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but it is extremely difficult to fall into a black hole (contrary to what a lot of scientists think)
If it is not clumped (and thus by inference is not subject to any force, not even gravity itself, since gravity alone will cause clumping), then in what way is it matter at all (as distinct from the MOND interpretation of simply being a change in gravity, without the cause of that change actually being itself subject to gravity)?
a black hole could pull it together a bit but it is extremely difficult to fall into a black hole (contrary to what a lot of scientists think)
pssha.you didn't specify what kind of rifle. You could do it easy with a sniper rifle [][][]
Quote from: science_guy on 08/03/2007 00:19:14As far as I know, the limit of accuracy of a sniper rifle would only be about a mile (with skill, and ideal conditions, maybe a little, more); but not, I think, several miles).
Quote from: another_someone on 08/03/2007 00:33:22Quote from: science_guy on 08/03/2007 00:19:14As far as I know, the limit of accuracy of a sniper rifle would only be about a mile (with skill, and ideal conditions, maybe a little, more); but not, I think, several miles).During the troubles in NI, the IRA managed to get hold of some pretty good sniper rifles that had an accuracy over 1 mile.The Barrett M82A1 , for instance, can accurately hit a long range target at 1,800 meters, this is not the same model used by the IRA snipers but the range is pretty similar.