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Science & Mathematics - 19 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

Is there a formula or easy method to use to find out?
It's Creative THX 5.1 surround speakers putting out like 500 watts. It consist of 5 main speakers
and one subwoofer!!!

2006-07-19 16:15:18 · 3 answers · asked by butanebird91 3 in Engineering

100 here in Central Iowa. Our heat index was 113!!!

2006-07-19 16:05:04 · 14 answers · asked by Lizziedoddle B 2 in Weather

2006-07-19 16:03:47 · 20 answers · asked by professional student 4 in Biology

These were all found 120 feet into stone. Could it be bones of a dinosaur?

2006-07-19 16:03:15 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Other - Science

2006-07-19 15:59:14 · 28 answers · asked by steven_jonson2003 1 in Mathematics

Aren't their enough blatant shortcomings to indicate, at best, Incompetent Design, or Insane Design?

For starters:
Chocolate bad and brussel sprouts healthy?
The most advanced species can't do photosynthesis?
You have to destroy part of the life you created to release the planet's stresses (vulcanism and seismic events)?
Why do our bodies produce ANY waste products at all?

Come on, if you're omnipotent AND benevolent AND sane/rational, you can do better than this!

2006-07-19 15:55:51 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous in Other - Science

I can see that when it leans, half of the flywheel travels with an upward component - is it a matter of trigonometry? Any help gratefully receved?

2006-07-19 15:53:34 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

...And i wana be with her.. is there anything that i can do?

2006-07-19 15:48:00 · 16 answers · asked by limewire 1 in Medicine

0

I am having trouble with this question:
In a resistance, the amount of energy concerted to heat is:
a.) directly proportional to both R and I^2
b.) directly proportional to R but inversely proportional to I^2
c.) inversely proption to R but directly proportional to I^2
d.) inversely proportion to R but directly proportional to I^2.

Thank you for your help. :)

2006-07-19 15:44:18 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

Last time i asked this question i wasn't very clear about a lot of things, so here's what i meant about the junk yard rocket. could it be done if it was a community project, with volunteer engineers from the local university, donated parts and other contributions from local businesses and fund raising events to raise money for the project. As for fuel and how to knowledge please view this link. If a single individual like this man can do it what would stop someone else.

http://www.rocketguy.com/oldhome.html

2006-07-19 15:36:03 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Astronomy & Space

Whats not interesting imagining a MASSIVE structure consuming itself and that everything that crosses its path just suddenly dissapears? Its one of the universes mose strangest mysteries.

2006-07-19 15:35:44 · 18 answers · asked by Jojo 1 in Astronomy & Space

Bush Vetoed a bill to fund stem cell research, a medical revolution that can end/cure debilitating and life threatening conditions and diseases suffered by millions and millions of people. What is you opinion on Bush's decision.

2006-07-19 15:34:17 · 8 answers · asked by auestionsandqnswers 2 in Medicine

True it sucks, but then Australia gets them all the time.
Best thing to do:

Wet two towels
Put them in freezer
When frozen, lay on one of them, then put the other on you with a fan blowing on to your body.....oooh yeah.....

2006-07-19 15:22:25 · 6 answers · asked by Girl Goes Back To The Future 6 in Weather

I was watching "Nova" on PBS yesterday, and they were talking about string theory as a possible building block of the universe & I just couldn't grasp the concept. Could someone put it in their own words? AND! How would one understand this concept through a mathmatical equation? Is it that the equations depict it somehow?

2006-07-19 15:22:15 · 12 answers · asked by cricket 2 in Physics

can you please give me two examples of a channel (not like discovery channel or something), a glacier, a iceberg, a oasis, a penisula, a plain, a [plateu, a strait, and or a swamp? it's for my homework but i don't have an atlas and the computer, just freaks on me... thanks soooo much!

2006-07-19 15:21:56 · 13 answers · asked by Cindy Lindy 2 in Geography

2006-07-19 15:21:40 · 8 answers · asked by scary visionary 2 in Other - Science

What if the telescope was powerful enough to observe God creating the universe, would we be allowed to view it , and would God back then know we are watching now with that telescope?

2006-07-19 15:20:38 · 13 answers · asked by ZORRO 3 in Astronomy & Space

Say if I bet 100 dollars on Bobbyjoe and he wins, what equation is used to get me my winnings?

2006-07-19 15:17:07 · 4 answers · asked by vols91060 2 in Mathematics

2006-07-19 15:16:03 · 23 answers · asked by Anonymous in Mathematics

Millions of years before the 1st star was born, there were no stars at all! Scientists say a telescope 100 million times more powerful than the Hubble is being built. What if we could observe the explosion of the Big Bang?

2006-07-19 15:15:21 · 8 answers · asked by ZORRO 3 in Astronomy & Space

if planets are created bc of clumps of astroids gain gravety and suck more astroids in then y isnt there a planet in the astroid belt?

2006-07-19 15:14:13 · 9 answers · asked by dr_jeckyl1 2 in Astronomy & Space

If I have a circle, diameter 10cm, and an equilateral triangleis formed from this diameter, jutting out of the "top" of the circle. what is the area of the two sections cut "off" the circle by the equilateral triangle? In other words, the area of the circle not enclosed by the triangle, and not in the "lower" half of the circle?

If you could explain your solution I would be appreciative. My gut reaction is that the answer is 4.08cm^2.

2006-07-19 15:13:15 · 7 answers · asked by teacher 2 in Mathematics

There's no bathroom aboard. Do they just go in a container and close it up quickly! What if the u know what floats in the air inside the cabin, do the astronauts catch it with something?

2006-07-19 15:09:47 · 9 answers · asked by ZORRO 3 in Astronomy & Space

'Nuff said.

2006-07-19 15:03:30 · 11 answers · asked by tesla_009 1 in Earth Sciences & Geology

If an object is moving in a vacuum at a speed approaching c, its mass and gravitational field have increased from when the object was at rest. So the object is moving along…and it hits a stationary object. Assuming the objects are not vaporized, and the stationary object hasn’t started moving yet at the moment of impact, will the mass and gravitational field of the object that hit the stationary object be transferred to the stationary object?
I’m not sure if kinetic energy would have anything to do with this situation or not; if so, enlighten me.

2006-07-19 15:00:25 · 6 answers · asked by vaporhut 1 in Physics

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