🧵 cows are carbon beneficent.
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 12:16:27 UTC No. 16242528
🗑️ 🧵 Joining STEM college after prison
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 12:05:35 UTC No. 16242516
>enter STEM college at the age of 20 ( 2 years late)
>Start college late due to a prison sentence of 6 months for online theft(found about on a website)
>Entering one of the best STEM institutes(passing rigorous entrance exam) in my country but don't know how the society will accept me.
Any tips anons ?
The sentence was lenient enough to let me get books and some study material. Any tips anons ? Will I have problem working abroad after this ?
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 11:25:08 UTC No. 16242484
There's no Weismann barrier i.e. evolution not only happens through natural selection of information carried by reproductive cells but also through inheritable changes of somatic cells i.e. epigenetics i.e. Lamarck had a point and Dawkin's underestimates the power of memes and the body is not just a vehicle created by genes to carry them to the next generation but all matter is changing itself through many processed besides le genetic mutations and le genetic selection. There are no external forces acting upon matter but matter itself is the force.
So now what? Genes don't control us so let's shape ourselves into chad and get laid. Let's also regulate the deregulations i.e. cure our own disease. Not serious by the way. Why don't le epic epigeneticists never explain constraints?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DT0
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 11:02:31 UTC No. 16242452
You look at the concept of a 'part' wrong, such as your hair or a plug socket. It's half connected and half separate. It will probably cause a mental illness if you continue to perceive reality with this block. So fix your interpretation of the concept of a part.
🧵 Olfactory science
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 11:01:35 UTC No. 16242450
>“Did you ever try to measure a smell?” Alexander Graham Bell once asked an audience of graduands at a high school in Washington DC.
>He then quizzed the probably confused class of 1914 as to whether they could tell when one scent was twice the strength of another, or measure the difference between two distinct odours. Eventually, though, he came to the point: “Until you can measure their likenesses and difference, you can have no science of odour,” Bell said. “If you are ambitious to find a new science, measure a smell.”
https://tile.loc.gov/storage-servic
So how come there is little attention and work has occurred in olfaction versus other fields since smell is an important sense of the body.
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 09:31:56 UTC No. 16242392
Look at him go, frimmin' on the frim fram!
Godspeed little fellah!
🧵 /sfg/ - Spaceflight General
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 09:16:35 UTC No. 16242376
India-US cooperation edition
previous >>16239590
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 08:24:47 UTC No. 16242341
I couldn’t pass intro to econometrics. Am I retarded?
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 08:23:09 UTC No. 16242337
Would you take a completely untested experimental drug from someone who's area of expertise is using drugs to sterilize mammals?
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 07:19:42 UTC No. 16242296
Why is CDC picking and choosing what data it publishes about covid?
What are they trying to hide?
🧵 What's the formula you've seen the most in your life?
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 07:15:08 UTC No. 16242291
The one you've seen many times in school or at work. For me it's picrel.
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 06:14:42 UTC No. 16242258
the idea that if you removed everything like stars, atoms, and radiation from empty space then there will be positive and negative particles that pop out of existence (+100 and -100 is 0) is like saying that fire and water, earth and air are nothing because +1 (-1) = 0 too!
just because we can not remove them from empty space yet doesn't mean that it is nothing!!
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 06:10:12 UTC No. 16242255
If the warping of spacetime can exceed the speed of light, then this means that gravitational forces can travel faster than light through warped spacetime.
All reference frames experience local spacetime. This includes singularities. Singularity F experiences an instant in spacetime, moving from T0 to T1. F's past self still exists at T0. We will call this singularity P. The gravitational effect of F exceeds the speed of light and travels through warped spacetime and warps P's spacetime near infinitely and instantly.
The gravitational force of P's singularity cannot over come the gravitational force of F and P explodes in all directions instantly. Spacetime for P instantly expands proportional to the gravitational influence of F. This is what we observe as the first instant of the big bang.
Gravitational strength is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. After the expansion of P's spacetime, the strength of F instantly weakens proportional to the distance to P. We can now think of P as being at T0.000...1 and F still being at T1.
To put this into a different perspective: F is a black hole representing a future singularity. P is a white hole representing a past singularity. Due to the gravitational effects of F, a wormhole opens between P and F. Now the distance between P and F are the length of the wormhole. This wormhole is our flat universe as we presently observe it.
As matter travels through the wormhole, it approaches the future singularity F at T1. As the matter approaches T1 the gravitational influence of F increases. This is what we observe as dark energy or cosmic acceleration. This implies that our universe is within the event horizon of the future singularity. No matter what direction we travel or how fast or slow we travel, we can never escape approaching the future singularity at T1.
When all matter from the past singularity P arrives at T1, what happens?
🧵 What time will display one third?
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 05:48:53 UTC No. 16242241
A typical clock has 12 subdivisions, one for each hour. There are two arms, one for the hour and one for the minute.
In picrel, imagine that the minute hand is perfectly on the '6' subdivision. Then, the hour hand will be perfectly in between the '10' and '11' subdivisions. However, this doesn't produce a perfect angle which is a third of the whole, i.e. 360/3=120 degrees. Each arm is variable and affects the other's placement on the clock.
My question is this: at what time(s) will a clock's hour and minute hands form a perfect 120 degree angle?
I trust that the jannies will see that this question is too stupid to break rule 2. I'm just curious as to what level of math is required to solve this question. I genuinely can't figure it out.
🧵 New nuclear fuel reprocessing technology
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 05:05:42 UTC No. 16242204
>closed nuclear fuel cycle, ultimately eliminating production of radioactive waste from nuclear power generation
>fuel refabrication for production of dense uranium plutonium nitride
>crystallisation technology is expected to become the final technological stage in the process of purification of nuclear materials isolated from irradiated SNUP fuel
>Requires fewer reagents. The equipment is easier to produce, and it has smaller dimensions
How will this affect the nuclear industry and the design and operation of future reactors?
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 04:54:20 UTC No. 16242189
My heart rate just hit 49bpm on my 25mg of metoprolol wtf? Am i going to die? I read under 50 is dangerous!
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 04:24:34 UTC No. 16242167
basado, beyond belief. well in all honesty, astronomers and paleontologists are fucktards like that.
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 03:28:35 UTC No. 16242112
This shit doesn't clean well you unhygienic retards
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 03:08:02 UTC No. 16242077
Is calculus good for you?
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 02:56:17 UTC No. 16242057
The state of scientific *paper* in 2024
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 02:43:06 UTC No. 16242036
It would be so good if we didn't poop.
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Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 02:37:09 UTC No. 16242031
>"You got me FUCKED up"
You got yourself fucked up.
🧵 Earth and science
Anonymous at Wed, 19 Jun 2024 01:50:33 UTC No. 16242001
As a earth scientist and a geologist I have come up with a interesting theory, that if you flipped the world over on its axis, everything would turn on its side including houses, roads, and even people. The reason we believe this is because if the earth is spinning on its axis diagonally, but put it horizontally, items on earth would follow earth's gravity and direction making everything turn on its side, what is your thoughts?