Everything posted by exchemist
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Why we are alone...
Processes happen many times over in nature. The outcomes of those processes may not be exactly the same every time. For example, many millions of stars have formed, but no two stars are exactly alike. So, we might expect that life can arise many times over in the universe, but it is unlikely that the form it takes each time will be identical to that we see on Earth.
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Does dark energy obey the inverse-square law?
What "it" are you talking about? I repeat, but with emphasis added, no deviations from Newton's inverse square law of gravitation were detected. In other words, just to spell it out, no influence of dark energy - which the experimenters thought might cause a deviation from Newton's law of gravitation - was detected. As nothing apart from Newton's law behaviour was observed, no manifestation of dark energy was detected. So no information about dark energy can be obtained from this experiment, except in the sense I mentioned, viz. that if there are any deviations from Newton's law, they must be smaller than the detection limit of this experimental setup.
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Does dark energy obey the inverse-square law?
No, this passage does not say anything about dark energy obeying an inverse square law. What it says is that no deviations from Newton's inverse square law of gravitation were detected. So this experiment has not shed any light (haha) on dark energy, save, I suppose, in establishing some upper limit to the magnitude of any deviation from Newton's inverse square law that there may be.
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Why do we condemn stepping on bugs but embrace sport fishing?
People will often object to wanton killing of harmless creatures. Your examples of the unnecessary killing of spiders and bees, both of which are generally harmless to us and actually beneficial, suggests you lack this sensitivity. If I met you, I would find your behaviour callous and objectionable. Regarding sport fishing, I agree it seems unnecessarily cruel, though I note there are efforts to improve the survival rate of the released fish, by improved design of hooks etc. Perhaps it is just one of those things, like bullfighting, that is a relic of a more barbarous age and will die out as people become more aware of the need to respect the environment. How many of the people who object to you stamping on insects and spiders go sport fishing?
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Please explain the origin and ubiquity of the laws of the universe?
Does your theory make testable predictions? If it doesn't, it is not science.
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Please explain the origin and ubiquity of the laws of the universe?
Science is a body of knowledge about nature. And there is nothing in that body of knowledge about the origin or cause, if there were to be one, of the order in nature. If I were to speak of "scientists", instead of science, I would immediately be making it seem as if it might be a mere matter of fashion, or personal belief. So I meant what I said. I am not speaking of a "fashion" in "science philosophy". I'm telling you that an answer to such a question is absent from that body of knowledge. Secondly, I have explained why there is no explanation: there is no observation that can be made that has any bearing on the question. So it not a question that science can answer. You might as well ask what is the "cause" (if there was one) of the universe. That is not a question science can answer either, for the same reason.
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Please explain the origin and ubiquity of the laws of the universe?
No and yes, respectively. First, no we can't explain, because the order* in nature just is, as far as science is concerned. And then yes, we can explain why we can't explain, because science does not pretend to be able to answer every question it is possible to dream up. Science limits itself to theories (that is to say, models) of nature that can be tested by observation. That requirement imposes limits on what science can model. In fact the refusal of science to dream up answers to questions that can't be validated by observation is what gives it its reliability and explanatory power. This is in contrast to some other systems of thought, such as metaphysics, that indulge in unverifiable theories. * This order is sometimes called referred to as the "laws" of nature, though actually these "laws" are merely man-made descriptions of the order, as we perceive it.
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If I move a box with nothing in it, does the nothing move with it?
No, we do not define liquids by the quantity that we have. You can characterise water, or petrol, say, perfectly well without any reference to the quantity you are talking about. The same is true for other things, e.g. sheep. The definition of sheep does not require any information about the number of them that someone may have. Quantity or volume information is generally not intrinsic to an entity.
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If I move a box with nothing in it, does the nothing move with it?
One a point of detail it is untrue that something must have mass to interact with something else. Something can be a field for example, as with photons. But more fundamentally, you seem to assume one can identify one piece of nothing as distinct from another piece, such that one can speak of one portion of nothing "replacing" other nothing. But that's rather silly, isn't it?
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Covid's Delta Variant
Indeed, but worth a look, in view of the numbers reporting long Covid.
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Covid's Delta Variant
There do seem to be some indications it may help long Covid: https://3ca26cd7-266e-4609-b25f-6f3d1497c4cf.filesusr.com/ugd/8bd4fe_a338597f76bf4279a851a7a4cb0e0a74.pdf But indeed studies on long Covid have not had much time to report, as yet.
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New to chemistry
I agree with @chenbeierthat you need to learn at school. There is not a lot of point in just starting practical work if you don't really understand what you are doing. Having said that, it is fun to do simple things at home to supplement what you learn at school. Learning about acids and bases is a good starting point, with immediate application domestically. (Even little things like when you wash out a bowl that has had red fruit in it, the colour changes from red to purple, if you live in a hard water area, or how baking powder, or oven cleaner, works.). A bit of electrochemistry can also be fun. You can make a battery from copper and zinc rods and a lemon, or a potato. With a low voltage DC electricity supply, e.g. from a train set, you can electrolyse various solutions and see what you get. I would also recommend that you read up a bit about the types of chemical bonding before you start anything. You need to understand the difference between ionic and covalent bonding, and between molecules and giant structures, before you can get vary far. And you ought to have a good look at the Periodic Table and see where the various chemical elements that you come across appear and what sort of properties they have.
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Covid's Delta Variant
Yes but out of 23, only 3 have gone to hospital with it. My 93 year old father got Covid at his nursing home after being vaccinated, too. But he had no fever, was just rather breathless for a week (no oxygen needed) and lost his appetite, and then made a full recovery. UK experience with the Delta variant is that the vaccines are effective at preventing serious disease, provided you have had both shots. This finding seems to be based on the rates of hospital admission since the Delta variant started to spread. Collecting data on whether vaccines prevent a person testing +ve is harder to obtain. I have not seen any numbers on that. The people in nursing homes are very fragile and their immune systems are weak. It is not surprising that they can catch the virus after being vaccinated. What matters is how ill they get. The vaccines do seem to help, considerably, with this.
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Magnetic Turbine Idea
If you had a South pole facing inward all the way round, then there would be no reason for a force to be produced that was not purely radial. So there would be no rotation.
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Tide Generator
It would generate energy, yes, but very little. What this device would do is displace a volume of water equal to the area of the pipe x the tidal range, once every 12hrs, so it would be a sort of very slow pump. To extract energy from the tides, you are far better off to use a place where a natural restriction, say the entrance to a bay, causes a significant tidal current and then use a turbine of some kind. That way, you exploit the tidal displacement of an entire bay's worth of water volume every cycle.
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questions
It seems to me a lot of this is old gnus.
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Singularities and black holes are a consequence of an error in the GRT equation.
OK, I see what you are saying, but if that were a valid explanation for the cosmological red shift, then presumably GR would be false and would predict results contrary to observation in other respects. Is that the case? Or can you somehow preserve GR AND this idea at the same time?
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Singularities and black holes are a consequence of an error in the GRT equation.
Re your last line, I think you may be confusing motion through space with expansion of the metric.
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State of "matter" of a singularity
As far as I'm aware, we don't have a theory for that. As quarks are the most elementary unit of matter we know of, I doubt that we have anything on which to base any speculations as to whether or not they might be decomposable into something "more" fundamental. Though I'd be interested if any physicists have anything to add on that.
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State of "matter" of a singularity
People theorise about "quark matter", I think, viz. a form of degenerate matter in which neutrons lose their identity and one has just quarks. But I know nothing about this. I gather we don't know enough about the strong force to model it very well.
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State of "matter" of a singularity
You mean, what would we see if the laws of physics were not what they are? Surely that would depend on what they were instead, wouldn't it?
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State of "matter" of a singularity
Energy is a property of a physical system of some sort. It is not "stuff": you can't have a jug of energy. So it becomes pretty hard to see how a singularity can have energy. It would have to be a system, and that would prevent it being a singularity.
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Negative effect on child of mother's age
I have not altered the meaning of what you wrote in any way. Whereas your cutting the part of my sentence which actually already addresses the point you go on to make, does alter its meaning.
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Crypto-cancer fade out end of civilization for Fermi paradox?
Do you really think nobody would notice this "resource consumption" and take steps to limit it?
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Negative effect on child of mother's age
My actual sentence, part of which you have snipped out of the whole, thereby altering its meaning, was : " If the foetus has the normal complement of chromosomes and the mother has no problems in the pregnancy, it would seem there are no issues for the child, once it is born. " Down's syndrome involves an extra copy of all or part of chromosome 21.