John Cuthber
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Everything posted by John Cuthber
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Just for the record, while it may be a usable source, it may not be a legal one. Anyway to answer the original question, no. Sorry but you need carefully processed and doped ZnS to get a decent effect. I have seen the light from a beta source irradiating a bit of the phosphor covered inside of a broken fluorescent tube, but I can't say I recommend this experiment.
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Actually, I guess it depends on what you mean by "represents". Here in the UK about 9.5 g of some brassy alloy represents a pound. I think the question refers to the fact that, seeing that title, we all want to prove just how smart we are so we answer a question that might otherwise seem too trivial to bother with.
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Offhand, I can't think of any biological system that isn't buffered, possibly stomach contents which are strongly acid. Tears, blood, milk etc are all buffered.
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You forgot e) the perpetrator had to leave a hair behind because it's in the script. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy the show, but I don't think of it as a documentary.
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The fact that you don't have enough data to tell what follows "3" is precisely what makes it "random". It would be perfectly possible to generate a transcendental number that never included, for example, 3. "With enough info one can determine where you are in the string and start predicting with 100% accuracy." No, you cannot because any finite sting of digits will occur in the decimal expansion of pi an infinite number of times and will be followed by each of the digits 0 to 9 (an infinite number of times for each digit). How often each digit will follow the sequence is "random" in that is unbiased in the long run. I accept that it's perfectly possible to calculate out pi to as many places as you need so it's perfectly deterministic. However, if you did generate the sequence of "digits that follow 4s in pi" it would look just like tossing a 10 sided dice; there's no pattern to it. If you did the same thing with the decimal expansion of 1/23 you would get a very clear pattern. 4 is always followed by a 3 or a 7. That's the only sense in which pi is "random" and, in refutation of the original post, it has been shown to stay "random" for a lot more than 121 digits. I have a vague feeling here that what is in question is the meaning of random, I think the one that makes pi look random is a lack of auto-correlation. Of course, since I can always calculate the next digit it isn't random at all and that's the point I made originally because it seem to rather pull the rug from under the original post.
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I'm not sure if this is chemistry; it's an odd question but I think that fact that fats do not dissolve very well in acids might help. I think chicken is usually less fatty than beef; I'm a lot less sure about "fish" because there are so many types. At least some fish are known as "fatty fish" when talking about omega-3 fatty acids so I guess they are more fatty than chicken. I also think the fats will get in the way of the acid. If all that is correct and there isn't some other confounding factor I have missed out then the chicken should dissolve fastest.
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Well you have got as far as the ratio of Na to acetate must be 1 to 1. What is that ratio now and what would you need to do to make it 1 to 1?
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Err, I think "Pi in base Pi is 10. " is misleading. Non- integer bases run into problems. In base 10 I can use all the digits 0 to 9; there's no need for anything bigger than 9. In binary I only have 1 and 0. What digits can I use in base 0.5 ? And, at the risk of arguing against myself, pi is random in a rather obscure sense. Given that a particular digit is, for example, 3 does not give any indication of what the next digit is. Similarly the sequence of digits 25356 is just as likely to be followed by any digit as any other. It is, in fact, used in random number generation and, as such, it was tested for randomness (of this type) a long time ago to a lot of digits. It passed so there's not going to be anything interesting in the first couple of hundred digits. http://news.uns.purdue.edu/html4ever/2005/050426.Fischbach.pi.html
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You should look into following your doctor's advice.
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Pi can be calculated, if you tell me what digit you want, I can (in principle) tell you what it is. It's not random. The 3rd digit of pi (in denary) is always going to be 4. Nothing random about it and the same goes for any other digit in any base. You cannot have a changing value of the radius of the universe if it is calculated from a collection of constants (Planck's constant and some parameter calculated from the (randomness of the) digits of pi). Whenever you calculate it it will give the same answer. 6 times 7 will still be 42 in 13.7 billion years and it was just the same as close back to the big bang as you like. Whather or not pi was still about 3 before the big bang is a matter of philosphy and I'm not sure the question has a meaning. If you take the view that maths was discovered (ie like America, it was already there for Columbus (or whoever) to find) then pi was 3 and a bit before anyone anyone noticed it and it will still be 3 and a bit forever. Since as you say, the radius is changing, there is a problem with your theory.
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"yeah, thats right eg. cis-2-chloroethene or trans-2-chloroethene" Err, that's a rather poor example. In one case the chlorine is cis to a hydrogen and trans to the other one. In the other case the Cl is trans to a hydrogen and cis to the other. There's only one isomer. For what it's worth that compound is 1 chloroethene rather than 2chloroethene Anyway, the answer seems to depend who you ask but, for example, names like "cis,cis,cis,trans-[5.5.5.6]-fenestrane" can be found on the 'net. Here are the "official" rules from people who can't spell sulphur http://www.acdlabs.com/iupac/nomenclature/
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I'm puzzled, why don't you think the reaction has gone to completion? Since adding more eggshells doesn't produce more CO2 I think the acid has been used up. Btw, please give me the names of insoluble acetates that could plausible be present.
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"I'm not sure if it's the same GABA I looked up on the internet that comes in pills and powder form like some sort of supplement (vitamin packaging and whatnot). " No. It's a different chemical altogether. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabapentin rather than http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GABA
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"However, there is a lot more CO2 in the atmosphere than methane, so it would not be very useful to curb methane emmisions for the sole purpose of stopping global warming." Erm? Isn't that a good reason for limiting release of methane (and the CFCs too). There's lots of CO2 in the air. IR at any wavelength where CO2 absorb meets lots of CO2, so little gets through. A bit more CO2 doesn't matter so much because it is already absorbing all the IR that it could absorb. Methane is much less common so the absorbtion of the sun's IR isn't so nearly complete. More methane means more absorbtion.
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"I would like to know more about how can we solve the climate change and if cow more responsible than us to the release of CO2" We could stop farming cows but, since cows (and sheep etc) can eat grass which we cannot eat, there might be a problem feeding the world. Also, I like beef and I don't own a car so I'd obviously rather give up cars than cattle.
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All this reminds me of a dilbert cartoon http://weblogs.asp.net/mhawley/archive/2004/10/25/247203.aspx
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"I need the exact solutions to some calculations and not an estimate to the solution such as X^99 or an approximation of Pi or e." Good luck with the exact value of those transcendental numbers.
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How did you do the experiment?
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How do you propose to measure the radius of the universe? Last time I heard most people thought it was infinite. If there's an "edge" wouldn't dividing that radius by c give at least as good an estimate? Whenever you do the maths the value for "The proposed value would be such that the precision at which the change in randomness occurs " will be the same because one of the nice things about maths is that it is constant. Planck's constant is also a constant. The radius of the universe is either expanding or infinite. If it's infinite the expression you give makes no sense. If it is expanding then you are saying that something constant is a function of something that is changing.
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Reduction of WO3 by hydrogen at high temp is the industrial process I think. It's not very cheap.
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I'm not saying that the stuff is hugely toxic. I just think it's plain dumb to make a statement like "No, it's not toxic" when, in fact, it is toxic. This is meant to be a scientific forum. Plainly inaccurate postings like that serve no purpose, worse they may persuade some fool to ignore the toxic nature of Mn compounds and harm themselves. You may wish to disregard those people as candidates for a Darwin award, but that's not a point I'd like to have to argue with their family or their lawyer. As for this comment "john, that refers to manganese metal, not its dioxide." What are you talking about? Do you really believe that Mn wouldn't get oxidised in the body? Do you really think that MnO2 wouldn't get reduced? Don't you understand that the toxicity refered to in the Wiki article is about welding fumes? Do you think those fumes are the metal rather than its oxide(s)? If anything the higher oxidation states are likely to do more damage. The comment "MnO2 isn`t going to cause ANY harm :)" is simply at odds with the facts; Mn has caused harm and it probably will again.
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For a start, cars emit carbon monoxide (CO) in quite large amounts whereas cows scarcely produce any. If you are talking about CO2 then you have to think about another aspect of it. Cows (an people too) produce a fair amount of CO2. On the other hand, all the CO2 a cow produced was CO2 in the atmosphere recently. Then it was turned into grass by photosynthesis and some of it was subsequently released, in the long run, all that CO2 will end up back in the atmosphere. The car on the other hand is producing CO2 that was locked away from the atmosphere millions of years ago.
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"No, it's not toxic." Want to bet on that? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manganism
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"Quote: Originally Posted by John Cuthber Dogs spend enough time humping their owners' legs to prove that they certainly don't know they are dogs, I question whether they have a sense of self. If a dog doesn't have an understanding that it is an individual then how can it think "I am in pain"- there isn't an "I" to think that. Only just caught up with this thread, But this "example" made me laugh like a drain. Just substitute man and plastic blow-up dolls for dogs and legs, or even for students' rolled up socks, and we are asked to conclude that if a man does such things he likewise has no notion of pain or self. Doll and sock shaggers are thus a legitimate part of the Vegan food chain. Canibalism rules, O.K.? Way to go, Vegans!" Yeah, sure, if that were the only eidence about dogs- which it isn't.
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Err? "the eyeball itself is incapable of feeling pain," Having scratched the cornea of my eye a few years back I can tell you the eye is quite definitely capable of feeling pain. It left me lying in bed for a day because I couldn't see. Even with the damaged eye shut , every time I looked round at something it seemed to scrape the damaged bit across the inside of the eyelid (which, lets face it is pretty smooth really). Did you know that when you listen to stereo musc recordings your eyes tend to follow the loudest sound? I didn't until every movement of the eye hurt like blazes. BTW, Ecoli, if you haven't gone to the local hospital's emergency room yet, might I ask what you are waiting for?