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originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
originally posted by: FriedBabelBroccoli
originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
originally posted by: Aleister
a reply to: TiM3LoRd
Are the little pieces laying around just outside the cages living things too? Or maybe dust. And what do the guards feed these cells in the cages, or are they starving them? Cruel and rather unusual punishment.
not sure what the stuff outside the cages are but from what I understand even dust is made up of all sorts of biological matter like dried skin and insect endo skeletons
This is neat.
The flux of a pyramidion is fairly simply to calculate given the known nature of its chemical make-up and could allow for some interesting tests on the effect of electro-potential from various cell processes taking place in various substrates (dust, etc).
Not sure if anything ground breaking will come from this though . . .
-FBB
This is interesting. what more can you tell me about this pyramidion flux.
In the various subfields of physics, there exist two common usages of the term flux, both with rigorous mathematical frameworks. A simple and ubiquitous concept throughout physics and applied mathematics is the flow of a physical property in space, frequently also with time variation. It is the basis of the field concept in physics and mathematics, with two principal applications: in transport phenomena and surface integrals. The terms "flux", "current", "flux density", "current density", can sometimes be used interchangeably and ambiguously, though the terms used below match those of the contexts in the literature.
originally posted by: FriedBabelBroccoli
originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
originally posted by: FriedBabelBroccoli
originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
originally posted by: Aleister
a reply to: TiM3LoRd
Are the little pieces laying around just outside the cages living things too? Or maybe dust. And what do the guards feed these cells in the cages, or are they starving them? Cruel and rather unusual punishment.
not sure what the stuff outside the cages are but from what I understand even dust is made up of all sorts of biological matter like dried skin and insect endo skeletons
This is neat.
The flux of a pyramidion is fairly simply to calculate given the known nature of its chemical make-up and could allow for some interesting tests on the effect of electro-potential from various cell processes taking place in various substrates (dust, etc).
Not sure if anything ground breaking will come from this though . . .
-FBB
This is interesting. what more can you tell me about this pyramidion flux.
Given a force vector (represented as some equation ie: F(x,y)= x^2y^2) it can be used to develop more accurate measurement and modeling tools to acquire data.
en.wikipedia.org...
In the various subfields of physics, there exist two common usages of the term flux, both with rigorous mathematical frameworks. A simple and ubiquitous concept throughout physics and applied mathematics is the flow of a physical property in space, frequently also with time variation. It is the basis of the field concept in physics and mathematics, with two principal applications: in transport phenomena and surface integrals. The terms "flux", "current", "flux density", "current density", can sometimes be used interchangeably and ambiguously, though the terms used below match those of the contexts in the literature.
Sorry for the late reply, I totally spaced this thread.
-FBB
originally posted by: FriedBabelBroccoli
a reply to: TiM3LoRd
Flux could be used to calculate how much water is flowing through a pipe at any given time.
Time is usually used as the variable. For example x(t)= gallons of water flowing through a pipe, y(t) would be the concentration of some solvent like salt being mixed in the water and the function of F(x,y) could be used to calculate how much salt is being transported through the pipe over a given time.
These systems might better be used to see how fields or distance from some stimulant affect the direction which biological material is inclined to grow. It could also be used to measure where the strongest charge (or more likely the direction of the charge) is located if some system of sensors where there for that.
Time is more perception and is entirely relative to other things, well in most scenarios at least.
There is no flux energy, flux is just the mathematical term. Flux could be heat dissipating in the atmosphere, water flowing through a pipe, current running through a wire, graduation rate of students given certain conditions, etc.
-FBB
originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
a reply to: FriedBabelBroccoli
lol that's hilarious.
So what scientific principles are you studying right now and which ones do you think you have a firm grasp on?
originally posted by: FriedBabelBroccoli
originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
a reply to: FriedBabelBroccoli
lol that's hilarious.
So what scientific principles are you studying right now and which ones do you think you have a firm grasp on?
Electromagnetism and I am tutoring Vector Calc and Differential Equations (except folks taking math at that level rarely come in for help so usually I am sleep-walking through calculus/algebra/ and trigonometry homework) for a local community college because having a previous degree prevents me from slacking off and supporting myself with a sweet scholarship. I have already cleared newtonian mechanics, electromagnetism, waves (physics).
Currently working through signal theory/processing, thermodynamics (I passionately hate this class), and circuit integration (with other systems).
So mostly disciplines where actions are governed by mathematical formulas as opposed to constructed from data and described (usually poorly) by riemann sums.
-FBB
originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
originally posted by: FriedBabelBroccoli
originally posted by: TiM3LoRd
a reply to: FriedBabelBroccoli
lol that's hilarious.
So what scientific principles are you studying right now and which ones do you think you have a firm grasp on?
Electromagnetism and I am tutoring Vector Calc and Differential Equations (except folks taking math at that level rarely come in for help so usually I am sleep-walking through calculus/algebra/ and trigonometry homework) for a local community college because having a previous degree prevents me from slacking off and supporting myself with a sweet scholarship. I have already cleared newtonian mechanics, electromagnetism, waves (physics).
Currently working through signal theory/processing, thermodynamics (I passionately hate this class), and circuit integration (with other systems).
So mostly disciplines where actions are governed by mathematical formulas as opposed to constructed from data and described (usually poorly) by riemann sums.
-FBB
wow
so much abstraction.
How accurate would you say this statement is.
Maths is just a symbolic representation of a philosophical concept of reality that is continually being updated to reflect the experimental evidence.
I hear what you say when you mention that most scientist have some OCD issues.
So why did you get into these fields of science specifically? was it financially driven or did you want genuine answers to the question of what reality is?
Thanks for the conversation too by the way its so rare to have an intelligent discussion on this site without peoples ego's getting in the way.