Dauth's little corner of Science
#76
Posted 14 April 2008 - 18:06
It does negative beta decay, which follows the reaction scheme below
Co 60 -> Ni 60 + e- + anti electron neutrino
The Nickel then spits out two relatively high energy gamma rays which would cook life very effectively, the 5 year lifespan means that it's around long enough to kill off life but a generation underground would be fine.
#77
Posted 21 April 2008 - 06:21
Get a regular flame lighter, The cheap kind from 7/11
Light it, and look at the very top of the flame.
I see threads, perfectly straight, rising out of the flame, not necessarily the top.
They go down the longer you have the flame in existence, and sometimes disappear.
What causes this?
Also, as a related subject, have two lighters, and an exposed spark (read: lots of light emitted and visible, compared to electric sparks.) Once again the common lighter works wonders. The source flame has not mattered with what is on my desk, and that is a fairly decent sample. (lol pyro) Light one flame, and and while it is lit, spark with the other lighter around/ above it. Cool little trick eh?
So far I have come to this: For the first thing: Impurities in the fluid/ gas aperture cause some atoms to rise exceedingly fast, causing the threads. This is based in nothing, which really pisses me off.
The second trick is caused by the energized atoms of the flame, reacting and losing their energy. I have already worked out the models and what not for this, just let me know if I am generally right with my assumption.
Main issue is the first phenom. (that's supposed to be an abbreviation, but apparently that's a word....)
Yay first comment! Thank you Comr4de!
If I were an alien from a distant world, unhampered by the endless void of space for whatever reason, I would stay the hell away from these primitive, monkey-like creatures from Earth who are too busy slaughtering each other over subjects such as religion or ethnicity, who pollute their one and only planet and who praise mindless pop-culture personalities more than scientists and philosophers.
#78
Posted 21 April 2008 - 16:38
If so they may be impurities in the lighter fluid, or even something that's being burnt in the atmosphere.
Otherwise I am lost for ideas.
#79
Posted 21 April 2008 - 20:27
Sorry for the minor question compared to most other questions, just that i have been thinking about it for a while.
#80
Posted 21 April 2008 - 20:44
striker26, on 21 Apr 2008, 12:27, said:
Sorry for the minor question compared to most other questions, just that i have been thinking about it for a while.
I'm not an expert, but I would say that it's intramolecular bonds holding water to your skin cells and hair. Water is strongly attracted to other water molecules, but they are also attracted to non-water molecules because of polar and non-polar ends. That is also why water is attracted to dirt molecules, due to it's non polar (?) ends, and is capable of removing dirt from your hands.
Feel free to correct me.
As for the match question, that's probably just steam or smoke.
#81
Posted 21 April 2008 - 21:01
Yay first comment! Thank you Comr4de!
If I were an alien from a distant world, unhampered by the endless void of space for whatever reason, I would stay the hell away from these primitive, monkey-like creatures from Earth who are too busy slaughtering each other over subjects such as religion or ethnicity, who pollute their one and only planet and who praise mindless pop-culture personalities more than scientists and philosophers.
#82
Posted 21 April 2008 - 21:59
striker26, on 21 Apr 2008, 21:27, said:
Sorry for the minor question compared to most other questions, just that i have been thinking about it for a while.
The surface tension of water is quite high, slowly fill a glass with water and you will see it bubble over the edge above the height of the glass, once past this point the surface is broken and the water above the top will fall away.
Try it with different liquids, like a thin oil, this one will fall away earlier, all the way up to thick treacle which you will be able to pile higher (IIRC)
pyrobob, on 21 Apr 2008, 22:01, said:
I have different styles of lighters for my gas stove and have been unable to replicate, can you post some pics please?
#83
Posted 21 May 2008 - 14:08
#84
Posted 21 May 2008 - 22:33
Edited by Chyros, 21 May 2008 - 22:33.
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#85
Posted 22 May 2008 - 00:48
Doesn't entropy rule out the existence of black holes?
19681107
#86
Posted 22 May 2008 - 08:11
However this is interesting and I will have a further look into it.
#87
Posted 17 June 2008 - 19:48
How does superconductivity work... if that's explainable to a human degree...
#88
Posted 18 June 2008 - 04:05
This is with no prior research too......
As far as I can tell, the magnets field changes varying with temperature. The extreme cold probably just curls the field more against itself..... I could show you with my hands what I mean, but yea........
basically, instead of the north field wrapping around the north pole of the magnet, it curls the other way and as such can hold objects. Now if you think of the field as a sort of helmet, the curl arond the edges, making the object rebound from it....
Started typing this earlier and a friend picked me up, finished it when I got home.
Yay first comment! Thank you Comr4de!
If I were an alien from a distant world, unhampered by the endless void of space for whatever reason, I would stay the hell away from these primitive, monkey-like creatures from Earth who are too busy slaughtering each other over subjects such as religion or ethnicity, who pollute their one and only planet and who praise mindless pop-culture personalities more than scientists and philosophers.
#89
Posted 18 June 2008 - 08:51
Hope this explains some of what you want, they are really cool objects.
#90
Posted 19 June 2008 - 04:03
Yay first comment! Thank you Comr4de!
If I were an alien from a distant world, unhampered by the endless void of space for whatever reason, I would stay the hell away from these primitive, monkey-like creatures from Earth who are too busy slaughtering each other over subjects such as religion or ethnicity, who pollute their one and only planet and who praise mindless pop-culture personalities more than scientists and philosophers.
#91
Posted 19 June 2008 - 08:43
#92
Posted 23 June 2008 - 17:22
#93
Posted 26 June 2008 - 22:03
I actualy did a presentation on superconductivity recently ... it's a bloody complex quantum phenomenom.
Basicaly the low temperature cause's electron (within the lattice of the superconductive material) phonon emmission to increace causing the electrons to travel in pairs (cooper pairs). Then it's like a friend pushing people out the way for you at a music concert so you can slip through with no problems.
If i could upload the presentation i would
Theres a lot more to it than this.
Ladies and gentlemen we are floating in space
#94
Posted 01 July 2008 - 23:08
Right
Within cosmology there is Dark Matter and Dark Energy.
Dark Matter explains why the galexies within the universe don't just fly far apart, it essentialy adds the missing gravity between them (if it is indeed gravity that holds them together).
Dark Energy is a, currently, unknown force that is responsible for the, supprising, acceleration of the expansion of the universe.
Both of these things are not proven to exsist in practice at the moment.
But:
More gravity within a universe means a decceleration of its expansion. Hense the presance of Dark Matter essentialy should contribute to causing the universe to slow in expansion.
Rather than inventing a new concept such as Dark Energy would it not be easier to just say that there is less Dark Matter?
Or is it that Dark Energy and Dark Matter do concel each other in some ways but they have fundamental differances in the way they work?
Sorry, this questions been a bitch to word
Cheers
Talus
Ladies and gentlemen we are floating in space
#95
Posted 02 July 2008 - 07:33
Quote
You said it yourself, the DM exists to provide gravity.
The numbers that we have are required because the universe is almost flat in spacetime and these values supply that when you crunch them through the equations.
#96
Posted 02 July 2008 - 21:33
Thanks
I've got something else i'd like to ask, if you have time (i like physics ):
In special relativity an object is said to gain mass as it approaches the speed of light.
This is because that as the objects velocity V tends to c it becomes difficult to accomodate the energy increace within purly kinetic energy, therefore, unable to gain kinetic energy the object gains mass energy.
Einstein once said: "the faster you go, the slimmer you get"
Am i missing something with my facts? if not: how can this be so?
Ladies and gentlemen we are floating in space
#97
Posted 02 July 2008 - 22:09
#98
Posted 02 July 2008 - 22:35
At a guess i'd say you get thinner because the larger dent in spacetime means that you take up less space.
Am I right in saying that?
I know this situation is entirely hypothetical but it's just interesting.
Ladies and gentlemen we are floating in space
#99
Posted 02 July 2008 - 22:38
#100
Posted 02 July 2008 - 22:43
I get horribly lost when these things are explained to me mathmaticaly anyway, i know my physics theory quite well but the maths just throws me atm :(.
Ladies and gentlemen we are floating in space
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