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Physics - June 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Physics

Suppose there is a long hole in the earth which opens up at the other end. if we drop an object from one side, it will keep falling, when it reaches the other side, again gravity will work and it will fall on the other side again. So it will keep falling. Is this right or will something else happen?

2006-06-13 03:30:22 · 11 answers · asked by sa_cool 2

happen.????Wont tht b agnst law of nature!!!!

2006-06-13 03:06:06 · 22 answers · asked by Jammy 1

same...to have a high good grade in my project

2006-06-13 02:48:41 · 5 answers · asked by morgandry21 2

2006-06-13 02:37:03 · 2 answers · asked by sak007 1

Einstein proposed that time was relative and at Velocities of greater than C (the speed of light in a vacuum) that time runs in reverse. Therefore if you accelerated on a linear trajectory, time would increment until your velocity reached C. then at speed greater than C time would decrease but your postitional vector would continue to increment. does this mean that you are in two places at the same time? as your linear position continues to increment but the time taken for you to achieve this position is reduced so in theory you are at two different positions at the same time? relativity ..... the more you think about it the harder it gets

2006-06-13 02:09:48 · 11 answers · asked by Andrew W 1

2006-06-13 01:14:58 · 11 answers · asked by crazymanhandcuffed 1

As asked by a six year old.

2006-06-13 00:46:55 · 16 answers · asked by gnalawode 1

2006-06-13 00:44:06 · 6 answers · asked by harsh b 1

This is looking across the neck, and under incandescant light

2006-06-13 00:24:41 · 6 answers · asked by The Gosport One 2

a black hole as weve seen demonstraighted is making an unhesatating plunge downward why isnt it going in all direction similtainiously?

2006-06-13 00:13:44 · 7 answers · asked by sdevin1962 2

basically i get 1 litre of boiling hot water and another cold bottle and mixed them in a big tub will the heat be exactly at the middle tempreture of these 2 bottles. e.g 1 at 10 degrees and 1 at 90 degrees after being mixed will it be exactly 50 degrees?

2006-06-13 00:10:03 · 9 answers · asked by frank smithy 1

So what caused it to start moving in the first place?

2006-06-12 19:54:50 · 5 answers · asked by Sam 3

universe inflating theory? like, we cannot suceessfuly say that the universe is expanding if the galaxies are moving apart from each other ? and please also tell me what is supersymmetry and axissymmetry?

2006-06-12 19:50:07 · 3 answers · asked by ankitd 3

A possable infinent would be the nothing at all. so it would default to that. and there would be nothing. so.............what?

2006-06-12 19:29:48 · 7 answers · asked by Sam 3

2006-06-12 19:17:26 · 5 answers · asked by Geena 1

does the government(s) and oil companies kill or ruin people who find a way to make free enegry? free enegry as in no fuel required.

2006-06-12 18:58:25 · 3 answers · asked by Sam 3

I'm puzzled by the time paradox of near-light-speed travel. If time would seem to pass more slowly to a high-speed traveller, why wouldn't it also seem to pass more slowly from the perspective of light, itself? In other words, why do we say that it takes light a year to travel a light year? To us, perhaps, it does, but from the light's perspective, wouldn't it take much less time to go that distance, or even no time at all? And, if not, why not?

2006-06-12 18:18:45 · 9 answers · asked by Jim 1

I know this sounds like a stupid question, but it genuinely frustrates me and I'd like to know if there is a logical explanation for it. You can spend a good deal of time carefully and neatly rolling up a cable and then have it sitting there for a month where no-one has touched or disturbed it in any way, and yet when you go to use the cable, you find it tangled and knotted. WHY???

2006-06-12 17:08:22 · 6 answers · asked by CumQuaT 2

What causes the sound?

2006-06-12 16:09:18 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

A ball leaves the bat with a speed of 40 m/s and an angle of 37degrees above the horizontal. A very high fence is located at a horizontal distance of 128m from the point where the ball is struck. Assuming the ball leaves the bat near ground level,.....

I got 17.07 m and just using this to check my answer.

2006-06-12 15:03:56 · 2 answers · asked by houstonman20042002 1

Something like the "philadelphia experiment" .

2006-06-12 14:25:45 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-06-12 12:43:37 · 14 answers · asked by thajoba 1

If Absolute zero, ( -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit or minus 273.15 Celsius), is the hypothetical point at which a substance would have no motion and no heat. How can this be possible with the existing laws of thermodynamics?

2006-06-12 11:17:40 · 28 answers · asked by s0ulrider2k 1

2006-06-12 10:48:39 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

One of those silly questions... mind you, could you imagine the fun you'd have making yourself invisible? (As long as you don't trip and shatter into a million pieces!!)

2006-06-12 09:57:35 · 12 answers · asked by liquid_ice_71 2

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