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General Science / Re: why do Frozen Candles Burn Longer...Why's that then ?
« on: 15/05/2007 17:54:24 »
I'll have to think about that one!
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how much energy would be consumed by reprocessing, repackaging and guarding all this material for 300,000 years?
You have to take my comment within a particular context of assuming there was a hole in the centre of the Earth where you were undertaking this experiment.
It is also that everybody has slightly different variations of cone sensitivity, with slightly different peek wavelengths for the different cones.
I suspect that if it was an iron atom then it would be like a piece of iron yes ?...
It is also that everybody has slightly different variations of cone sensitivity, with slightly different peek wavelengths for the different cones.
A nuclear explosion. China Syndrome
Some of the remaining reactors are still being used by the Ukraine,
there is however a limited size you can make this as the bomb tends to blow itself apart before it has all ignited.
(This question makes me wonder why the highest degrees of intellect would ever deem an answer unworthy of study. Just for starters, why would anyone not be at least “a little concerned” that they just might exist in the wrong 50%? )
Can I just point out that all the candles I have used burn shorter
As a firm believer in empirical study I will conduct said experiment on the morrow else amidst the next few days !
Curve in what direction? Of course it would curve in a downward direction. Newton's Laws of Motion establish that beyond doubt.