Recent content by BL4CKCR4Y0NS
-
B
High School Seismic Waves: How Are They Produced?
So what would happen if the elastic limit was surpassed? It would simply break, right?- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #3
- Forum: Other Physics Topics
-
B
High School How does opening a window change the air pressure of a bedroom?
Why would air come in through the window when you close the door? Shouldn't air be pushed out of the window?- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #5
- Forum: Mechanics
-
B
Undergrad The World Doesn't Revolve Around You
Well what if I was stationary. I'm not orbiting around anything. So if I am not moving, how much mass then?- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #5
- Forum: Other Physics Topics
-
B
Undergrad The World Doesn't Revolve Around You
Orbit? Just like the Earth revolved around the sun. Just like the Earth orbits the sun.- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #3
- Forum: Other Physics Topics
-
B
Undergrad The World Doesn't Revolve Around You
You know that saying? "The world doesn't revolve around you" If by "world" we'll use Earth ... how much mass would one need for the Earth to literally revolve around the subject? Thanks in advance.- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Thread
- Replies: 7
- Forum: Other Physics Topics
-
B
Undergrad Bullet from a moving train kinda
Doesn't an e-Bomb just mess with electricity and power?... I've probably mistaken this with something else though...- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #2
- Forum: Special and General Relativity
-
B
Graduate Can Light Ever Travel Faster Than the Speed of C?
Celsius, Centigrade?- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #13
- Forum: Optics
-
B
Graduate Travel back in time, with the help of light?
What format will they send it in? DVD? BluRay? Or a simple .avi file? Jks lol- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #3
- Forum: Optics
-
B
High School Will light be trapped in a room full of mirrors?
I think I read a thread earlier on this forum about trapping light in a PERFECTLY ROUND ball with a PERFECT vacuum inside. And the inside surfaces of this ball are PERFECTLY reflective. Now just reading that you would know that this is impossible. I don't remember the answer exactly but I think...- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #5
- Forum: Optics
-
B
High School Why is it Colder at Higher Altitudes?
Okay let's see... (I like to make sure I understand what I have read before continuing with my questions or else I get muddled up if I make a mistake.) So the sun does NOT heat up the air? It only heats up the ground, which in turn radiates more electromagnetic radiation heating up the air...- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #7
- Forum: Thermodynamics
-
B
High School Why is it Colder at Higher Altitudes?
Okay let's see... (I like to make sure I understand what I have read before continuing with my questions or else I get muddled up if I make a mistake.) So the sun does NOT heat up the air? It only heats up the ground, which in turn radiates more electromagnetic radiation heating up the air...- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #6
- Forum: Thermodynamics
-
B
High School Why is it Colder at Higher Altitudes?
Is this basically saying that heat doesn't rise until the energy hits the ground? In other words, heat will only start rising AFTER the energy hits the ground?- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #3
- Forum: Thermodynamics
-
B
High School Why is it Colder at Higher Altitudes?
I don't know if I'm asking this in the correct section of the forum. *sorry* Why is it that when you climb up (up a mountain?) it is colder? Doesn't heat rise? Aren't you close to the sun? (maybe not by much but you're still closer...) I get the feeling that the answer is REALLY simple...- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Thread
- Replies: 13
- Forum: Thermodynamics
-
B
Undergrad So everything ISNT particle based?
That should answer one of your questions. They're not particles, but they use particles to become what they are. Fire being the chemical reaction from fuel and oxygen. Fuel - from particles Oxygen - from particles.- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #11
- Forum: High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
-
B
High School Ice and Boiling Water Experiment: Discover the Surprising Results
Yeah I took it straight out of a book and didn't understand... So basically it just takes more time for it to melt because heat rises and the ice is at the bottom. Yeah?- BL4CKCR4Y0NS
- Post #3
- Forum: Mechanics