John Cuthber
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Everything posted by John Cuthber
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I foresee a different problem. A hydrogen escape that met a tuft of platinised glass wool ( which is what the stuff is really made from) would explode. Initially the reaction would take place on the surface of the Pt, but that reaction generates a lot of heat. The Pt would get hotter until it ignited the gas. This was used many years ago ( before they had reliable matches) as a fire lighter.
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ASTM D 1726-03 Hydrolyzable Chloride Test
John Cuthber replied to poorpatti's topic in Applied Chemistry
As far as I can see, the titre of the the sample should be less than the blank. I think there's an error in the method. -
Does Fluoride Have A Negative Effect On Creativity?
John Cuthber replied to jamiestem's topic in Speculations
The effects of chronic fluoride toxicity are well documented. (Mottled teeth etc.) For what it's worth, I have an aunt who grew up in an area where the natural fluoride levels are high enough to induce those symptoms. You might want to argue with her about "creativity", but I wouldn't. So, we know from common experience that these ideas put forward by the conspiracy nutters are simply wrong. Why do they keep on about it? Perhaps they lack the creativity to come up with a better idea. -
If men didn't exist would there be less wars?
John Cuthber replied to Mr Rayon's topic in Speculations
Ask Mrs T http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falklands_War -
"My girlfriend keeps yelling at me to shut up about the sun." Did it occur to you that she might be right?
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I do. However, perhaps you would like to come up with a better test. Alternatively you might want to accept that your assertion, being untestable, is probably unscientific and shouldn't be here.
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"Is it safe to assume that eating an unhealthy animal is bad for you? " I don't know. All the ones I have eaten have been unhealthy to the point of being dead.
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"the box is filled with a transparent material that emits light where two lasers overlap" For example...?
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Interestingly, this "Evolutionary processes interacted with changing weapons technology initially to make people taller, since ergonomically you can fight more effectively with your bare hands if you are shorter and more stable on the ground" is reasonably testable. Are Sumo wrestlers generally taller or shorter than the population from which they are chosen? My hunch, based entirely on prejudice, is that the wrestlers are tall and so the idea is false.
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ghijk, Have you seen what has happened in Somalia? That's pretty close to an anarchist country; and it's not a nice place to be.
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arc tan means the inverse of tangent. So, tan (45 degree) = 1. Arctan (1) =45 degrees. It's a particularly stupid bit of nomenclature
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All that shows is that mice will not be constructed in the same way as elephants. So what? Evolution isn't stupid. If there's some reason why tall people have more children then the race will, on average, become taller. However if these tall people can't do a lot because their backs are not strong enough then they won't have so may kids and the average height will fall. Actually it will just never get to the point where being tall is a significant problem. So the answer to te question "does this suggest that humans will become very weak and when born perhaps collapse under their own weight within a few hundred years? " is no.
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"So when all-optical CPUs are the norm, 400 nm is the sweet spot between high speed and human safety. " 400 nm isn't a sensible cut-off. If you were to use 180 nM then, if any did escape from the processor it would be absorbed by oxygen in the air - so it would never reach any people. Of course, this would still only happen if the chip failed big style. A better solution would be to choose the wavelength on the basis of whatever you can get to work. Then put the chip in a box.
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A bit of steel mesh will meet the requirement of passing isobutylene. What do you want it to hold back? Anyway, I'd try a membrane made form polyisobutylene since it should be easy to get and rubbery materials are often gas permeable, (though butyl rubber is less permeable than many).
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"For the equation I came up with: Ni2(SO4)3 + 6H20 → 2Ni + 6OH + 6H + 3SO4 Is this this correct?" No, and it's not just the charges that matter though they would probably help you see what's going on..
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For chemical processes (and in principle nuclear ones too) the rate of reaction is temperature dependent, so even if every molecule had a half life, it would depend on the environment. Incidentally, by this time tomorrow there's every chance that the enzymes in my liver that are responsible for the oxidation of alcohol will be saturated and so the rate of loss of alcohol from me will be roughly zero order, rather than the first order decay that is characterised by a (single) half life. On the other hand, the caffeine in the cola I had earlier is a diuretic and since the kidneys are (largely) responsible for excretion of caffeine, the more caffeine there is the faster they produce urine and get rid of the caffeine. So the loss of caffeine is a bit faster than first order and, again, that's not characterised by a simple half- life. Biology is, in general, very complicated.
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"You could always carry a wild rage-bearing cat with you and throw it in his face when he attacks you. I swear to god cats like this are suffering embodied." Once again, I'm amused by the lack of respect for the law (about animal cruelty). Anyway, it reminded me of this http://www.xkcd.com/325/
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"cr++? What are you talking about? Chromium? Hexavalent chromium salts are already regulated but chrmium is an element. It's kinda hard to ban an element. " Banning the chromous ion (Cr++) would be roughly as stupid as trying to ban chromium. I wonder what he really meant.
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They would probably ask to see the risk assessment for the process.
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It's quite possible to have a suspension of, for example, sugar in a saturated solution of sugar. The odd thing is that the sugar is soluble. If you play the same game with radiolabeled sugar you can prove it. The important difference is, as Captain pointed out Solution: no solid particles. All material is dissolved. Suspension: solid particles present. Not all material dissolved.
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"Apartheid They initiated apartheid in South Africa. Thankfully apartheid is not a problem now because of Nelson Mandela. " I think that, had the English initiated this they would have called it something like "Separateness" or "segregation" . The reason it's known by an Afrikaans name is that it's not actually English. Anyway, as for the reason. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtx3ezwDyO0&feature=related
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Just a thought, but the plunger seals in cheap syringes are made from rubber and balloons are made from rubber; so anything that will destroy a balloon...
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Pair of great danes vs a tiger, who would win?
John Cuthber replied to Fanghur's topic in Ecology and the Environment
The overall winners would be the bookkeepers. -
I can't speak for the OP but I'm sure he had heard about a genetic link to sexuality, since asked about one. "Sure, not all sex leads to babies. But it DOES NOT FOLLOW then that not all babies come from sex! Well maybe test tube babies" Congratulations! you have realised that life is slightly more complicated than 1 cause=1 effect. Now you need to apply this to the case of human behaviour (which is very complicated). A single gene cannot, on it's own determine eye colour, (in spite of what you said earlier). Similarly there is no single "gay gene". However there are genes related to sexual preference. As with procreation, there are other factors at work- like contraception or fertility clinics on one hand, or single sex schools on the other. But, when it comes down to it, there are clearly researched associations between genetics and sexual preferences. " The plausibility that homosexuality has any genetic origin at all is about equal to the plausibility that the flying spaghetti monster rules the universe. " OK, explain the correlation please. Also, why is there more association between sexual preference of identical twins than between fraternal twins? Actually, never mind that, here's a better question. Do you think a tendency to heterosexuality is genetic? If not how do animals know whom to mate with? If there were some impediment to that system would that not be a heritable pro-homosexual trait? Couldn't a similar thing happen with humans?