Originally posted by KrazyHorse
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Originally posted by KrazyHorse View PostYou can't put a human being "in" the LHC. The beam pipes are only a few centimeters across.
http://www.iamorrison.mistral.co.uk/beampipe.jpg
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Originally posted by Aeson View PostThis would be totally awesome and worth at least another few billion into studying if the elf chicks are hot or not.Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
"Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead
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Also, for $5 billion, could we create a computer program that could analyze videos of clothed women, deduce their booby size and shape from their clothing bulges, and seamlessly "nudify" them? So that, for example, we could make Palin announce her resignation in the buff, or watch a CNN anchor-honey talk about a trainwreck with a frowny-face and a jiggling rack? That is soooo much better as a use of funding...
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Originally posted by Elok View PostAlso, for $5 billion, could we create a computer program that could analyze videos of clothed women, deduce their booby size and shape from their clothing bulges, and seamlessly "nudify" them? So that, for example, we could make Palin announce her resignation in the buff, or watch a CNN anchor-honey talk about a trainwreck with a frowny-face and a jiggling rack? That is soooo much better as a use of funding...With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.
Steven Weinberg
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Originally posted by Traianvs View PostReally. And why are tectonic plates the size they are?
Assuming that the system organizes itself to minimize [, depending on the boundary conditions, certain metrics for] resistance to thermal flows (which is a big assumption), this scale is accommodated by low viscosity zones through which lateral flows are channelized, such as the asthenosphere. Looking at energy conservation, the low viscosity zones reduce lateral dissipation - and allow a larger aspect ratio to maximize heat transfer. Numerically testing the stability of these patterns (to finite thermal perturbations, aka subduction) bears out this prediction, albeit at a vigor of convection that is a few orders of magnitude lower than that which exists in the mantle.
Would you like a more technical explanation? I assume you won't, but I thought I'd ask."Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way. "
-Bokonon
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That's not useless Ramo! When the poles stop spinning or are going to shift or whatever, you can use your knowledge to help us figure out where the nukes should be set to get it spinning properly again. (I did not see this in a movie... at least not a movie that wasn't so horrifically bad that I didn't subconsciously repress the memories of seeing it.)
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Nukes are the duck tape of disaster movies.Last edited by Heraclitus; July 5, 2009, 07:25.Modern man calls walking more quickly in the same direction down the same road “change.”
The world, in the last three hundred years, has not changed except in that sense.
The simple suggestion of a true change scandalizes and terrifies modern man. -Nicolás Gómez Dávila
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Originally posted by KrazyHorse View PostYou can't put a human being "in" the LHC. The beam pipes are only a few centimeters across.
http://www.iamorrison.mistral.co.uk/beampipe.jpgBlah
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Originally posted by Thoth View Post*duct tapeModern man calls walking more quickly in the same direction down the same road “change.”
The world, in the last three hundred years, has not changed except in that sense.
The simple suggestion of a true change scandalizes and terrifies modern man. -Nicolás Gómez Dávila
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