𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 11:02:42 UTC No. 16303087
Is this world real, or is it part of a three body problem simulating humans which is our species in a different dimension, in order to negate the alien problem.
1. We are a solitary sapient species, ain't that strange. No authentic competition for the top spot.
2. Only one of us may be real, the rest NPCs, and the planet could be invaded by enemies.
3. The real person is supposed to study the health of the simulation and complete an order to tell the home universe.
Is this true. Seems strange fags. Am I Jesus?
ποΈ π§΅ Yale scientists say CO2 is making the planet healthier
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 06:12:58 UTC No. 16302872
Additional CO2 is making the planet greener and causing formerly barren wastelands to flourish with new life
https://e360.yale.edu/features/gree
>Despite warnings that climate change would create widespread desertification, many drylands are getting greener because of increased CO2 in the air β a trend that recent studies indicate will continue.
>Climate scientists and ecologists alike have until recently presumed that the combination of growing meteorological aridity and pressure from human activities would lead to less vegetation. They have routinely warned of widespread desertification, which U.N. officials have called βthe greatest environmental challenge of our time.β
>Yet in most drylands, this anticipated desertification has not happened. Rather than shriveling and dying, vegetation is usually growing faster and expanding its terrain, while deserts are retreating. This, researchers of the worldβs carbon and water cycles say, is largely due to the extra CO2 in the atmosphere.
𧡠Near Term Quantum Computing and Biology
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 04:31:08 UTC No. 16302834
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/epdf/10.10
Superradiance observed in microtubule networks. The paper says that it would require 10^5 entangled transition dipoles. Does this imply that some large-scale quantum computing network could be manufactured in system with as high a temperature and as much noise in a biological system?
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 04:30:29 UTC No. 16302831
>he built a massive million dollar pyramid just for the lolz
ποΈ π§΅ Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 04:16:08 UTC No. 16302824
What are the differences between every 10s of IQ tiers? How do you tell the difference when observing their behavior?
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 04:03:56 UTC No. 16302816
Is Dark Matter a meme or is it truly worth pouring millions of dollars into it?
𧡠Any entomologists on here?
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 03:21:15 UTC No. 16302784
Anyone recognize what these are? I found about 7 of them climbing up the trunk of my new eucalyptus tree sapling. Geographically, I'm in a green LA suburb.
They are about 5 mm long. Are they harmless caterpillars or are they some kind of pest that will harm my lovely tree?
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 01:49:15 UTC No. 16302683
Is bioanthropology /sci/, /his/, or /an/?
ποΈ π§΅ solving 3 body problem from series
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 01:36:07 UTC No. 16302667
The three-body problem is indeed a fascinating and complex issue in physics and mathematics. It describes the challenge of predicting the motion of three celestial bodies interacting with each other through gravity. This problem is notoriously difficult because the gravitational interactions create a chaotic system where small changes in initial conditions can lead to vastly different outcomes2.
Your idea of continuously monitoring the positions of the three bodies with sensors is intriguing. While it wouldn't solve the mathematical complexity of predicting their future positions, it could provide real-time data that might help in making short-term adjustments and decisions. This approach is somewhat analogous to how we use weather satellites to monitor and respond to weather patterns without being able to predict them perfectly far in advance.
However, there are a few challenges to consider:
1. **Technological Feasibility**: Deploying and maintaining a network of sensors capable of continuously monitoring three celestial bodies with high precision would be a significant technological challenge.
2. **Data Processing**: The amount of data generated would be enormous, requiring advanced algorithms and computing power to process and interpret in real-time.
3. **Response Time**: Even with real-time data, the chaotic nature of the three-body problem means that rapid and unpredictable changes could still occur, potentially limiting the effectiveness of any response strategies.
In essence, while continuous monitoring could provide valuable insights and help in making more informed decisions, it wouldn't completely eliminate the unpredictability inherent in the three-body problem. It could, however, improve our ability to respond to changes as they happen, potentially mitigating some of the risks associated with such a chaotic system23.
𧡠"hyperbrisant" fuels via radiolysis/photolysis
Anonymous at Tue, 30 Jul 2024 01:19:31 UTC No. 16302654
Are there molecules which are particularly suited to radiolysis/photolysis which can effectively be used as fuels?
I had a conversation years ago about that which was very interesting, but I have since forgotten the specific term used to refer to fuels/exothermic reactions which the reaction front propagates at the speed of light, either by its own reaction byproducts, or by an external source.
The term I keep remembering is hyperbrisant, but that was in a military context. What I am looking for are the terms used to refer to fuels which some specific chemical bond is resonant to a specific wavelength of radiation. The concept was that these types of had extremely high ignition temperatures, but surprisingly easy to start/stop/control the reaction based on exposure to different wavelengths of radiation.
The concept was fairly simple, a molecule has a range of lengths in the bonds, each corresponding to some wavelength of radiation. Methane with 109 picometers between bonds, means 2.75x10^15 hz, or an integer octave of it. Shitty example here, since that is in the range of visible light, but the question remains the same.
Since the radiolysis reaction front proceeds at the speed of light, the mass of fuel is completely consumed with a low excitation energy. I do seem to recall that there are also more conventional fuels which are able to be thermally ignited, but their ignition releases a wavelength of radiation which then is resonant to the bonds elsewhere in the molecule, thereby causing a self-sustaining reaction, as in a turbine combustion chamber.
ποΈ π§΅ Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 23:54:59 UTC No. 16302597
if you truly believe there is no free will, you have to reach two practical conclusions: a) there is nothing you have done, nothing you have earned, that entitles you to anything more than any other person; there is no one who has earned less of a right to have their needs considered than you. b) hating someone makes as little sense as hating an earthquake.
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 23:46:01 UTC No. 16302588
Why does the west refuse to appreciate go. Chess is overrated af! I've yet to find a scientific reason why humans play this meh game over the universal game of go.
𧡠Agreeableness and IQ
Frin at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 23:44:03 UTC No. 16302585
Agreeability given that all humans start of being very low IQ as babies and very uninformed as children is not congruent with understanding.
Sure great minds think alike, but this means exclusive to weak and stupid and ill informed people.
The end point being that either intelligent people learn to be two faced linguists such as more Jewish traits or just disagreeable Christians and Muslims like Germans Russians or Ottomans.
Reality itself will select away the worlds Gretas and Watsons for being too agreeable towards the ill informed.
It's simply a fact although I believe I am capable of educating them by dancing around these things accurately.
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 23:23:32 UTC No. 16302563
>ywn work on secret anti-gravity research at SUNY Stony Brook
𧡠AI says its impossible to find the answer
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 22:57:06 UTC No. 16302544
You are only given the length of BO and the angle of Alpha (Ξ±). Find all the other lengths and angles. AI says you can't do it.
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 22:55:37 UTC No. 16302542
How can bacteria survive trapped in amber or ice for hundreds of millions of years, but animal DNA can't even survive fully intact past a few thousand years in either amber or ice?
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 22:05:44 UTC No. 16302492
i have one friend that has never smelled scent of a corpse.
How can i even describe someone smell of rotten body?
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 21:56:15 UTC No. 16302485
Is it true the most dangerous region of space for life in the milkyway is the galactic core region basically certain that whole region is sterile a galactic no man's land
𧡠when you finally found that perfect teacher
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 21:20:48 UTC No. 16302453
Isn't great when a book or internet course, actually has someone that actually knows the topic, but also knows how to teach it?
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 21:20:32 UTC No. 16302451
I suspect I may currently be on too much thyroid med.
I just found out I've been drinking lead water the past 8 years, and now I'm not. But now that I've stopped for a few months, I've got high blood pressure and bpm. I think now that it's not chronically lead poisoned my thyroid is healing back, but that means my prescription is an OD.
Before I contact my doctor about this, is this a really good chance to lose some weight? I can practically starve and my metabolism still isn't going to downshift, it feels like I'm on 2 Monsters with none of the energy round the clock. So all I have to do is make sure I don't lose muscle mass from gluconeogenesis, which should be easy with proper protein intake and exercise.
Originally posted to >>/fit/74801134, I just thought I should also ask here too just in case.
ποΈ π§΅ Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 21:15:26 UTC No. 16302441
There is nothing more damaging to society than presenting theories as facts
Grade school teachers do this for a living
It is no wonder the average citizen is a complete moron
𧡠Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 20:05:51 UTC No. 16302333
NASA is absurdly claiming that a round planet orbiting a round star in an elliptical orbit has it's highest average temperature shortly following aphelion, when radiation input from the sun is at it's weakest.
How low would your IQ need to be to believe that assertion?
ποΈ π§΅ Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 19:50:50 UTC No. 16302303
The possibility of a biochemical connection between skin pigmentation and intelligence is not totally unlikely in the view of the biochemical relation between melanins, which are responsible for pigmentation, and some of the neural transmitter substances in the brain. The skin and the cerebral cortex both arise from the ectoderm in the development of the embryo and share some of the same biochemical processes.
𧡠Who's the most groundbreaking creative genius
Anonymous at Mon, 29 Jul 2024 19:43:44 UTC No. 16302291