Infant CPR – Choking Part 1

Learn what you can do in a life-threatening situation of a choking infant. Visit www.ThePregnancyShow.com
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The deeper NASAs Hubble Space Telescope looks into space, the farther back in time it looks, because light takes billions of years to cross the observable universe. Hubbles latest image shows 13 billion-year-old infant (and still forming) galaxies. — Please subscribe to: • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com • www.youtube.com — The Hubble Space Telescope has captured the earliest image yet of the universe — just 600 million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was just a toddler. Scientists released the photo at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. It’s the most complete picture of the early universe so far, showing galaxies with stars that are already hundreds of millions of years old, along with the unmistakable primordial signs of the first cluster of stars. Hubble can be thought of as a time machine; the deeper it looks into the cosmos, the further back in time it sees. The light emitted from these baby galaxies was produced 13 billion years ago, but since then, the universe has been expanding at an accelerated rate, so it’s taken the same light 13 billion years to reach our telescopes. These faint objects are therefore the most ancient and most distant things we have ever seen. Interestingly, the light from the most distant galaxies in this image is stretched or “red-shifted.” As the universe expands, the light is stretched to longer and longer wavelengths. Now this ancient, dim infrared light can only be detected by extremely sensitive