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Science Trivia

#121 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zoo {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 02:10 AM

black holes would be the most dense
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#122 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Neraphym {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 03:38 AM

No, no, no!!! When there is X amount of matter in a star when it dies, it becomes a white dwarf. White dwarfs do not excede a certain mass, or the gravity would excede a certain pressure and it'd form a neutron star. Neutrons have a similar mass limit before it excedes another pressure and collapses into a black hole. What are these two pressures?

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#123 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ratty {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 07:41 AM

Peer and Air.
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#124 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Nuu™™ {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 09:45 AM

I think it is, in fact, Peer and Moral.
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Things which you should look at:

SKoA - http://skoa.cspacezone.com/ , if you have any Age of Empires games.

The DS Garden Festival Minigame - Link , whether you play DStorm or not.

The Most Mysterious SSSS - Link For people who don't care about...things.

Like LEGO? Play Blockland!


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#125 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ratty {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 10:30 AM

QUOTE(Nuu™™ @ Apr 16 2007, 07:45 PM) {lang:macro__view_post}
I think it is, in fact, Peer and Moral.

Damn you. I couldnt think of another good one sad.gif
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#126 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 06:53 PM

Nuetron Degeneracy Pressure. Though, may be better to ask what keeps it from being a quark star, if they exist. grnwink.gif
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#127 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Neraphym {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 08:14 PM

Well, that's one of them. There's also electron degeneracy pressure. Also, scientists are fairly sure that there are no more pressures beyond neutron degeneracy pressure, so neutron stars go straight into black holes when that pressure is exceeded.
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#128 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 08:48 PM

There is no electron degeneracy pressure in a neutron star, thats a white dwarf.

And yeah, there is alot of debate about quark stars. I don't know how much of it I buy. I want to go into particle astro physics most likely, so I can see the argument, but no real proof yet to make me believe it or not.
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#129 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Neraphym {lang:icon}

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Posted 16 April 2007 - 11:15 PM

I guess you didn't even read the question. Anywho, it's your turn to ask.
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#130 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 17 April 2007 - 11:28 AM

Actually, I did, but I read it between classes, so I did forget the full thing. My fault. Flush.gif

In terms of the actual waves, what is the difference between AM and FM. Like how do they create each.
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#131 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zoo {lang:icon}

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Posted 17 April 2007 - 12:41 PM

Uhh.. well, I know AM is amplitude modulation and FM is frequency, so for the former they mess with wave height, and the latter how many waves per unit of time. I dunno anything more than that icon_sweatdrop.gif.
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#132 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Goto {lang:icon}

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Posted 17 April 2007 - 01:49 PM

That's probably what he was after, beat me to it.

Just in case he's after more information though... I'm a bit rusty on this, but I believe a carrier wave is modulated to represent changes in the signal, which contains the information being transmitted. As Zoo said, AM modulates the amplitude of the signal to represent information (the 'strength' of the signal), while keeping the frequency constant. FM does the opposite, the frequency changes in relation to the information being sent while the amplitude of the signal remains constant. So yeah, the data signal is superimposed over a carrier signal, causing either a variable amplitude or frequency for the resulting wave.

The question should go to Zoo though, I think.
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#133 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 17 April 2007 - 05:11 PM

Yep yep, she said what I was looking for.
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#134 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Zoo {lang:icon}

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Posted 17 April 2007 - 07:19 PM

*cough*she*cough*

Where does the poison secreted by poison dart frogs come from?
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#135 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Rylkan {lang:icon}

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Posted 17 April 2007 - 09:31 PM

Sorry about that, though I defend myself using a rule of the internet, There are no girls on the internet. :-p *Fixed my mistake though, so I apologize.

As for the answer, I remember reading it before but had to look it up again to make sure. "Batrachotoxin is a steroidal alkaloid secreted from skin glands and is deadly to other small animals." Basically a poison that effects the muscles and causes muscles to breakdown and to make things like the lungs stop working. But as for the question you asked, from glands within the frogs skin.
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