DennisN
Gold Member
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Speaking of the Sun...
Wouldn't her mass lead to spacetime curvature?Bandersnatch said:The best I can think of is: 'yo mama so fat, her curvature is indistinguishable from flat using current best measurement methods'
Interesting, that's about three times (π?) the Schwarzenegger radius (biceps radius):fresh_42 said:I simply took a 30 cm Schwarzschild radius
I don't dare to think about the association with a black hole that brought you to this ... I hope it was the time traveling aspect ...DennisN said:Interesting, that's about three times (π?) the Schwarzenegger radius (biceps radius):
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No, it was not that sophisticatedfresh_42 said:I don't dare to think about the association with a black hole that brought you to this ... I hope it was the time traveling aspect ...
Ouch! Wrong thread thoughDennisN said:No, it was not that sophisticated. It was simply the similarity of the names Schwarzschild and Schwarzenegger.
Bandersnatch said:Hullo
Not wanting to make a new thread for this silly endeavour, I'll ask here.
Say, if you wanted to come up with a cheeky cosmology-related science joke, what would it be? (I'm thinking, maybe, to put it on a t-shirt)
The best I can think of is: 'yo mama so fat, her curvature is indistinguishable from flat using current best measurement methods'
Any other ideas?
How ironic. The only particles where the mass is not expected to come from the Higgs boson are neutrinos, the lightest massive partices.Related to the glass: Another science world viewEnumaElish said:Yo mama so fat she has mass whether the Higgs Boson exists or not (source: http://www.jokes4us.com/yomamajokes/yomamasciencejokes.html)
Yo mama so fat and heavy she ate a black hole.EnumaElish said:Yo mama so fat she has mass whether the Higgs Boson exists or not (source: http://www.jokes4us.com/yomamajokes/yomamasciencejokes.html)
Yo mama so fat the Hubble telescope used her gravitational lensing to see the big bang.
Yo mama so fat she's known as the great fattractor.
Blog post said:It’s time for another dispatch from the land of spiderweb-cracked blast shields and “Oh well, I never liked that fume hood, anyway”
[...]
The most alarming of them has two carbons, fourteen nitrogens, and no hydrogens at all, a formula that even Klapötke himself, who clearly has refined sensibilities when it comes to hellishly unstable chemicals, calls “exciting”. Trust me, you don’t want to be around when someone who works with azidotetrazoles comes across something “exciting”.
[...]
No, only tiny amounts of this stuff have ever been made, or ever will be. If this is its last appearance in the chemical literature, I won’t be surprised. There are no conceivable uses for it – well, other than blowing up Raman spectrometers, which is a small market – and the number of research groups who would even contemplate a resynthesis can probably be counted on one well-armored hand.
(That’s been settled by their empirical formulas, which generally look like typographical errors)
Sounds definitely like a politician in a talk show. I always forget about this species ...mfb said:We are missing someone who tests n=1 and concludes that the validity starts at n=1.
I was one of them. May be we can get our own spoiler! Alright, yeah! ...mfb said:We are missing someone who tests n=1 and concludes that the validity starts at n=1.
Cynic logician or rigorous mathematician:fresh_42 said:From which number on is ##2^n > n^3## ?
There is certainly an N.Probably ##10##, so let's say ##20##.Works with the nested intervals ##(2,20),(4,16),(8,12),(9,11), \ldots ## and ends up with ##9.93953514142690(5)\pm3 \cdot 10^{-15}##.##1## kByte ##= 1,000 = 10^3## ergo ##10##.It's ##\log \sqrt[3]{2} = \frac{1}{n} \int_1^n dx \cdot x^{-1} -dn##Nonsense. Everybody knows that ##2 < 3##.