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Physics - August 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Physics

2006-08-30 01:13:18 · 8 answers · asked by Lutfor 3

2006-08-30 00:46:33 · 11 answers · asked by maggie 1

2006-08-30 00:23:47 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous

would its exhaust heat the surrounding air?would it make any noise?would it vibrate?woild any of its fuel go unused?Explain.

2006-08-30 00:17:22 · 8 answers · asked by joy_blue03 1

2006-08-29 23:55:51 · 7 answers · asked by HunterKid! 2

answer other than theory of relativity, today's physical boundaries
THINK!!WHY CAN'T ANYTHING GO FASTER THAN LIGHT
(time slowing down as we reach speed of light is only relative!!)

2006-08-29 23:53:07 · 10 answers · asked by LamboMan 1

Everytime you drop a buttered piece of toast it always seem to drop and land facedown....why?

2006-08-29 23:38:05 · 14 answers · asked by lmnop 1

2006-08-29 23:37:45 · 9 answers · asked by Ruccu 1

(other than a form of energy)

2006-08-29 23:19:45 · 17 answers · asked by LamboMan 1

2006-08-29 23:17:29 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous

Could this be Einstein's Either? Am I walking through it right now?

2006-08-29 23:15:05 · 3 answers · asked by Red 5

2006-08-29 22:37:13 · 9 answers · asked by gini 1

is it Just a mathemathical construct of a packet or lump (what ever that is)?

2006-08-29 22:21:58 · 2 answers · asked by goring 6

2006-08-29 22:16:24 · 4 answers · asked by babby 1

Did Einstein Relativity postulates explain light?

2006-08-29 22:15:03 · 6 answers · asked by goring 6

Speed of light is constant as measured relative to What point?

2006-08-29 22:08:43 · 5 answers · asked by goring 6

it's all about newto'ns law

2006-08-29 21:37:08 · 5 answers · asked by leny 1

a machine that ones is turned on keeps working, in a way it fuels itself.

2006-08-29 21:21:55 · 14 answers · asked by himxman 1

does space have an outer boundary? perhaps from an older big bang?

2006-08-29 21:04:16 · 15 answers · asked by sage of saigon 2

2006-08-29 21:00:30 · 6 answers · asked by dont know 1

The magnet should be at rest because the dc does not make an moving electromagnet

2006-08-29 20:59:34 · 6 answers · asked by RGs 1

2006-08-29 20:30:56 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

If its a wave the graviton is not a particle that moves at the speed of light does it?

2006-08-29 20:13:20 · 5 answers · asked by goring 6

Making a question will 'sound louder' than telling people there is something new, right?

There's right, I do also feel something like gays, lesbians at these effects... real world is like that; theory is absolute but real world is not, Quantum vs digital / analog...

2006-08-29 18:54:49 · 8 answers · asked by Kotami 1

Olbar suggested that the night sky is dark because the universe was finite in its existance. He deduced that, if the universe was inifinitely old, then in every direction in which you looked, you eye would fall upon a star. One of the 'best answers' to this question when it was last asked, addressed an expanding universe, not an infinitely old universe. If we look at Olbars Paradox in an inifinely old universe, the the question becomes, since we know that stars have a finite life time, could all stars in that infinely old universe that are older than a certain life (say older than 100,000 year) have simply burned out and is, therefore, no longer emitting light, making it impossible to see them? Here we can have an infiniteyl old universe and still retain our 'dark sky' at night.

2006-08-29 18:46:02 · 8 answers · asked by Reggie 2

2006-08-29 18:02:59 · 9 answers · asked by nethra k 1

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