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rakuenso

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Everything posted by rakuenso

  1. i think being cold blooded means that a reptile can function just as well at a lower temperature without respiring more to create heat. While a mammal cannot tolerate more than +-3 degrees from their normal body temperature (IIRC)
  2. cellular respiration is probably directly related to the number of cells with a mitochondria, which in your case, is true for all examples. just because they have equal mass doesn't mean they have equal number of cells, it also depends on if they are moving or not in the second case i would say respiration is higher for the 10 degrees, because the body has to generate more heat to maintain its body temperature. If it's too hot, the body also needs to expel the excess heat in terms of sweat seeds are bigger at 72 hours than at 0 hours, so my guess is that respiration is proportional to germination time
  3. usually they die under a week, I will quote OMIM here: "(1) In the harlequin fetus, an abnormal x-ray diffraction pattern of the horn material points to a cross-beta-protein structure instead of the normal alpha-protein structure of keratin. (2) Bullous ichthyosiform erythroderma (113800) is characterized by an early formation of clumps and perinuclear shells due to an abnormal arrangement of tonofibrils. (3) In the Curth-Macklin form of ichthyosis hystrix (146590), concentric unbroken shells of abnormal tonofilaments form around the nucleus. (4) In ichthyosis hystrix gravior (146600) only rudimentary tonofilaments are found with compensatory production of mucous granules" however, there has been one case where a harlequin fetus managed to live to his teenage years. I'm not sure if he's still alive. also for the curious minded: do not image google it unless you know what you are about to see.
  4. whats a dire? my old english is not good enough
  5. lol besides that.... i wasn't planning to thermite it anyways.. that's just an overkill
  6. anyways, the rock might be sandstone, i'm not too good with geology to distinguish the different types. I really don't care what size the resulting rocks end up being, as long as it breaks into pieces that one can feasibly remove. some of my friends have been debating over thermiting it, but i think the amount of shrapnel it will give off is just suicidal
  7. [math] A = (b1+b2)/2*h = (3+3+2*b_2)/3*sqrt(9-x^2) [/math]
  8. yes its my rock but neighbors are fiesty as hell, i'd prefer to do it discretely is possible, and i'm not the type to use brute strength to destroy something. Thats why I'm on SFN after all ^-^
  9. lol that sounds too dangerous, too conspicuous, and arouses too much curiosity from neighbors
  10. right now the rock has no holes/cracks, the rock is outside, not sure about the type, maybe granite?, i can buy some chisels, but can't make too much noise or neighbors will start bitching, so no sledge hammers. It's not liftable
  11. no this rock is HUGE like about the size of a small car I don't think a few chisels is enough
  12. as title indicates... I'm trying to make a few cracks in a giant rock i have... any ideas how to do with household chemicals/materials? it doesn't have to be a chemical method, physical /chisels/ any other basic method would work
  13. edit nm... I took a pretty ridiculous derivative... but the answer 6? what i did was express h in terms of x and then differentiated
  14. you mean you'll be the second one to call
  15. no offense but that article regarding the link between vaccines and autism seems to be near rubbish on its amish basis. Why? Several possibilities: Because it is far more likely that the Amish don't tend to outbreed, meaning that if its founder population don't have the autistic gene, its descendents won't either. It simply just may be their lifestyle, the fact that they aren't fat and do everything without the aid of heavy machinery or technology gives them a higher fitness. Not being autistic might just be a side effect Besides, we need vaccines more than it hurts us. If we didn't have vaccines polio and other viruses would do far more damage than autism Also can you cite your CDC source?
  16. the problem with that is: if it's hot when it's suppose to be an ice age, how hot is it going to be when its no longer suppose to be an ice age?
  17. <-- broke.. can only afford free programs
  18. i don't think you can really predict how something will mutate though.. its like trying to guess the location of a needle in a haystack
  19. hi.. I'm looking to code a program in C that does this: solve for numbers of m such that the net result is the greatest [math]-(m^2+11m-30.75)/(2(2m+1))[/math] 2 modes, m as integers m as all real numbers the method doesn't matter, i'm thinking along iterative methods though This isn't a homework problem just to clarify. But a own personal investigation to help find a solution to a physics problem.
  20. Ryan, I think you are hurting them by helping them.
  21. rakuenso

    Books

    you read MATH books for... FUN>? GASP
  22. no one cares about your soliloquies and monologues.
  23. isn't this a hydrogenation syn reaction? I'm pretty sure its adsorb
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