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Science & Mathematics - 9 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

2006-07-09 16:43:13 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

Sometimes it looks huge. I think it has something to do with the distance from the horizon and something in the atmosphere, but I'm not really sure.

This evening the moon looked very large, yellow, and bright. It was beautiful and got me wondering...

2006-07-09 16:41:43 · 5 answers · asked by hhhh 4 in Astronomy & Space

Nothing can exist without first bodies. A first body is an invariant that can neither be created nor be destroyed. A thing that has only one first body is an invariant that can never vary. A thing that has more than one first body can vary. Variant is the order of the first bodies of things having more than one first body. A variant cannot be defined, analyzed, and understood without its distinct invariant first bodies.
First bodies = first principles, first ideas, elements, fundamentals
Order = structure, form, state, arrangement

2006-07-09 16:40:54 · 7 answers · asked by The Knowledge Server 1 in Other - Science

I need to know how to do this problem I have 5 others and I do not understand what I am suppose to do? Thank you

2006-07-09 16:40:10 · 16 answers · asked by cysreese 1 in Mathematics

come on.... if yall say god is a coincadence.. hik ups have to be

2006-07-09 16:36:51 · 4 answers · asked by uninsane_bane 1 in Biology

2006-07-09 16:35:09 · 21 answers · asked by goring 6 in Physics

I've been told that when you heat a metal ring, the ring expands - but instead of the center hole getting smaller (like I would have thought because of the metal expanding in all directions), the hole actually gets larger with the rest of the ring.

What causes that to happen? I would have thought that since the metal of the ring would expand in all directions, the hole would shrink.

2006-07-09 16:33:34 · 4 answers · asked by gallostravels 1 in Physics

Step away from your computers for just a minute, and go outside to check it out. It's beautiful !!
Does anyone really feel the effects of a full moon?

2006-07-09 16:28:58 · 30 answers · asked by Anonymous in Astronomy & Space

2006-07-09 16:28:23 · 7 answers · asked by Tommy2shoes 1 in Weather

Planetary motion

2006-07-09 16:27:41 · 8 answers · asked by goring 6 in Physics

It's obviously difficult to do this via this text box, but if you grab a sheet of paper and a pencil and try to do the following:

- Draw a square
- Inside the square make an X so that it takes up the entire box (touches the corners)
- On each side of the box, make an arc from each corner (the bottom of the box would have something that looks like 'U', the top would look like 'n', etc)

Overall, it should look like a 4 leaf clover with a box in the middle, containing an X.

Now that you've drawn it how it should look, the obejct is to draw that exact design, but without lifting your pencil or retracing an already drawn line (you can cross over them, you just can't draw over the same exact line already made).

A math teacher gave us this puzzle when I was in 8th grade (1985) and I've still not been able to find an answer to it (either why it can or can't be done).

2006-07-09 16:26:09 · 12 answers · asked by gallostravels 1 in Mathematics

How does a sex related trait such as color blindness effect offspring. Why do men inherit this disease more than woman?

2006-07-09 16:23:05 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Biology

Like I wanted to do what type of chocolate melts the fastest but somebody will probably do that and I want to do something that will appeal to my peer group(12-13yrolds) but still be easy and different. Should I just stick to the chocolate idea? plz help

2006-07-09 16:22:10 · 7 answers · asked by chey_the_princess 2 in Other - Science

I want to know how much $ is being spent to explore Mars, in future vision to move people there...? What is wrong with spending $ on investigating the wealth of life here, our mother planet? I'll bet that ocean creatures/plants also have medicinal qualities; gotta be that plants in rain forests do too. So, why do we spend so much $ for Mars? AND, though treaties exist that say we cannot polute anything in space, what is wrong with putting our regular and toxic wastes on the dark side of the moon? It does not revolve and there will never be life on it. Why don't people make an outcry for Mother Earth instead of imagining what they will do in outer space? I personally do not see that anything from space is realistically benefiting us, though if we really HAD EXTRA $, I don't mind space exploration!

2006-07-09 16:20:39 · 12 answers · asked by Louiegirl_Chicago 5 in Astronomy & Space

A very big bang and a new universe was born--our Universe, is how ours was born. How our universe was born was by another universe touching ours! This turned the conventional big bang theory on its head! Time and space all existed before the big bang. There had to be space for the so-called big bang and time for it to happen, whether or not it happened. Could another universe collide with another in the years into the future?

2006-07-09 16:17:28 · 8 answers · asked by ZORRO 3 in Astronomy & Space

please describe and define

2006-07-09 16:12:15 · 1 answers · asked by Book of Changes 3 in Mathematics

2006-07-09 16:10:39 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Earth Sciences & Geology

2006-07-09 16:10:08 · 9 answers · asked by chiquita 1 in Physics

ok,so theres the nucleous for a simple atom and electrons are atracted to it,(orbiting it).then theres a nucleous cells(like plant cells and animal cell s and everyone's cells).then theres the earth's nucleous which is the one that makes gravity and keeps everything together.then theres the sun which keeps the planets crbiting arround it.then theres a huge black hole in the middle of the milky-way galaxy which also keeps everything together.

2006-07-09 16:09:32 · 4 answers · asked by ◄ZΨΦИ► 2 in Physics

just asking...

2006-07-09 16:09:31 · 10 answers · asked by marimbaman 2 in Geography

What if you stand with your forehead against the microwave door, watching your food cook?

2006-07-09 16:08:25 · 7 answers · asked by chiquita 1 in Physics

But explain to the people who reply 40 why they are wrong please!

2006-07-09 16:07:03 · 31 answers · asked by BackMan 4 in Mathematics

2006-07-09 16:02:15 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

Scientists believe these universes exist less than one millimetre away from us. In fact, our gravity is just a weak signal leaking out of another universe into ours. These other universes contain space, time and strange forms of exotic matter, even a different you and me.

2006-07-09 16:00:57 · 20 answers · asked by ZORRO 3 in Astronomy & Space

and most of the remaining leaves are shriveling. Does any one have any ideas as to possible causes based on this limited information?

2006-07-09 16:00:09 · 4 answers · asked by tom d 2 in Botany

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