A Swedish city Malmö has more than 90 different nationalities.
The biggest black hole has 18 billions times the mass of the sun
The biggest black hole has 18 billions times the mass of the sun
I knew that one from a web comic. And people say those things aren't educational.TheFreeGus said:the average person has approximately 10^13 cells in their body and
the average person has approximately 10^14 individual bacterial cells in/on their body.
And 73% of statistics used in conversation are made up on the spot.Anarchemitis said:25% of people who read that try.MagnetoHydroDynamics said:It is impossible for a normal human to lick his/her own elbows.
[a href=http://www.snopes.com/critters/wild/rats.asp]Snopes says no.[/a]mshcherbatskaya said:The ratio of rats to humans in any city is approximately 1:1.
...Wow...Just wow...Khell_Sennet said:...Edmontonians drive like epileptic lemurs with no arms.
Geoffrey42 said:[a href=http://www.snopes.com/critters/wild/rats.asp]Snopes says no.[/a]mshcherbatskaya said:The ratio of rats to humans in any city is approximately 1:1.
Glass is in a liquid state though... thats why the old panes are wavy... thickness is due to the manufacturing. Most plastics are liquids too... thats why they don't work for structural supports as they eventually flow under stress and then the building falls over. (go polymer engineering grad school!)Lukeje said:Your first point is not exactly true; they used to line glass with lead (that is of course very dense), and there is also evidence that the glass makers, because it's very difficult to get a perfectly flat piece of glass, would put the thicker end at the bottom (because the pane is more structurally stable that way).Blue Sonnet said:Glass is a liquid, not a solid - you can see this when you see windows on centuries old houses, the glass is thicker on the bottom of the pane.
Every glass of water from your tap has been drunk by at least nine other people before you.
The second quote should technically be "It is very statistically probable that each glass of water you drink has passed through at least nine other people...
most of the "proof" that ppl use to say it's a REALLY slow moving liquid are really examples of different/poorly made glass, those being windows for the 17th-19th century because they are wavy (poorly made glass) or the medieval glass, which was explained previouslyGeoffrey42 said:Per the Glass = Liquid/Solid thing, I've heard multiple versions. In school, I was taught "amorphous solid, just an incredibly slow-moving one." Then, a bit later, I read a PopSci article where some VERY bored scientist measured glass very, very accurately, over the course of 2 decades, and found that it moved not at all, so he extrapolated that it simply doesn't ever. It doesn't prove anything, but I thought I would add what I knew of the matter.
I'm sorry but chemists are not experts on the states of matter by any definition. Physicists are.... and I happen to be well trained in both... chemical engineering bachelors and a masters in polymer science and one in polymer engineering.cleverlymadeup said:most of the "proof" that ppl use to say it's a REALLY slow moving liquid are really examples of different/poorly made glass, those being windows for the 17th-19th century because they are wavy (poorly made glass) or the medieval glass, which was explained previouslyGeoffrey42 said:Per the Glass = Liquid/Solid thing, I've heard multiple versions. In school, I was taught "amorphous solid, just an incredibly slow-moving one." Then, a bit later, I read a PopSci article where some VERY bored scientist measured glass very, very accurately, over the course of 2 decades, and found that it moved not at all, so he extrapolated that it simply doesn't ever. It doesn't prove anything, but I thought I would add what I knew of the matter.
this is one of those issues that ppl hear one thing but don't listen to ppl with expertise in the field, ie chemists.
another one is hitler was rejected by the freemasons when he applied and they were the first group he went after before the jews
In that case your definition of a liquid need to be called up. By the grade school definition anything that maitains its volume and flows into the shape of its container is a liquid. Just because we don't live long enough to see it doesn't mean its not flowing.Calobi said:According to Wikipedia, "in the scientific sense the term glass is often extended to all amorphous solids (and melts that easily form amorphous solids), including plastics, resins, or other silica-free amorphous solids."
According to some university's website the making of glass involves "forming a thick syrup and eventually an amorphous solid. The molecules then have a disordered arrangement, but sufficient cohesion to maintain some rigidity. In this state it is often called an amorphous solid or glass."
Amorphous solids are solids which lack the molecular structure that most solids have, most commonly due to a rapid cooling of the material from it's liquid state. Cotton candy is also considered an amorphous solid.
The POV expressed early on in the xkcd about Mythbusters (before the zombie walks in) is exactly how I feel about it. They claim to be busting myths, but they go about it so badly, that you simply can't depend on what they're doing. Entertaining, sometimes, sure, but half the time they aren't even really trying.Anarchemitis said:(Mythbusters are even worse)
yes but not all eskimo are inuit there are other tribesHelmet said:If you ever meet an Eskimo, do not call them an Eskimo. Call him/her an Inuit. Eskimo means "Stupid person that eats raw meat."
Nah, to old.x434343 said:If Half-Life became a movie, Hugh Laurie would be a perfect Gordon Freeman.![]()
funny how i learned about the different states of matter in chemistry class not physicsManta173 said:I'm sorry but chemists are not experts on the states of matter by any definition. Physicists are.... and I happen to be well trained in both... chemical engineering bachelors and a masters in polymer science and one in polymer engineering.
Glass is a liquid.