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Science & Mathematics - 8 July 2006

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Agriculture · Alternative · Astronomy & Space · Biology · Botany · Chemistry · Earth Sciences & Geology · Engineering · Geography · Mathematics · Medicine · Other - Science · Physics · Weather · Zoology

No air friction means no drag.

2006-07-08 16:16:47 · 12 answers · asked by blur 1 in Engineering

Now I do. It was eye opening and quite reveling. Check it out for yourself at: www.delusionresistance.org

2006-07-08 16:12:23 · 3 answers · asked by bladei 2 in Astronomy & Space

You would go at the age you are now (for instance, if you were 12 in 76 and go back there, you would not be 12), you could not come back(you would continue to age normally).
You could do pretty much whatever you wanted.
When would you go to?? and why??

2006-07-08 16:07:45 · 19 answers · asked by Comfortably Numb 3 in Other - Science

2006-07-08 16:03:21 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Biology

2006-07-08 16:02:38 · 8 answers · asked by zapster 1 in Biology

We know that sharks kill people but, do they really eat people?

2006-07-08 15:55:09 · 12 answers · asked by valdirsoares 2 in Other - Science

2006-07-08 15:53:44 · 14 answers · asked by pearljam_80 1 in Astronomy & Space

2006-07-08 15:53:43 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Weather

Ex. Stanford Taurus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_colonization

2006-07-08 15:51:39 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Astronomy & Space

Double negatives make a positive in English and in Math. In English it makes sense, but in math it does not make that much sense. For me that concept has just been a rule and I do not comprehend its reasoning. If anything 1- -1 should equal -1 since you are subtracting twice because of the two subtraction signs.

2006-07-08 15:50:03 · 16 answers · asked by abcd 2 in Mathematics

I have two circles. One has a radius of 6 inches, and the other has a radius of 8 inches. Their diameters are overlapping 2 inches. Don't use calculus to solve it. What is the area of the overlapped region?

2006-07-08 15:48:22 · 7 answers · asked by Michael M 6 in Mathematics

0

X= 5y + -z - + 6x

2006-07-08 15:46:00 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Medicine

2006-07-08 15:42:53 · 21 answers · asked by Anonymous in Astronomy & Space

A few years ago, there was information presented about the speed of light not being constant. It got faster, out by the edge of the observable universe. I believe that it was observed by the xray telescope we have in orbit. I have tried for some time to find the source of this information.

2006-07-08 15:42:48 · 8 answers · asked by bigga55 1 in Astronomy & Space

2006-07-08 15:42:26 · 13 answers · asked by bruserdog 2 in Earth Sciences & Geology

let there be a bus travelling at a sped of 60km per hour with all windows open then how can a mosquito is able to travel with the buswithout being in contact with the bus

2006-07-08 15:41:31 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

an explosive force like a bomb or is it due to the elastic properties of the fabric of time. The sudden and drastic reduction of mass/area causing the fabric to contract back together and propel matter away. an example; Say you had a 1000lb man on a trampoline and the trampoline held his weight and with in milliseconds he lost 999lbs. He would be launched.

2006-07-08 15:32:48 · 3 answers · asked by aorton27 3 in Astronomy & Space

Wouldn't there relative speed be greater than that of light speed?

2006-07-08 15:32:29 · 14 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

Are they toxic?
Do they corrode in air?

2006-07-08 15:32:24 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Chemistry

Name ONE scientist (since 1850) who did/do not support macro-evolution.

2006-07-08 15:29:56 · 2 answers · asked by flandargo 5 in Biology

2006-07-08 15:25:39 · 11 answers · asked by ? 2 in Mathematics

2006-07-08 15:24:12 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Astronomy & Space

If you attached an object (say a space ship) to an extremely long cable of remarkable strength (like graphite or diamond) and the end of the cable is cast into a black hole (by "cast into" of course I mean "launched into from hopefully billions of miles away") what would happen? I know that you couldn't pull it back out - an infinite amount of force would be insufficient - but could this be a practical means of interstellar acceleration, especially if life support and DEceleration aren't a problem (like probes)? How fast exactly would the space ship accelerate? Would it at all?

2006-07-08 15:19:18 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Astronomy & Space

2006-07-08 15:16:35 · 1 answers · asked by Sue 1 in Astronomy & Space

2006-07-08 15:16:32 · 6 answers · asked by Jake S 1 in Astronomy & Space

even a simple map of america would be okay

2006-07-08 15:14:35 · 6 answers · asked by Croasis 3 in Geography

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