernova explosions, and their collision sent ripples—gravitational waves—through space itself, allowing scientists to study the properties of matter squeezed far beyond anything found on Earth. ✨
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🪐 Some gamma-ray bursts last less than two seconds and are thought to result from the collision of two neutron stars—ultra-dense remnants of massive stars that pack more mass than the Sun into a space the size of a city. In 2017, the galaxy NGC 4993, about 130 million light-years away, was the site of such a collision, allowing astronomers to observe both gamma rays and gravitational waves from the same cosmic event—a rare glimpse into the most violent mergers in the universe. ✨
#gamma-ray ⚡#neutronstar⚡#gravitationalwaves⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space
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🪐 In 2020, astronomers detected gravitational waves from the merger of two black holes with highly unequal masses—one about nine times heavier than the other—in a distant galaxy. This unusual event, named GW190814, created a final object weighing about 142 times the mass of our Sun, providing the first strong evidence for so-called "intermediate-mass" black holes that fill the mysterious gap between stellar and supermassive black holes. ✨
#gravitationalwaves⚡#blackholes⚡#discoveries⚡#nasa⚡#galaxy⚡#stars⚡#astronomy⚡#universe⚡#cosmos⚡#space
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