Heres a good example: as them how many times they've put their friends happiness above their own?
Heres a good example: as them how many times they've put their friends happiness above their own?
When I lived in Ft. Collins, I was actually very depressed. Its strange, for some reason the locals there where much more clique-ish and uninviting.
Yes, temperature does follow CO2 over Long periods of time. 15 years is too short a time to have any statistical significance. Furthermore you'll notice if you look at the records that every 15 years since the 'warming' began the earth enters a metastable state that lasts for 15 years, then step rises from…
I dont think so... Scandinavia is connected to russia through some pretty high and rugged lands. If it was an island at some point it was before humans
because of course, if we haven't seen anything in 15 years it must not be happening... Oh wait? I forgot to look at the past 150 years? My bad.
why don't they just swim?
"...twirling chimpanzee dung through a sieve, gold-miner style..." Objection! Being a fairly competent prospector, I can tell you with great confidence that neither the gold miners of yesteryear nor today use sieves like this... if they use sieves at all. Otherwise very good review.
I was under the impression that gravity acts upon energy densities, and though mass is a great way to store energy (and thus is affected by gravity quite a bit) all particles, even massless ones have energy and are thus affected by gravity.
aside from the transistor though, basically every other electronic component is as you said. The materials and tolerances for capacitors, resistors, and inductors have changed, but the basic principles used a 150 years ago still apply and could be instantly understood by scientists of that time.
uh.. 2.7 mw/cm^2 is not the right units to measure this. Can someone tell us the specific Energy density?? J/m^3 ?? or how about J/kg?
Its important to note that not all americans are like this, and even within america there is a strong cultural divide. I'm a west coaster and have never shot a gun. Most of this 'gun totin americans' stuff probably refers more to midwesterners/hillbillies. If anything its quite interesting how diverse cultural views…
with regards to the biomes comment: its true that other chemical forms of life have been proposed, using everything from arsenic instead of phosphorus to ammonia instead of water. However all of these alternative chemistries are very very inferior compared to the chems currently being employed by known living…
mmmm bison burgers,
you sir, win the game.
if we define objective morality to mean "the way in which we humans can act towards one another such that we as a species persist longest in this universe" then you can see that theoretically there is a way for different moral systems to be tested and evaluated on this claim. HOwever this experiment is ridiculous to…
well.. technologically and scientifically we've solved them, but unfortunately the american public, both blue and red alike, are to reactionary and political forces dominate over logical ones.
Well, if we used a thorium breeder reactor, there is no way #1 could happen, #2.. maybe although there are some exellent designs out there that deal with this, #3, we could simply burn (read, irradiate to transmute it into less radioactive substances in the reactor) it or just dump it under the sea floor near a…
We do have those safeguards. The problem is all of our reactors are like 30-40 years old and are hard to upgrade to newer systems.
YES. A hydrogen bomb uses a small nuclear bomb to compress a capsule of deteurium and tritium which creates an even larger explosion than the nuclear bomb itself. a Nuclear bomb just uses fission and an atomic bomb really isnt a technical term at all.
You know, i really think that people are way more concerned about the safety of nuclear installations than they should be. YES there are real dangers, fukishima, three mile and chernobyl have demonstrated that. But remember: