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Everything posted by RyanJ
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Oh.. gravity decreased with distance, so even if something like the strings from string theory made gravity (Not detectable) then one that spread out it would get harder and harder... Since we have not yet found those gravity waves I would preume we are quite a long way from detecting these Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Maybe because its one of those really tightly bound nuclides nuclei? I really don'tk now the answer but it will be interesting to see what the answer is Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Here are some more: 1) http://www.goldennumber.net/ 1) All you ever wanted to know about Phi. 2) http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/sci/math/MiscellaneousMathematicalConstants/chap98.html 2) Big list of mathematical constants, useful for very (and I mean very) accurate calculations. 3) http://dmoz.org/Science/Math/Geometry/ 3) More geometry stuff. 3) http://dmoz.org/Science/Math/Geometry/ 3) More geometry stuff. 4) http://www.scenta.co.uk/tcaep/ 4) Science and maths information – lots of stuff like a table of constants etc. 5) http://www.sosmath.com/wwwsites.html 5) More maths website, the whole site is useful. 6) http://www.numbertheory.org/ntw/N4.html 6) Lots of information on Number Theory! Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Firstly welcome to the forums! 1. Read this 2. Do ot understand, an element is not charges so it can't be an Ion, nor can it be a molecule because that would require a combination of more then one type of element joined together by chemical bonds. So the answer to these is not they are not them but can form them. 3. Lots can lat time I checked. It depends on the element and what they are bonded with. 4. Again, look on Wikipedia for the information you require 5. Mass is defined as the amount of “stuff” you have, weight is the downward force the object experiences as a result of gravitational attraction. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Where do you get the information? The sun is not pulling the planets closer, it can’t because its mass is remaining constant, though the determination of orbits is thought to occur, it occurs on scales far to small to be what you are talking about anyway. What is happening is that the sun is growing larger as it starts to run out of Hydrogen fuel for its fusion and so starts to fuse Helium and what have you making it hotter and so making it expand. Mars is not really in a position to accept life really, its to small to “hold” an atmosphere like we would require, it was though it may have had one once long ago but it leaked away into space and so the same would probably happen again Cheers and welcome to SNF! Ryan Jones
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Scientists produce 2 billion degrees Celsius
RyanJ replied to wormholeman's topic in Modern and Theoretical Physics
That’s a lot of heat I’ll give you that, the real interesting thing is they are not yet shure how they did it! This is really hot, fussion does not even create heat like that (Normally anyway). Does anyone know what temperature a supernova would reach? Would be really cool if we can ever reach temperatures that high Cheers, Ryan Jones -
Question about quantum uncertainty and a singularity
RyanJ replied to RyanJ's topic in Quantum Theory
I'm still doing research but it appears the answer is no contradiction because at the scales we are dealing with the “quantum jitters” would prevent us knowing almost anything abut the singularity its self let along where it lies nor where its parts are, the question is actually meaningless now I think about it because matter, energy and space are all concepts that are worthless in the singularity… Cheers, Ryan Jones -
Sounds like an interesting idea, should be do able also, as for how hard that depends on the complexity of the task... could just do somehting like a comparitive string search and compare the two I guess. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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OOO, I like it, bookmarked and thanks for the link! Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Or here, this has all the information & equations you'll need http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circle Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Firefox and Opera are on equal footings as far as standards support goes so I don't see how it can be a compatability problem... Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Hi all I'm shure I'm not the only one that feels the edit restrictions are annyoing, especially when you havea big error to correct or something that should be added for other readers. So here is my idea, Wikipedia keeps a record of all previous edits, would it not be possible to do something likethat for a post? That way there could be unlimited edits over any period of time while maintaining the flowof the thread by keeping previous copies for reference. Would something like that be possible? Cheers, Ryan Jones
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My set is actually too big to post... wish we could edit after more then 2 hours would be useful. Will post more soon! Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Simple reasoning, the less queries you use the less data you need to pull, Google uses 3 queries I bet that pges uses a hell ofa lot more. Notonly that but google uses extract markup, only parts are returned. That thing returns more and so its slower. Not saying its bad - its just less effective and fails to offer the tools I like. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Maybe something happened, a micro singularity passed in close proximity to the server causing time to slow down there and not for us (From the relativity point of view)... that would expain it! Or we can take Phi For All's explination Cheers, Ryan Jones
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If your using IE I would not put it past - things like that ar easy to do in IE (CRAP). Or it could be trying to make you uy some fancy $400 firewall sofware that does nothing special... Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Thats true and like YT said - they are not idiots, its designed not to be removed... You don't happen to have a centrifuge lying arround do you? I bet you can seperate it out with that but not every home chemist has such equiptment. Are there any proterties of the compound we can exploit? Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Should we get some confirmation for staff where it should go? It would be lost in the general section and as for anythin else I'm not shure where it would go... Suggestions anyone? Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Is there not something that can make the Pyridine precipiatate out? If not how about some sort of fractional distillation? Boilling point of Pyridine is 115.2 °C and Ethanol about 78.4 °C thats a difference that can be exploited right? Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Probably because people can easily abuse it... if a site had say illegally upoaded films the bot will not care and list it anyway... Thats probably the reason, once the new filters are finished it should be made full (There are some types it completly blocks for security reasons) Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Yes, Google actually logs every file it scans (Even though they do not mention it) and so searching for just about any type works... just don't try the "view as HTML" option... you could cause a crash. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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You can use the filetype feature, does not mention audio and video but they work non the less... More information from here. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Its a browser for UNIX based OS' http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konqueror Probably for legal and maintinance issues. Including text, images, whatever, from a page on your site can be considered a breach of copyright and can get you sued. Its also easier to maintain and makes searcing faster becausse you don't need toextract so much on your page queries. Cheers, Ryan Jones
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Every other section has one... this one should too (If it has I can't find it sorry). So I'll start off: 1) http://linuxfreak87.googlepages.com/ 1) Covers a lot of stuff, Maths and some physics. 2) http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ 2) Amazing maths resource, lot of advanced stuff. 3) http://www.purplemath.com/ 3) Basic and advanced maths here. Good tutorials. 4) http://www.dansmath.com/ 4) Again more good tutorias and weekly challanges. 5) http://mathforum.org/dr.math/ 5) LOTS of question solutions here, examples too. This one has helped me a lot in the past and still does 6) http://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/junkyard/ 6) Lots of fun geometry, useful stuff and interesting stuff here. 7) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mathematics 7) As always Wikipedia is a great resource for one and all. 8) http://www.research.att.com/~njas/sequences/Seis.html 8) If your interest is number sequences this is the place to go. Useful for research. 9) http://eqworld.ipmnet.ru/ 9) Equations, equations and yes you guessed - MORE equations. Very useful resorce for reference. 10) http://home.att.net/~numericana/ 10) Lots of interesting stuff and some other useful links too. 11) http://www.mcs.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/R.Knott/ 11) Lots of interesting stuff, the mysteries of the Fibonacci Numbers etc. 12) http://integrals.wolfram.com/ 12) Very useful too, online integral solver! 13) http://tones.wolfram.com/ 13) Maths in music, what next? If you have more to add pease share them Cheers, Ryan Jones