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#122324 - 04/22/07 09:54 PM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: David Koot]
Bravus Online   content
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Great question (someone's thinking!) The form used in semiconductors is actually a compound of gallium, gallium arsenide, so gallium combined with arsenic. This compound has a melting point of 1238 C, so it's completely safe even in hot computers.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallium_arsenide
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#122337 - 04/22/07 11:34 PM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: Bravus]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
Unfortunately the period of a pendulum's swing depends on

(a) air density
(b) distance from the center of the earth

(b) is measurable - because the earth has a bulge at the equator, so pendulums swing measurably slower there...

Then, of course, there is the problem of getting a reliable clock that does not use a pendulum - easy today, but not 200 years ago...

/Bevin

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#122339 - 04/22/07 11:41 PM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: bevin]
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I suspect that both (a) and (b) would have effects smaller than the .005 in the 2.005, so yeah, you wouldn't use a pendulum clock to time the 100 m race at the Olympics, but for timing an egg or taking a pulse it'd work fine. Incidentally, you've probably noticed that clock pendulums tend to be very thin in the plane in which they swing, presumably as a means of reducing the influence of (a).
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#122368 - 04/23/07 03:20 AM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: Bravus]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
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Loc: New England
Actually I realized there is an age-old reliable-enough clock - the rotation of the earth! So you would adjust the length of the pendulum until it did 24*60*(60/2) swings per day, where day is measured by a star crossing a hair in a telescope....

Of course that means having someone count about 50,000 swings... unless you also invented a counting device...

/Bevin

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#122369 - 04/23/07 03:29 AM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: bevin]
bevin Offline


Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
 Quote:
The diameter from the North Pole to the South Pole (the shortest diameter) is approximately 12,714 km. The equatorial diameter (the longest diameter) is approximately 12,756 km.


so it is about 50/12756 = 1/240 difference in radius

so g at one place is (240/240)**2 and the other ((240-1)/240)**2 so the difference is about (2*1*240/240)**2 or (1/120)**2 or about 0.0001 << 0.005

There is another effect also - centrifugal forces - but I suspect without calculation this is even more irrelevant...

A less irrelevant topic may be the shape and density of the pendulum - you would have to agree on that also...

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#122407 - 04/23/07 04:54 AM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: bevin]
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Yeah, the equations for the pendulum require it to have a string of zero mass and a bob that is a point mass, so the denser the better. Lead is a good start, but in a war zone maybe you could pick up some depleted uranium.
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#122490 - 04/23/07 09:22 PM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: Bravus]
Bravus Online   content
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The Skylab astronauts grew 1.5 - 2.25 inches (3.8 - 5.7 centimeters) due to spinal lengthening and straightening as a result of zero gravity.
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#122492 - 04/23/07 09:28 PM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: Bravus]
Gail Administrator Offline
I have many points...

Registered: 12/10/02
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Loc: Buon giorno, Principessa
This is all very interesting but way beyond me!!

I wish I hadn't skipped out of school so much!

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#122511 - 04/24/07 03:14 AM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: Bravus]
Amelia Administrator Offline
Here Forever, by Request :)

Registered: 07/30/01
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Loc: Out standing in a field
 Quote:
The Skylab astronauts grew 1.5 - 2.25 inches (3.8 - 5.7 centimeters) due to spinal lengthening and straightening as a result of zero gravity.


I'm going to assume that they don't feel this elongating in space but what about when they are back on earth. Do they feel themselves shortening? How long does it take to shorten up?
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" Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him..."1 John 2:15-16

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#122603 - 04/24/07 11:20 PM Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day [Re: Amelia]
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And we can't ignore the 'human sciences':

In the developing world, fertility rates vary in inverse proportion with literacy rates. For example, Afghanistan, with a female literacy rate of only eight percent has a fertility rate of 6.9 per 1,000 population. Thailand, in contrast, has a literacy rate of 88% and a fertility rate of 2.6/1,000.
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