Wikipedia:Reference desk/Science and Charles Darwin: Difference between pages

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{{dablink|For other uses see [[Darwin (disambiguation)]]}}
{{/How_to_ask_and_answer|[[WP:RD/S]] or [[WP:RD/SCI]]|Science}}
[[Image:Charles_Darwin_1881.jpg|thumb|right|200px|In his lifetime Charles Darwin gained international fame as a controversial and influential scientist.]]
 
'''Charles Robert Darwin''' ([[February 12]], [[1809]] – [[April 19]], [[1882]]) was a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[natural history|naturalist]] who achieved lasting fame as the originator of the [[theory]] of [[evolution]] through [[natural selection]] and [[Sexual selection]]. ''[[Jean-Baptiste Lamarck]] had already developed a different theory of evolution and claimed that acquired characteristics were passed on.''
=November 13=
 
He developed his interest in natural history while studying first medicine, then [[theology]], at university. Darwin's [[The Voyage of the Beagle|five-year voyage]] on the [[HMS Beagle|''Beagle'']] brought him eminence as a [[geology|geologist]] and fame as a popular author. His [[biology|biological]] observations led him to study the [[transmutation of species]] and develop his theory of natural selection in 1838. Fully aware of the likely reaction, he confided only in close friends and continued his research to meet anticipated objections, but in 1858 the information that [[Alfred Russel Wallace]] now had a similar theory forced early joint [[publication of Darwin's theory]].
== electrical ==
 
His 1859 book ''The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life'' (usually abbreviated to ''[[The Origin of Species]]'') established evolution by [[common descent]] as the dominant scientific theory of diversification in nature. He was made a [[Fellow of the Royal Society]], continued his research, and wrote a series of books on plants and animals, including humankind, notably ''[[The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex]]'' and ''[[The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals]]''. His last book was about [[earthworm]]s.
electrical tester, that we use to see if current is there or not in sockets,...n when we use it even while standing on wooden stool the ckt gets completed n the bulb in tester glows how?? irrespective of the thickness of wooden stool(insulator)..how it happens??
 
In recognition of Darwin's pre-eminence, he was buried in [[Westminster Abbey]], close to [[William Herschel]] and [[Isaac Newton]].
 
== Life ==
from Avinash parhi,India
=== Early life ===
[[Image:Charles Darwin 1816.jpg|thumb|190px|The seven-year-old Charles Darwin in 1816, a year before the sudden loss of his mother.]]
{{main|Charles Darwin's education}}
 
Charles Darwin was born in [[Shrewsbury, Shropshire]], [[England]], on [[February 12]], [[1809]] at his family home, the [[The Mount, Shrewsbury|Mount House]]. He was the fifth of six children of [[Robert Darwin|Robert]] and [[Susannah Darwin]] (''née'' Wedgwood), and the grandson of [[Erasmus Darwin]] on his father's side, of [[Josiah Wedgwood]] on his mother's side, both from the [[Darwin-Wedgwood family|Darwin–Wedgwood family]], a prominent English family which supported the [[Unitarianism|Unitarian]] church. His mother died when he was only eight. When he went to the nearby [[Shrewsbury School]] the next year, he lived there as a "[[boarding school|boarder]]".
--[[User:59.93.129.191|59.93.129.191]] 02:33, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
In 1825 Darwin went to [[University of Edinburgh|Edinburgh University]] to study medicine, but his revulsion at the brutality of surgery led him to neglect his medical studies. He studied [[taxonomy]] with a freed black slave from South America, and found his tales of the South American rainforest absorbing. In Darwin's second year he became active in student societies for [[natural history|naturalists]]. He became an avid pupil of [[Robert Edmund Grant]], who enthusiastically followed the theories of [[Jean-Baptiste Lamarck]] and Charles's grandfather Erasmus concerning evolution by acquired characteristics. Grant's pioneering investigations of the life cycle of marine animals on the shores of the [[Firth of Forth]] found evidence for ''[[homology (biology)|homology]]'', the radical theory that all animals have similar organs and differ only in complexity. Darwin took part in these investigations, and in March 1827 made a presentation to the Plinian society of his discovery that the black spores often found in oyster shells were the eggs of a skate leech. He also sat in on [[Robert Jameson]]'s natural history course, learning about [[stratigraphy|stratigraphic]] [[geology]] and assisting with work on the collections of the [[Royal Museum|Museum of Edinburgh University]], then one of the largest museums in Europe.
:Keep checking back for an answer while it is developed over the course of a few days, as we generally don't reply by e-mail. --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 02:37, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
In 1827, his father, unhappy that his younger son had no interest in becoming a physician, enrolled him in a [[Bachelor of Arts]] course at [[Christ's College, Cambridge|Christ's College]], [[University of Cambridge]], which would qualify him to be a clergyman. This was a sensible career move at a time when [[Anglicanism|Anglican]] [[parson]]s were provided with a comfortable income, and when most naturalists in England were clergymen who saw it as part of their duties to explore the wonders of God's creation. At Cambridge, Darwin preferred riding and shooting to studying. Along with his cousin [[William Darwin Fox]], he became engrossed in the craze at the time for the competitive collecting of beetles, and Fox introduced him to the Reverend [[John Stevens Henslow]], professor of botany, for expert advice on beetles. Darwin subsequently joined Henslow's natural history course, becoming his favourite pupil and coming to be known as "the man who walks with Henslow". When exams began to loom, Darwin focused more on his studies and received private tuition from Henslow, whose subjects were mathematics and theology. Darwin became particularly enthused by the writings of [[William Paley]], including the [[teleological argument|argument of divine design in nature]]. In his finals in January 1831, he performed well in theology and, having scraped through in classics, mathematics and physics, came tenth out of a pass list of 178.
:Ah, I'm not sure you've thought this out. Most likely, the tester is completing the circuit itself. I.E. it has a bulb in it and two contacts, allowing the electricity to pass through it, lighting the bulb. [[User:Superm401|Superm401]] | [[User_talk:Superm401|Talk]] 13:14, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Residential requirements now kept Darwin at Cambridge until June. In keeping with Henslow's example and advice, he was in no rush to take holy orders. Inspired by [[Alexander von Humboldt]]'s ''Personal Narrative'', he planned to visit the [[Madeira Islands]] to study natural history in the tropics with some classmates after graduation. To prepare himself, Darwin joined the geology course of the Reverend [[Adam Sedgwick]], then in the summer went with him to assist in mapping strata in [[Wales]]. Darwin was surveying strata on his own when his plans to visit Madeira were dashed by a message that his intended companion had died, but on his return home he received another letter. Henslow had recommended Darwin for the unpaid position of gentleman's companion to [[Robert FitzRoy]], the captain of [[HMS Beagle|HMS ''Beagle'']], on a two-year expedition to chart the coastline of [[South America]] which would give Darwin valuable opportunities to develop his career as a naturalist. His father objected to the voyage, regarding it as a waste of time, but was persuaded by [[Josiah Wedgwood II]] to agree to his son's participation. This voyage became a five-year expedition that would lead to dramatic changes in countless fields of science.
::I would suggest that although a wooden stool acts as a resistor, nothing is a perfect insulator, and there is still sufficient current to light the bulb. I suspect inductance may play a part too. [[User:Shantavira|Shantavira]] 14:09, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=== Journey on the Beagle ===
:::There are "hot-wire" testers which only require one contact with the ungrounded side of an AC mains source to indicate. The technology uses capacitance to ground (earth) and can be quite sensitive. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 14:59, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
{{main|The Voyage of the Beagle}}
 
[[Image:HMS_Beagle_by_Conrad_Martens.jpg|thumb|245px|right|[[HMS Beagle|HMS ''Beagle'']] surveying the coast of [[South America]], where Darwin's research began.]]
He doesn't quite say so, but I suspect he's talking about the
The ''Beagle'' survey took five years. Darwin spent two-thirds of this time exploring on land. He studied a rich variety of geological features, [[fossil]]s and living organisms, and met a wide range of people, both native and colonial. He methodically collected an enormous number of specimens, many of them new to science. These specimens later established his reputation as a naturalist and made him one of the precursors of the field of [[ecology]], particularly the notion of [[biocoenosis]]. His detailed notes formed the basis for his later work and provided social, political and [[Anthropology|anthropological]] insights into the areas he visited. While there, Darwin read [[Charles Lyell]]'s ''Principles of Geology'', which explained geological features as the outcome of gradual processes over huge periods of time, and wrote home that he was seeing landforms "as though he had the eyes of Lyell": stepped plains of shingle and seashells in [[Patagonia]] appeared to be raised beaches; in [[Chile]], he experienced an earthquake that raised the land; and even high in the [[Andes]], he was able to collect seashells. He theorized that [[coral]] [[atoll]]s form on sinking volcanic mountains, and a survey of the [[Cocos (Keeling) Islands]] supported his theory.
simplest kind of electrical tester, which has two leads and a
neon lamp inside, along with a big old (100k or so) series
current-limiting resistor, since small neon lamps require a
ridiculously small amount of current. Secondly, I suspect he's
asking about the case where you connect one lead of the neon
tester to a hot wire, and hold the other lead in your hand.
In this case, the neon bulb will in fact glow -- not as brightly
as when you connect that second lead to the neutral or ground
wire, but still plenty bright enough for you to see.
(And in fact this effect leads to a useful trick, one I use all
the time: determining which of two indistinguishable wires is hot
and which is neutral.) The current flow -- if indeed there is
any -- is so tiny that you don't feel a thing.
 
In South America he discovered fossils of gigantic extinct [[megatherium|megatheria]] and [[glyptodon]]s in strata which showed no signs of catastrophe or change in climate. At the time, he thought them similar to African species, but after the voyage [[Richard Owen]] showed that the remains were of animals related to living creatures in the same area. In [[Argentina]] two species of [[Rhea (bird)|rhea]] had separate but overlapping territories. Darwin found different [[mockingbird]]s on the nearby [[Galápagos Islands]], and on returning to Britain he was shown that Galápagos [[tortoise]]s and [[finch]]es were also in distinct species based on the individual islands they inhabited. The Australian [[marsupial]] rat-kangaroo and [[platypus]] were strikingly different animals. This made him remark that "An unbeliever ... might exclaim 'Surely two distinct Creators must have been [at] work'." In the first edition of ''[[The Voyage of the Beagle]]'', he explained species distribution in light of [[Charles Lyell]]'s ideas of "centres of creation"; however, in later editions of this ''Journal'' he foreshadowed his use of Galápagos Islands fauna as evidence for evolution: "one might really fancy that from an original paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species had been taken and modified for different ends."
The explanation for why/how this works always involves phrases
like "the capacitance of your body", although this has never made
perfect sense to me.
[[User:Ummit|Steve Summit]] ([[User talk:Ummit|talk]]) 19:50, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Three natives of [[Tierra del Fuego]] returned with the Beagle as missionaries. They had become civilized over the previous two years, yet their relatives appeared to Darwin savages little above animals. Within a year, the missionaries had -in Darwin's opinion- reverted to savagery.<!--Please specify what "savagery" they returned to, as this term is a highly loaded one.--> Yet they preferred this and did not want to return to civilization. This experience and his detestation of the slavery he saw elsewhere convinced him that the widespread concept of inferior races was incorrect, and that humanity was not as far removed from animals as his clerical friends believed.
== CPU vs RAM? ==
[[Image:Cpuhelp.jpg|thumb]]
Is it strange that my CPU is maxing out at 100% when such a large fraction of my RAM remains unused? Causes? Fixes? Perfectly normal? Etc?--[[User:Ineedhelp(name)|ineedhelp]] 02:39, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
::A computer can carry out intensive processing without needing much RAM, so that is not strange at all. --[[User:Pidgeot|Pidgeot]] <small>[[User_talk:Pidgeot|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/Pidgeot|(c)]] [[Special:Emailuser/Pidgeot|(e)]]</small> 02:48, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
While on board the ship, Darwin suffered from seasickness, in October 1833 he caught a fever in Argentina, and in July 1834, while returning from the Andes down to [[Valparaíso]], he fell ill and spent a month in bed. From 1837 onwards Darwin was repeatedly incapacitated with episodes of stomach pains, vomiting, severe boils, palpitations, trembling and other symptoms, which particularly affected him at times of stress, such as when attending meetings or dealing with controversy over his theory. The cause of [[Charles Darwin's illness|Darwin's illness]] was unknown during his lifetime, and attempts at treatment had little success. Recent speculation has suggested that in South America he caught [[Chagas disease]] from insect bites, leading to the later problems. Other possible causes include psychobiological problems.
::That's not strange, RAM and CPU are different resources that are not necessarily related. Click the Processes tab to see what process is using up you CPU.
 
=== Career in science, inception of theory ===
High CPU usage indicates your computer is carrying out a processor intensive task (of which there are many). Some of these required large amounts of RAM, and some do not. The two resources are orthogonal in that respect. So no, it's not surprising that your CPU is at 100% without a large consumption of RAM. Nor would it be surprising if there was a large consumption of RAM. [[User:Raul654|&rarr;Raul654]] 07:30, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[Image:Charles_Darwin_by_G._Richmond.jpg|thumb|left|While still a young man, Charles Darwin joined the scientific élite.]]
{{main|Inception of Darwin's theory}}
 
While Darwin was still on the voyage, [[John Stevens Henslow|Henslow]] carefully fostered his former pupil's reputation by giving selected naturalists access to the fossil specimens and printed copies of Darwin's geological writings. When the Beagle returned on [[October 2]], [[1836]], Darwin was a celebrity in scientific circles. He visited his home in Shrewsbury and his father organised investments so that Darwin could become a self-funded gentleman scientist. After visiting [[Cambridge]] and getting Henslow to agree to work on botanical descriptions of modern plants he had collected, Darwin went round the [[London]] institutions to find the best naturalists available to describe his other collections for timely publication. An eager [[Charles Lyell]] met Darwin on [[29 October]] and introduced him to the up-and-coming anatomist [[Richard Owen]]. After working on Darwin's collection of fossil bones at his [[Royal College of Surgeons]], Owen caused great surprise by revealing that some were from gigantic extinct rodents and sloths. This enhanced Darwin's reputation. With Lyell's enthusiastic backing Darwin read his first paper to the [[Geological Society of London]] on [[January 4]], [[1837]], arguing that the South American landmass was slowly rising. On the same day Darwin presented his mammal and bird specimens to the [[Zoological Society of London|Zoological Society]]. The Mammalia were taken on by [[George Robert Waterhouse|George R. Waterhouse]]. Though the birds seemed almost an afterthought, the ornithologist [[John Gould]] revealed that what Darwin had taken to be wrens, blackbirds and slightly differing finches from the Galápagos were all finches, but each was a separate species. Others on the ''Beagle'' including FitzRoy had also collected these birds and had been more careful with their notes, enabling Darwin to find which island each species had come from.
:OOP! It is not strange, but that is not was is alaming. What is running on 48 processes? Please click on the previous tab ( Processses ), and click on the CPU Column. That will sort processes by CPU usage, and tell us which one of the 48 processes is taking your CPU time.
( I am browsing, playing, downloading and surfing, and I have 16 processes. ) --[[User:69.181.232.116|69.181.232.116]] 08:16, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
In London Charles stayed with his brother [[Erasmus Alvey Darwin|Erasmus]] and met inspiring [[savant]]s at dinner parties. His brother's lady friend Miss [[Harriet Martineau]] was a writer whose stories promoted [[Thomas Malthus|Malthusian]] [[Whig]] [[Poor Law]] reforms. Scientific circles were buzzing with ideas of [[Transmutation of species]] controversially associated with [[Radicalism (historical)|radicalism]]. Darwin preferred the respectability of his friends the Cambridge Dons, even though his ideas were pushing beyond their belief that natural history must justify religion and social order.
== Another Question ==
[[Image:Cyclicdata.jpg|thumb]]
I've been getting these alot lately any ideas???--[[User:Ineedhelp(name)|ineedhelp]] 06:51, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
On [[February]] 17, [[1837]], Lyell used his presidential address at the Geographical Society to present Owen's findings to date on Darwin's fossils, pointing out the inference that extinct species were related to current species in the same locality. At the same meeting Darwin was elected to the Council of the Society. He had already been invited by FitzRoy to contribute a ''Journal'' based on his field notes as the natural history section of the captain's account of the Beagle's voyage. He now plunged into writing a book on South American Geology. At the same time he speculated on transmutation in his ''Red Notebook'' which he had begun on the Beagle. Another project he started was getting the expert reports on his collection published as a multivolume ''Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle'', and Henslow used his contacts to arrange a Treasury grant of £1,000 to sponsor this. Darwin finished writing his ''Journal'' around [[20 June]] when King [[William IV of the United Kingdom|William IV]] died and the [[Victoria of the United Kingdom|Victorian]] era began. In mid-July he began his secret ''"B" notebook'' on transmutation, and developed the [[hypothesis]] that where every island in the Galápagos Archipelago had its own kind of tortoise, these had originated from a single tortoise species and had adapted to life on the different islands in different ways.
:I typically see this message on disks that are about ready to go bad. Get as much information off the disk as possible. Then run chkdsk to *possibly* fix the problem. If on a Windows 2000/XP machine, go to Start, click run, type 'cmd' without the quotes and hit enter. In the new window that pops up, type 'chkdsk a: /f /r /x' again without the quotes and hit enter, where a: is the drive that you are using when you experience that error. This will check the disk for bad spots, moving any data it finds in those spots to new areas and marking the old areas as bad. My suggestion would be to then move everything off that disk that you can and replace it. [[User:imsaguy(name)|imsaguy]]
 
Under pressure with organising ''Zoology'' and correcting proofs of his ''Journal'', Darwin's health suffered. On [[September 20]], [[1837]] he suffered "palpitations of the heart" and left for a month of recuperation in the country. He visited [[Maer Hall]] where his invalid aunt was being cared for by her spinster daughter [[Emma Darwin|Emma Wedgwood]], and entertained his relatives with tales of his travels. His uncle [[Josiah Wedgwood II|Jos]] pointed out an area of ground where cinders had disappeared under [[loam]] and suggested that this might have been the work of earthworms. This gave Darwin the inspiration for a talk which he gave to the Geological Society on [[1 November]], on the unusually mundane subject of worm casts. He had avoided taking on official posts which would take valuable time, but by March Whewell had recruited him as Secretary of the Geological Society. Illness prompted Darwin to take a break from the pressure of work and he went "geologising" in Scotland. In glorious weather he visited [[Glen Roy]] to see the phenomenon known as "roads" which he identified as raised beaches.
:Yeah, that's a bad sign. I've seen floppy disks do this when they have bad sectors. Backup if you can, then try chkdsk, see if that helps any. If it doesn't, you should probably invest in a new hard drive. --[[User:Fastfission|Fastfission]] 01:00, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
[[Image:Emma Darwin.jpg|thumb|left|Charles chose to marry his cousin, [[Emma Darwin|Emma Wedgwood]].]]
:The same goes for any sort of disk (floppy, hard disk, CD...) &mdash; I get these from time to time on old CD-Rs that have just been through too much. In case you're wondering, a [[cyclic redundancy check]] is a type of error-checking mechanism that Windows uses to make sure the file you're moving/copying is intact. And I would agree with the other posters - if you get this while moving files to/from a hard disk, get your files off there as soon as possible. If you get this while reading from a CD, then that CD is damaged, but you might be able to get your files by cleaning it off with a cloth (to get rid of stains, fingerprints etc). &mdash; [[User:QuantumEleven|QuantumEleven ]] | [[User_talk:QuantumEleven|(talk)]] 09:28, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
Fully recuperated, he returned home to Shrewsbury. Pondering his career and prospects he drew up a list with columns headed ''"Marry"'' and ''"Not Marry"''. Having come down in favour, he discussed it with his father then went to visit his cousin Emma on [[July 29]], [[1838]]. He did not get around to proposing, but against his father's advice he told her of his ideas on transmutation. While his thoughts and work continued in London over the autumn he suffered repeated bouts of illness. On [[11 November]] he returned and proposed to Emma, once more telling her his ideas. She accepted, but later wrote beseeching him to read from the Gospel of St. John a section on love and following ''the Way'' which also states that ''"If a man abide not in me...they are burned"''. He sent a warm reply which eased her concern, but she would continue to worry that his lapses of faith could endanger her hope that they would meet in an afterlife.
 
Darwin considered [[Thomas Malthus|Malthus]]'s argument that human populations breed beyond their means and compete to survive. He related this to the findings about species relating to localities, his enquiries into animal breeding, and ideas of Natural "laws of harmony". Towards the end of November 1838 he compared breeders selecting traits to a Malthusian Nature selecting from variants thrown up by "chance" so that "every part of newly acquired structure is fully practised and perfected", and thought this "the most beautiful part of my theory" of how species originated. He went house-hunting and eventually found "Macaw Cottage" in Gower Street, London, then moved his "museum" in over Christmas. He was showing the stress, and Emma wrote urging him to get some rest, almost prophetically remarking "So don't be ill any more my dear Charley till I can be with you to nurse you". On [[January 24]], [[1839]] he was honoured by being elected as Fellow of the [[Royal Society]] and presented his paper on the Roads of Glen Roy.
== Statistical tables ==
 
=== Marriage and children ===
Carole Winch e-mailed the following question to the help desk. I am taking the liberty of posting it here.
[[Image:Charles and William Darwin.jpg|thumb|185px|Darwin in 1842 with his eldest son, [[Darwin-Wedgwood family|William Erasmus Darwin]].]]
 
On [[January 29]], [[1839]], Darwin married his cousin [[Emma Darwin|Emma Wedgwood]] at Maer in an [[Anglican]] ceremony arranged to also suit the [[Unitarian]]s.
Hi
After first living in Gower Street, [[London]], the couple moved on [[September 17]], [[1842]] to [[Down House]] in [[Downe]] (which is now open to public visits, south of [[Orpington]]). The Darwins had ten children, three of whom died early. Many of these and their grandchildren would later achieve notability themselves (see [[Darwin -- Wedgwood family|Darwin&ndash;Wedgwood family]])
I need to know how to access tables of values for the students t-test, or how to use the fx-83WA calculator to extract the p-value from the t -statistic
I have tried looking in various places without luck!
Hope you can help
Carole Winch (Maths tutor)
 
* William Erasmus Darwin ([[December 27]], [[1839]]&ndash;[[1914]])
Thank you in anticipation of your help. [[User:Capitalistroadster|Capitalistroadster]] 09:04, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
* [[Anne Darwin|Anne Elizabeth Darwin]] ([[March 2]], [[1841]]&ndash;[[April 22]], [[1851]])
* Mary Eleanor Darwin ([[September 23]], [[1842]]&ndash;[[October 16]], [[1842]])
* Henrietta Emma "Etty" Darwin ([[September 25]], [[1843]]&ndash;[[1929]])
* [[George Darwin|George Howard Darwin]] ([[July 9]], [[1845]]&ndash;[[December 7]], [[1912]])
* [[Elizabeth Darwin|Elizabeth "Bessy" Darwin]] ([[July 8]], [[1847]]&ndash;[[1926]])
* [[Francis Darwin]] ([[August 16]], [[1848]]&ndash;[[September 19]], [[1925]])
* [[Leonard Darwin]] ([[January 15]], [[1850]]&ndash;[[March 26]], [[1943]])
* [[Horace Darwin]] ([[May 13]], [[1851]]&ndash;[[September 29]], [[1928]])
* [[Charles Waring Darwin]] ([[December 6]], [[1856]]&ndash;[[June 28]], [[1858]])
 
Several of their children suffered illness or weaknesses, and Charles Darwin's fear that this might be due to the closeness of his and Emma’s lineage was expressed in his writings on the ill effects of inbreeding and advantages of crossing.
::Critical values for ''t'' can be found [http://fsweb.berry.edu/academic/education/vbissonnette/tables/t.pdf here] (PDF file), as well as many other places on the web. [http://math.uc.edu/~brycw/classes/148/tables.htm#t This site] will enable you to calculate probabilities corresponding to a given ''t''-value and number of degrees of freedom. The two sites were on the first page of a Google search for "statistical tables": as I say, there are many, many sites which publish tables (as the information contained is not eligible for copyright). [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User_talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 11:28, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
===Development of theory ===
== Request for Diagrams - Fungal Enzymes ==
{{main|Development of Darwin's theory}}
[[Image:Charles Darwin.jpg|frame|left|Fearing both scientific and religious criticism, Darwin spent decades developing his theory of evolution largely in secret.]]
 
Darwin was now an eminent geologist in the scientific élite of clerical naturalists, settled with a private income. He had a vast amount of work to do, writing up his findings and theories, and supervising the preparation of the multivolume ''Zoology'', which would describe his collections. He was convinced by his [[theory of evolution]], but for a long time had been aware that [[transmutation of species]] was associated with the crime of [[blasphemy]] as well as with [[Radicalism (historical)|Radical]] democratic agitators in Britain who were seeking to overthrow society; thus, publication risked ruining his reputation. He embarked on extensive experiments with plants and consultations with [[Animal husbandry|animal husbanders]], including pigeon and pig breeders, trying to find soundly based answers to all the arguments he anticipated when he presented his theory in public.
How can I find diagrams for the listed Fungal enzymes please? they are required for illustration purpose--[[User:195.93.21.103|195.93.21.103]] 11:03, 13 November 2005 (UTC); asparaginase, amylase, catalase, cellulase, dextranase, b-glucanase, glucoamylase, glucose oxidase, hemicellulase, laccase, lipase, pectinase, protease, rennet, tannase, xylanase
When FitzRoy's account was published in May 1839, Darwin's ''Journal and Remarks'' was a great success. Later that year it was published on its own, becoming the bestseller nowadays known as ''[[The Voyage of the Beagle]]''. In December 1839, as Emma's first pregnancy progressed, Darwin suffered more illness and accomplished little during the following year.
 
Darwin made attempts to explain his theory to close friends, but they were slow to show interest and thought that selection must need a divine selector. In 1842 the family moved to [[Down House]] to escape the pressures of London. Darwin formulated a short "Pencil Sketch" of his theory, and by 1844 had written a 240-page "Essay" that expanded his early ideas on natural selection. Darwin completed his third ''Geological'' book in 1846; assisted by his friend, the young botanist [[Joseph Dalton Hooker]], he embarked on a huge study of [[barnacles]]. In 1847, Hooker read the "Essay" and sent notes that provided Darwin with the calm critical feedback that he needed.
:Structural or Ribbon? Id start with a college biochemistry textbook. --[[User:Artoftransformation|Artoftransformation]] 06:58, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
To try to deal with his illness, Darwin went to a spa in [[Malvern]] in 1849, and to his surprise found that the two months of water treatment helped. In his work on barnacles he found "[[Homology (biology)|homologies]]" that supported his theory by showing that slightly changed body parts could serve different functions to meet new conditions. Then his treasured daughter Annie fell ill, reawakening his fears that his illness might be hereditary. After a long series of crises, she died and Darwin lost all faith in a beneficent God. He met the young naturalist [[Thomas Huxley]] who was to become a close friend and ally, then completed his work on barnacles (''Cirripedia'') in 1854 and turned his attention to his theory of species.
: Your best bet would be to find the [[Protein Data Bank|PDB]] file for the enzyme and then plug it into [[RasMol]] or similar piece of molecular modeling software. --[[User:Diberri|David Iberri]] 01:03, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
===Announcement and publication of theory===
== CGA Monitors ==
[[Image:Charles Darwin aged 51.jpg|right|thumb|Charles Darwin, now an established geologist, was forced into early publication of his theory of [[natural selection]].]]
{{main|Publication of Darwin's theory}}
 
In the spring of 1856, Lyell read a paper on the ''Introduction'' of species by [[Alfred Russel Wallace]], a naturalist working in [[Borneo]], and urged Darwin to publish his theory to establish precedence. Darwin pressed ahead despite illness, getting specimens and information from naturalists including Wallace and [[Asa Gray]]. In December 1857 as Darwin worked on his ''Natural Selection'' manuscript he received a letter from Wallace asking if it would delve into human origins. Sensitive to Lyell's fears, Darwin responded that "I think I shall avoid the whole subject, as so surrounded with prejudices, though I fully admit that it is the highest & most interesting problem for the naturalist". He encouraged Wallace's theorising, saying "without speculation there is no good & original observation", adding that "I go much further than you". Then on [[June 18]], [[1858]], he received a paper from Wallace describing the evolutionary mechanism, with a request to send it on to Lyell. Darwin did so, shocked that he had been "forestalled" and though Wallace had not asked for publication, offering to send it to any journal that Wallace chose. He put matters in the hands of Lyell and Hooker, who agreed on a joint presentation at the [[Linnean Society of London|Linnean Society]] on [[1 July]] of ''[[On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection]]''.
Some question?
[http://www.pcguide.com/ref/video/stdCGA-c.html]
CGA was the first graphic standard for the IBM PC. ( 160x200x16c ), )
It can be emulated in VGA, by most SGVA graphics cards. --[[User:Artoftransformation|Artoftransformation]] 17:21, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
The initial announcement of the theory gained little immediate attention. It was mentioned briefly in a few small reviews, but to most people it seemed much the same as other varieties of [[evolutionism|evolutionary thought]]. For the next thirteen months Darwin struggled with ill health to produce an abstract of his "big book on species". Receiving constant encouragement from his scientific friends, Darwin finally finished his abstract and Lyell arranged to have it published by [[John Murray (publisher)|John Murray]]. The title was agreed as ''[[The Origin of Species|On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection]]'', and when the book went on sale to the trade on [[November 22]], [[1859]], the stock of 1,250 copies was oversubscribed. At the time "Evolutionism" implied creation without divine intervention, and Darwin avoided using the words "evolution" or "evolve", though the book ends by stating that "endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved". The book only briefly alluded to the idea that man, too, would evolve in the same way as other organisms. Darwin wrote in deliberate understatement that "light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history".
: What would be your question? --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 21:59, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
===Reaction===
== Why is it important that only one sperm may fertilise one egg in reproduction ==
[[image:Darwin_ape.jpg|thumb|left|Satirical attacks on Darwin were typified by the later caricature of him as an ape in ''Hornet'' magazine.]]
{{main|Reaction to Darwin's theory}}
 
Darwin's book set off a public controversy which he monitored closely, keeping press cuttings of thousands of reviews, articles, satires, parodies and caricatures. Reviewers were quick to pick out the unstated implications of "men from monkeys", though a [[Unitarian]] review was favourable and ''[[The Times]]'' published a glowing review by Huxley which included swipes at [[Richard Owen]], leader of the scientific establishment Huxley was trying to overthrow. Owen initially appeared neutral, but then wrote a review condemning the book. The [[Church of England]] scientific establishment reacted against the book, and Darwin's old Cambridge tutors [[Adam Sedgwick|Sedgwick]] and [[John Stevens Henslow|Henslow]] expressed their disappointment in him. Then ''[[Essays and Reviews]]'' by seven liberal [[Anglican]] theologians declared that miracles were irrational (and supported the ''Origin''), distracting attention away from Darwin.
:what do you mean "important"? it is a fundamental feature of [[sexual reproduction]]. in the case of [[asexual reproduction]], you don't talk about sperms and eggs. If you can think of another method, involving several fathers, Nature hasn't :) [[User:Dbachmann|dab]] <small>[[User_talk:Dbachmann|('''&#5839;''')]]</small> 14:25, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
The most famous confrontation took place at a meeting of the [[British Association for the Advancement of Science]] in [[Oxford]]. Professor [[John William Draper]] made a boring speech on Darwin and social progress, then [[Samuel Wilberforce|'Soapy Sam' Wilberforce]], the [[Bishop]] of Oxford, argued against Darwin. In the ensuing debate [[Thomas_Henry_Huxley|Thomas Huxley]] established himself as "Darwin's bulldog" &ndash; the fiercest defender of evolutionary theory on the Victorian stage. On being asked by Wilberforce whether he was descended from monkeys on his grandfather's side or his grandmother's side, Huxley apparently muttered to himself: "The Lord has delivered him into my hands" and replied that he "would rather be descended from an ape than from a cultivated man who used his gifts of culture and eloquence in the service of prejudice and falsehood" (there are several alternative versions of this story, see [http://users.ox.ac.uk/~jrlucas/legend.html Wilberforce and Huxley: A Legendary Encounter]). The story spread around the country: Huxley had said he would rather be an ape than a Bishop.
Your question has two answers:
#The [[ovum|egg]] already has half a set of [[chromosome]]s for a new person. One [[sperm]] supplies the other half. Trying to incorporate more than one sperm's worth of [[DNA]] would probably lead to higher rates of chromosomal [[aneuploidy]].
#It does seem necessary, or at least more efficient, for more than one sperm to participate in [[fertilization]], though only one sperm ends up being incorporated into the nucleus and contributing its chromosomes.
Does that answer your question? [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 14:26, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Many people felt that Darwin's view of nature destroyed the important distinction between man and beast. Darwin himself did not personally defend his theories in public, though he read eagerly about the continuing debates. He was frequently very ill, and mustered support through [[Correspondence of Charles Darwin|letters and correspondence]]. A core circle of scientific friends &ndash; Huxley, [[Charles Lyell]], [[Joseph Dalton Hooker]], and [[Asa Gray]] &ndash; actively pushed his work to the fore of the scientific and public stage, defending him against his many critics in this key scientific controversy of the era. Darwin's theory also resonated with various movements at the time and became a key fixture of popular culture. The book was translated into many languages and went through numerous reprints. It became a staple scientific text accessible both to a newly curious middle class and to "working men", hailed as the most controversial and discussed scientific book ever written.
It only takes one sperm because it only needs one sperm.--[[User:Eye|Eye]] 21:37, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=== Later life and death ===
==quantum mechanics?==
{{main2|Darwin from Orchids to Variation|Darwin from Descent of Man to Emotions|Darwin from Insectivorous plants to Worms}}
I am looking for Open Source software tools and/or libraries that can help me simulate (not 'solve', but propagate) many-body problems in classical quantum mechanics. [[User:Dbachmann|dab]] <small>[[User_talk:Dbachmann|('''&#5839;''')]]</small> 14:29, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
[[image:Charles Darwin 1880.jpg|frame|A classic image of Darwin in 1880, still researching and producing numerous books.]]
:If you find one, let me know too!! I'm actually doing research in this area, and it would be wonderful if there was such a thing. What sort/form of many body problems are you looking at specifically? --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 16:48, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
Despite repeated bouts of illness during the last twenty-two years of his life Darwin pressed on with his work. He had published an abstract of his theory, but more controversial aspects of his "big book" were still incomplete; mankind's descent from earlier animals, and the mechanism of [[sexual selection]] which could explain features with no obvious utility other than decorative beauty as well as suggesting possible causes underlying the development of society and of human mental abilities. His experiments, research and writing continued.
 
When Darwin's daughter fell ill he set aside his experiments with seedlings and domestic animals to go with her to a seaside resort where he became interested in wild [[orchid]]s. This developed into an innovative study of how their beautiful flowers served to control insect pollination and ensure cross fertilisation. As with the barnacles, homologous parts served different functions in different species. Back at home he lay on his sickbed in a room filled with experiments on climbing plants. He was visited by a reverent [[Ernst Haeckel]] who had spread the gospel of ''Darwinismus'' in [[Germany]]. Even at Cambridge, students now supported his ideas. Huxley gave "working-men's lectures" to widen the audience, and Wallace remained a supporter but increasingly turned to [[spiritualism]]. ''Variation'' grew to two huge volumes, forcing him to leave out man and sexual selection, but when printed was in huge demand.
:The Models of Classical Quantum Mechanics, relating to [[Hydrino]] theory were constructed with Wofram Research's Mathamatica. They are avaible for download at blacklightenergy's webiste. I would love to know if you find any Open Source Software that works with Mathamatica Workbooks. --[[User:Artoftransformation|Artoftransformation]] 17:15, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
New fossil evidence proved the antiquity of man, but other writers failed to fully tackle human evolution. Opponents claimed that the beauty of birds demonstrated divine guidance. These two subjects were tackled in ''[[The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex]]'' which he followed up with ''[[The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals]]''. Darwin produced practical explanations for the differences between males and females, and between different races and cultures. He also developed his ideas that the human mind and cultures were developed by natural and sexual selection, an approach which still persists in [[evolutionary psychology]]. His evolution-related experiments and investigations culminated in five books on plants, and then his last book returned to the effect worms have on soil levels.
:Maybe you'd be interest in [http://www.falstad.com/mathphysics.html this website]? ☢ [[User:Kieff|Ҡieff]]⌇[[User_talk:Kieff|↯]] 17:23, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Darwin died in Downe, [[Kent]], England, on [[April 19]], [[1882]]. He had expected to be buried in St. Mary's churchyard at Downe, but at the request of Darwin's colleagues [[William Spottiswoode]], [[President]] of the [[Royal Society]], arranged for Darwin to be given a state funeral and buried in [[Westminster Abbey]].
== Application of mathematics in Actuarial Science, Medicine and Engineering ==
 
== Religious views ==
Hi,
{{main|Charles Darwin's views on religion}}
 
[[Image:Annie Darwin.jpg|frame|left|The 1851 death of Darwin's daughter, [[Anne Darwin|Annie]], was the final step in pushing an already doubting Darwin away from the idea of a beneficent God.]]
I am writing a paper on the application of mathematics in the following industries:
 
Charles Darwin came from a [[Nonconformist]] background. Though several members of his family were [[Freethought|Freethinkers]], openly lacking conventional religious beliefs, he did not initially doubt the literal truth of the Bible. He attended a [[Church of England]] school, then at Cambridge studied [[Anglican]] theology to become a clergyman and was fully convinced by [[William Paley]]'s [[teleological argument]] that design in nature proved the existence of God. However, his beliefs began to shift during his time on board [[HMS Beagle|HMS ''Beagle'']]. He questioned what he saw&mdash;wondering, for example, at beautiful deep-ocean creatures created where no one could see them, and shuddering at the sight of a wasp paralysing caterpillars as live food for its eggs; he saw the latter as contradicting Paley's vision of beneficent design. While on the ''Beagle'' Darwin was quite [[orthodoxy|orthodox]] and would quote the Bible as an authority on morality, but had come to see the history in the [[Old Testament]] as being false and untrustworthy.
*Actuarial Science
*Medicine
*Engineering
 
Upon his return, he investigated [[transmutation of species]], aware that his clerical naturalist friends thought this a bestial heresy undermining miraculous justifications for the social order, and aware that such revolutionary ideas were especially unwelcome at a time when the Church of England's established position was under attack from [[radicalism|radical]] [[Dissenter]]s and [[atheism|atheists]]. While secretly developing his theory of [[natural selection]], Darwin even wrote of religion as a tribal survival strategy, though he still believed that God was the ultimate lawgiver. His belief continued to dwindle over the time, and with the death of his daughter [[Anne Darwin|Annie]] in 1851, Darwin finally lost all faith in Christianity. He continued to give support to the local church and help with parish work, but on Sundays would go for a walk while his family attended church. In later life, when asked about his religious views, he denied being an atheist, but wrote:
But I am unable to fine anything, please help
:my judgment often fluctuates...In my most extreme fluctuations I have never been an Atheist in the sense of denying the existence of a God. I think that generally (and more and more as I grow older), but not always, that an Agnostic would be the more correct description of my state of mind."
In concluding his biography of his grandfather, [[Erasmus Darwin]], Darwin recounted how after his death in [[1802]], false stories were circulated that he had called for Jesus on his deathbed, writing "Such was the state of Christian feeling in this country at the [time].... We may at least hope that nothing of the kind now prevails." Despite this hope, very similar stories were circulated following Darwin's own death, most prominently the "[[Elizabeth Hope|Lady Hope Story]]", published in [[1915]], claiming his sickbed conversion. Such stories have been heavily propagated by some Christian groups, to the extent of becoming [[urban legend]]s, though the claims were refuted by Darwin's children and have been dismissed as false by historians.
 
== Legacy ==
THANKS
[[Image:Darwin-Charles-LOC.jpg|thumb|Charles Darwin's theories had an enormous effect on many fields of science.]]
Kaydean Campbell
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution based upon [[natural selection]] changed the thinking of countless fields of study from [[biology]] to [[anthropology]]. His work established that "evolution" had occurred: not necessarily that it was by natural or sexual selection (this particular recognition would not become fully standard until the rediscovery of [[Gregor Mendel]]'s work in the early 20th century and the creation of the [[modern synthesis]]).
 
His work was extremely controversial at the time he published it and many during his time did not take it seriously. Darwin's theory of evolution was a significant blow to notions of [[creationism|divine creation]] and [[intelligent design]] prevalent in [[19th-century]] science, specifically overturning the [[Creation biology]] doctrine of "[[Created kind]]s". The idea that there was no line to draw between man and beast would forever make Darwin a symbol of iconoclasm who removed humanity's privileged role in the centre of the universe. To some of his detractors, Darwin would be "the monkey man", often depicted as part ape.
:This is a very general question. Have you had a look at [[Engineering]]? The fields you mentioned all use computers, maybe [[Computer science]] will help.--[[User:Commander Keane|Commander Keane]] 16:25, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
:You could contact the Society of Actuaries.
:You could ask a student in a nursing program. --[[User:Artoftransformation|Artoftransformation]] 17:10, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
===Commemoration ===
::Is the paper you are writing for your homework? If so, then read the articles that Artoftransformation has suggested that you read and then if you have any specific questions please ask them here. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 19:26, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
During Darwin's lifetime many species and geographical features were given his name, including the [[Darwin Sound]] named by [[Robert FitzRoy]] after Darwin's prompt action saved them from being marooned, and the nearby [[Mount Darwin (Andes)|Mount Darwin]] in the [[Andes]] celebrating Darwin's 25th birthday. In [[Australia]]'s [[Northern Territory]], the capital city (originally Palmerston) was renamed [[Darwin, Northern Territory|Darwin]] to commemorate the Beagle's [[1839]] visit there, and the territory now also boasts [[Charles Darwin University]] and [[Charles Darwin National Park]].
 
The 14 species of [[Finch]]es he researched in the [[Galápagos Islands]] are affectionately named "Darwin's Finches" in honour of his legacy. In [[1964]], [[Darwin College, Cambridge]] was founded, named in honour of the Darwin family, partially because they owned some of the land it was on. In [[1992]], Darwin was ranked #16 on [[Michael H. Hart]]'s [[The 100|list of the most influential figures in history]]. Darwin was given particular recognition in [[2000]] when his image appeared on the [[Bank of England]] [[British banknotes|ten pound note]], replacing [[Charles Dickens]]. His impressive and supposedly hard-to-forge beard was reportedly a contributing factor in this choice. Darwin came fourth in the ''[[100 Greatest Britons]]'' poll sponsored by the [[BBC]] and voted for by the public.
For the medicine answer, you could even ask a doctor. Over 99% of the math used in clinical medicine by doctors and nurses is straightforward arithmetic and simple algebra: especially percentages, ratios, unit conversions. There is also some use of statistics and probability in devising and understanding research reports. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 19:42, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
:Of course the maths invovled in getting an [[MRI]] is more complicated.--[[User:Commander Keane|Commander Keane]] 05:23, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
As a humorous celebration of the theory of evolution, the annual [[Darwin Awards|Darwin Award]] is bestowed on individuals who ''"aid the process of evolution by demonstrating their unfitness"'' through fatally stupid actions.
== Planet VenusI ==
 
===Eugenics ===
I could use some help answering some ? about Venus. I have searched the site but can not find these answers, the diameter of the planet- average day& average year on Venus. Also my opinion of the color of Venus is purple& gold. Would you agree?
Following Darwin's publication of the ''Origin'' his cousin [[Francis Galton]] applied the concepts to human society, producing ideas to promote "hereditary improvement" starting in [[1865]] and elaborated at length in [[1869]]. In ''[[The Descent of Man]]'' Darwin agreed that Galton had demonstrated that "talent" and "genius" in humans were probably inherited, but thought that the social changes Galton proposed were too "utopian". Neither Galton nor Darwin supported government intervention and instead believed that, at most, heredity should be taken into consideration by people seeking potential mates. In [[1883]], after Darwin's death, Galton began calling his social philosophy ''[[Eugenics]]''. In the [[twentieth century]], eugenics movements gained popularity in a number of countries and became associated with reproduction control programmes such as [[compulsory sterilization|compulsory sterilisation]] laws, then were stigmatised after their usage in the rhetoric of [[Nazi Germany]] in its goals of genetic "purity".
Thanks for any help you can pass on to me on this subject. SAVANNAH {{unsigned|64.12.117.12}}
:If you had "searched the site", you surely would have looked at the article [[Venus]], which answers all of your questions. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 19:20, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
 
===Social Darwinism ===
::There is a table of ''physical characteristics'' on that page. In particular, it says that the year is approximately 243 days. The other values can be found by reading down the list carefully. --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 21:20, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
In [[1944]] the American historian [[Richard Hofstadter]] applied the term "[[Social Darwinism]]" to describe 19th- and 20th-century thinking developed from the ideas of [[Thomas Malthus]] and [[Herbert Spencer]], which applied ideas of evolution and "[[survival of the fittest]]" to societies or nations competing for survival in a hostile world. These ideas became discredited by association with [[racism]] and [[New Imperialism|imperialism]]. Though the term is anachronistic, in Darwin's day the difference between what was later called "Social Darwinism" and simple "Darwinism" was less clear. However, Darwin did not believe that his scientific theory mandated any particular theory of governance or social order.
 
The use of the phrase "Social Darwinism" to describe Malthus's ideas is particularly disingenuous, since Malthus died in [[1834]] before the [[inception of Darwin's theory]] was spurred by his reading the 6th edition of Malthus' famous ''Essay on a Principle of Population'' in [[1838]]. Spencer's evolutionary "progressivism" and his social and political ideas were largely Malthusian, and his books on economics of [[1851]] and on evolution of [[1855]] predated Darwin's publication of the ''Origin'' in [[1859]].
== What's this all about? ==
[[Image:attemptSony.jpg|thumb|left]] [[Image:notwork.jpg|thumb|right]]
 
== Works ==
<br clear="all"/>
* Bibliography: [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin3/darwin_biblio.htm#primary Darwin Bibliography] (including alternative editions, contributions to books & periodicals, correspondence & life)
*{{gutenberg author | id=Charles_Darwin | name=Charles Darwin}}
* [http://www.darwin-literature.com Darwin Literature], Chapter-indexed, searchable versions of Darwin's works.
* [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/ Charles Darwin's Books] in an easy to read format.
 
=== Published works ===
--[[User:Whatgives?|Whatgives?]] 19:48, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
* 1836: ''A LETTER, Containing Remarks on the Moral State of TAHITI, NEW ZEALAND, &c. &ndash; BY CAPT. R. FITZROY AND C. DARWIN, ESQ. OF H.M.S. 'Beagle.''' [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin4/tahiti.html]
:So? any advice? or what?--[[User:Whatgives?|Whatgives?]] 00:06, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
* 1839: ''Journal and Remarks'' ([[The Voyage of the Beagle]])
:: Disable your firewall. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 00:46, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
* ''Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle'': published between [[1839]] and [[1843]] in five volumes by various authors, Edited and superintended by Charles Darwin: information on two of the volumes &ndash;
: 1840: ''Part I. Fossil Mammalia'', by [[Richard Owen]] [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin3/zoology.html (Darwin's introduction)]
: 1839: ''Part II. Mammalia'', by [[George Robert Waterhouse|George R. Waterhouse]] [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin3/zoology.html (Darwin on habits and ranges)]
* 1842: ''The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs'' [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=2690]
* 1844: ''Geological Observations of Volcanic Islands'' [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=3054], [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/observations-geologiques-sur-les-iles-volcaniques/ (French version)]
* 1846: ''Geological Observations on South America'' [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=3620]
* 1849: ''Geology'' from ''A Manual of scientific enquiry; prepared for the use of Her Majesty's Navy: and adapted for travellers in general.'', John F.W. Herschel ed. [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin3/geology.html]
* 1851: ''A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with Figures of all the Species. The Lepadidae; or, Pedunculated Cirripedes.'' [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin4/liv_lepadidae/lepadidae01.html]
* 1851: ''A Monograph on the Fossil Lepadidae; or, Pedunculated Cirripedes of Great Britain'' [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin4/fos_lepadidae/fos.lep.html]
* 1854: ''A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with Figures of all the Species. The Balanidae (or Sessile Cirripedes); the Verrucidae, etc.'' [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin4/liv_balanidae/balanidae_fm.html]
* 1854: ''A Monograph on the Fossil Balanidæ and Verrucidæ of Great Britain'' [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin4/fos_balanidae/fos.balanidae.html]
* 1858: ''[[On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection|On the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection]]''
* 1859: ''[[The Origin of Species|On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life]]''
* 1862: ''On the various contrivances by which British and foreign orchids are fertilised by insects'' [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin3/orchids/orchids_fm.htm]
* 1868: ''Variation of Plants and Animals Under Domestication'' [http://www.esp.org/books/darwin/variation/facsimile/title3.html (PDF format)], [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/variation-of-animals-and-plants-under-domestication-v1/ Vol. 1], [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/variation-of-animals-and-plants-under-domestication-v2/ Vol. 2]
* 1871: ''[[The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex]]''
* 1872: ''The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals'' [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/the-expression-of-emotion-in-man-and-animals/]
* 1875: ''Movement and Habits of Climbing Plants'' [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=2485]
* 1875: ''Insectivorous Plants'' [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/insectivorous-plants/]
* 1876: ''The Effects of Cross and Self-Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom'' [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/the-effects-of-cross-and-self-fertilisation/]
* 1877: ''The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species'' [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/the-different-forms-of-flowers-on-plants/]
* 1879: "Preface and 'a preliminary notice'" in Ernst Krause's ''Erasmus Darwin'' [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin3/erasmus.html]
* 1880: ''The Power of Movement in Plants'' [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/the-power-of-movement-in-plants/]
* 1881: ''Formation of vegetable Mould Through the Action of Worms'' [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=2355]
* 1887: ''Autobiography of Charles Darwin'' (Edited by his Son Francis Darwin) [http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=2010]
* 1958: ''Autobiography of Charles Darwin'' (Barlow, unexpurgated)
 
==Slow= pageLetters loading===
*[[Correspondence of Charles Darwin]]
This is perhaps a question for [[WP:HD]] but since it is only showing up here I'll ask here. Does the inclusion of an image within the question (like the one just above) cause the page to load more slowly, perhaps waiting for the image server? It seems so to me. I'm going to be '''bold''' and ''link'' instead of ''call'' the images above to see if it helps. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 20:16, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
* 1887: ''Life and Letters of Charles Darwin'', ed. [[Francis Darwin]] [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/the-life-and-letters-of-charles-darwin-volume-i/ Volume I], [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/the-life-and-letters-of-charles-darwin-volume-ii/ Volume II]
* 1903: ''More Letters of Charles Darwin'', ed. [[Francis Darwin]] and A.C. Seward [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/more-letters-of-charles-darwin-volume-i/ Volume I], [http://charles-darwin.classic-literature.co.uk/more-letters-of-charles-darwin-volume-ii/ Volume II]
 
== References ==
: I've started a topic on the [[Wikipedia talk:Reference desk|talk page]]. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 21:13, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
{{Wikisource author}}
{{wikibooks}}
{{wikiquote}}
{{Commons|Charles Darwin}}
*Charles Darwin, ''Voyage of the Beagle'', (including Robert FitzRoy's ''Remarks with reference to the Deluge''), (Penguin Books, London [[1989]]) ISBN 0-14-043268-X
*[[E. Janet Browne]], ''Charles Darwin: Voyaging'' and ''The Power of Place'' (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995-2002).
*Adrian Desmond and James Moore, ''Darwin'' (London: Michael Joseph, the Penguin Group, [[1991]]). ISBN 0-7181-3430-3
*[http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/hope.html The Darwin Deathbed Conversion Question]
*Richard Keynes, ''Fossils, Finches and Fuegians: Charles Darwin's Adventures and Discoveries on the Beagle, 1832-1836''. ( London: HarperCollins, 2002).
* James Moore and Adrian Desmond, "Introduction", in ''The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex'' (London: Penguin Classics, 2004). (Detailed history of Darwin's views on race, sex, and class)
*Diane B. Paul, "Darwin, social Darwinism and eugenics," in Jonathan Hodge and Gregory Radick, eds., ''The Cambridge Companion to Darwin'' (Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 214-239.
*The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin], Ch. VIII, p. 274. New York, D. Appleton & Co., 1905 [http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin/texts/letters/letters1_08.html]: quotation in which he describes himself as "agnostic"
 
==External links==
== Why are Hydrates formed? ==
*[http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin/ Writings of Charles Darwin on the Web]
*[http://darwin-online.org.uk/ Complete Works of Darwin Online]
*[http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nature-online/science-of-natural-history/biographies/charles-darwin/charles-darwin.html Charles Darwin biography at the Natural History Museum, London]
* [http://www.aboutdarwin.com AboutDarwin.com]
* [http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/darwin/ Darwin] - at the [[American Museum of Natural History]]
* [http://www.gruts.com/darwin/index.php The Friends of Charles Darwin]
* [http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/banknotes/current/darwin.htm Darwin's portrait on the £10 note]
* [http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?search=ss&sText=Charles+Darwin&LinkID=mp01196 Twelve different portraits of Charles Darwin at the National Portrait Gallery, U.K.]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4607037.stm BBC News: "Darwin family repeat flower count"]
* [http://www.oum.ox.ac.uk/onlinedb/darwin/darimage/dardraw.htm Examine Darwin's crustacean collection online]
* A short [http://atheisme.free.fr/Biographies/Darwin_e.htm biography of Darwin]
 
==See also==
Why would hydrates form? <small>(''preceding [[Wikipedia:Sign your posts on talk pages|unsigned]] comment by'' [[User:68.48.11.145|68.48.11.145]] ([[User talk:68.48.11.145|talk]]&nbsp;&bull;&nbsp;[[Special:Contributions/68.48.11.145|contribs]]) {{{2|}}})</small>
* [[Harriet]] - a Galápagos tortoise, the world's oldest living animal
* [[Patrick Matthew]]
 
{{Darwin}}
:Hydrates are formed if they impart thermodynamic or kinetic stability to the chemical system. Let's take a substance X - If X forms a hydrate with water, it simply means that a bunch of water molecules surrounding molecules of X is more stable than if they were separate. But this is somewhat of an oversimplification. --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 21:29, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
{{evolution}}
<!-- Categorization and Interwiki links -->
 
[[Category:1809 births|Darwin, Charles]]
== Computer ==
[[Category:1882 deaths|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Agnostics|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Anglicans|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Alumni of Christ's College, Cambridge|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:British scientists|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Carcinologists|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Charles Darwin|*]]
[[Category:Darwin -- Wedgwood family|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:English travel writers|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Evolutionary biologists|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Fellows of the Royal Society|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:British geologists|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Natives of Shropshire|Darwin, Charles]]
[[Category:Unitarian Universalists|Darwin, Charles]]
 
{{Link FA|sl}}
distinguish between Management Information System and "Information System" {{unsigned|80.255.50.2}}
 
[[ar:تشارلز داروين]]
:'To err is human, but to really foul things up requires a comptuer' MIS systems typically have the ability to do either summories or ad-hoc reporting, where as Information Systems is a general catch all for any storage system. ( like a card catalog in a library ). --[[User:Artoftransformation|Artoftransformation]] 05:56, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[bg:Чарлз Дарвин]]
 
[[bn:চার্ল্‌স্‌ ডারউইন]]
== Law of expirementing with hydrates ==
[[bs:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[ca:Charles Robert Darwin]]
What law illustrates the heating of a hydrate in order to get an anhydrous substance?
[[cs:Charles Darwin]]
*There's no specific law, but heating water to remove it from a hydated substance would be called [[evaporation]]. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 23:12, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[cy:Charles Darwin]]
*The [[second law of thermodynamics]]. [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User_talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 07:25, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[da:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[de:Charles Darwin]]
== Venus ==
[[et:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[es:Charles Darwin]]
I have had conflicting answers to my ? on an average year on Venus is a year 243 days one site says a day on Venus corresponds to 243 earth days. Please Help Confussed {{unsigned|64.12.117.12}}
[[eo:Charles DARWIN]]
 
[[eu:Charles Darwin]]
:You're back again huh? Give me a minute. I'll help you out, I promise :-) --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 22:23, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[fr:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[fy:Charles Darwin]]
::From our article [[Venus]], the diameter of the planet is about 12,103.7 km. The average day on Venus lasts about 243 days, and a year on Venus (the ''orbital period'' on the list to the side of the table) is about 224.700 days.
[[ga:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[gd:Charles Darwin]]
::So, a "day" on Venus is actually longer than a "year"! Does this help clarify your questions now? --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 22:28, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[gl:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[ko:찰스 다윈]]
:: I don't think that is correct. The article says one venus day takes 116.75 earth days. One venus year takes 224 earth days (1.92 venus days). --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 22:34, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[hi:चार्ल्स डार्विन]]
 
[[hr:Charles Darwin]]
::Check out [http://www.solarspace.co.uk/Venus/venus.php] in the section "Retrograde motion". The 116.75 days is the synodic period. --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 22:37, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[io:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[id:Charles Darwin]]
:: Indeed, according to NASA [http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/venus_worldbook.html] 1 Venus day = 243 Earth days and 1 Venus year = 225 Earth days. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 22:53, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[is:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[it:Charles Darwin]]
:::This ''was'' a confusing point for sure! No wonder why the IP kept coming back. I hope this was helpful for him/her and hopefully encourage them not to blank the page or use excessive caps here. --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 23:04, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[he:צ'ארלס דרווין]]
 
[[ku:Charles Darwin]]
:::: I don't think I understand the sentance "''Sun could be seen from Venus' surface, it would appear to rise and set in a 116.75 day cycle (Venus' synodic rotation period), and a Venusian year would thus last 1.92 Venusian "days"''"? Shouldn't the 116.76 be 121.5? --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 23:08, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
[[la:Carolus Darwin]]
 
[[lv:Čārlzs Darvins]]
THANK you all for your info. I do not know what blank the page or that other thing is. This was my first time on this site an if I hit a wrong button sorry;;; please explain what those are.
[[lt:Čarlzas Darvinas]]
 
[[hu:Charles Darwin]]
: 'blank the page' means removing all the contents from a page, 'execessive caps' refers to WRITING IN CAPITAL LETTERS. Hope to see you around. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 00:03, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[mk:Чарлс Дарвин]]
 
[[ms:Charles Darwin]]
::Umm, go up to your original question (Venus) and at the end of it (after the word "Confussed") skip every thing else and click on '''contribs'''. That way you can see all of your contributions here. [[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 01:05, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[nl:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[ja:チャールズ・ダーウィン]]
:::Note that the IP in question belongs to AOL. Therefore, OP may very well not have been the vandal. --[[User:Pidgeot|Pidgeot]] <small>[[User_talk:Pidgeot|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/Pidgeot|(c)]] [[Special:Emailuser/Pidgeot|(e)]]</small> 02:09, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[no:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[pl:Charles Darwin]]
:The article states that Venus has an ''extremely slow rotation of less than one rotation per Venusian year''. This effectively means that it has a retrograde rotation, right? I've mentioned this on the talk page there as well. Also, the "Rotation period -243.0185 d" in the table looks rather puzzling. I'm not sufficiently on certain ground here to alter this myself. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 10:04, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[pt:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[ro:Charles Darwin]]
:: The minus implies the retorgrade rotation, I think something like Rotation period 243.0185 d (retrograde) would be more informative. Retrograde means it rotate the otherway around, compared to earth, having a slow rotation doesn't necessarily imply a retrograde rotation. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 15:41, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[ru:Дарвин, Чарлз]]
 
[[sco:Charles Darwin]]
:::Yeah, but slower than a year ''does''. This is such a counterintuitive thing that I'd say it deserves a better explanation in the article, rather than a puzzling minus in the table. I added some text to the top section of the article. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 09:28, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
[[scn:Charles Darwin]]
::::Retrograde rotation means "opposite of the orbit". So, if you look from above and you see a planet going clockwise around the sun but spinning conter-clockwise, it is retrograde. It really has nothing to do with Earth except that the planets tend to always have the same orbit direction as Earth - so retrograde tends to be the opposite direction of Earth.
[[simple:Charles Darwin]]
::::Venus spins in the opposite direction of the direction it orbits the Sun. It does so very slowly. The fact that is spins slowly does not make it retrograde. Other planets spin slowly without retrograde spin. The Moon, as another example, makes one rotation on each orbit of the Earth - that is almost as slow as Venus. However, it isn't retrograde. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 20:44, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
[[sk:Charles Robert Darwin]]
 
[[sl:Charles Darwin]]
:::::I'm sorry, I didn't put that very clearly. I meant that it rotates slower than a ''venusian'' year (which is the way it was stated eralier). Anyway, I my edit in the article was clear enough and that matters most. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 13:36, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
[[sr:Чарлс Дарвин]]
 
[[fi:Charles Darwin]]
=November 14=
[[sv:Charles Darwin]]
== Algebra ==
[[tl:Charles Darwin]]
 
[[ta:சார்லஸ் டார்வின்]]
Who started algebra in the past? {{unsigned| 70.236.189.93}}
[[th:ชาลส์ ดาร์วิน]]
 
[[tr:Charles Darwin]]
: See [[Algebra#History]]. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 01:08, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
[[uk:Дарвін Чарльз Роберт]]
 
[[zh:查尔斯·罗伯特·达尔文]]
::Reading the [[Algebra]] article will give you some insight into the subject. And, if you do read it all you will know more about Algebra than any of your friends. [[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 01:20, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Spin states of deuterium ==
 
Here's a question to chew on: I read somewhere the "...para-deuterium pD<sub>2</sub> has a nuclear spin of I = 1..." - what is it trying to say? That the entire molecule has a nuclear spin of 1? --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 02:02, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:No. Atoms have spins. The atomic spin that they are talking about is the spin moment of a single atom.
<blockquote>''TEXT REMOVED'' "HyperPhysics (©C.R. Nave, 2005) is a continually developing base of instructional material in physics. It is not freeware or shareware. It must not be copied or mirrored without authorization. The author is open to proposals for its use for non-profit instructional purposes. The overall intent has been to develop a wide ranging exploration environment which could be of use to students and teachers."</blockquote> [http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nuclear/nspin.html#c2]
 
:But to answer your question directly:
::Nuclide ----- Nuclear spin I ----- Magnetic momentm mu in mu mN
::2H(D)-------------1 --------- +0.8574376*
:::*For a proton with g = 5.5857 the quoted magnetic moment is m = 2.7928 nuclear magnetons.
:::Data from V. S. Shirley, Table of Isotopes, Wiley, New York, 1978, Appendix VII.
:This is the basis for Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
 
--[[User:Artoftransformation|Artoftransformation]] 05:53, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
::''everything I know, I learned from 10^100.''
 
== Netscape Favicon ==
 
Why do a lot of websites have Netscape's icon as their favicon.ico file?
 
Examples:
 
http://home.att.net/favicon.ico
 
http://cia.gov/favicon.ico
 
[[User:Theshibboleth|Theshibboleth]] 06:57, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Mostly its leftover from the days when Netscape ruled the world. I never knew what that file was for, until I looked at your links. Thanks. Now I know how to fix all my favicons on my toolbars.
:See article [Favicon]
:--[[User:Artoftransformation|Artoftransformation]] 06:13, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:You mean [[favicon]]? Anyway, I'm fairly sure that sites that have Netscape's icon are using a Netscape-branded web server which uses that favicon by default, and the server administrators haven't bothered to change them yet. [[User:Garrett Albright|Garrett Albright]] 14:05, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Either that or they were originally written with some sort of Netscape-based tool which inserted it as default (Netscape Composer or something like that). As an aside, have you checked out what the CIA lists their site's keywords as in their META tag? Fairly humorous...:
::''US Central Intelligence Agency, Central Intelligence Agency, CIA, C.I.A., cia, c.i.a., Intelligence, Government, United States, Goss, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, directors of central intelligence, cia homepage, cia home page, cia factbook, cia fact book, cia world factbook, cia world fact book, world factbook, world fact book, intelligence community, US intelligence Community, '''spy, spies, the company'''''.
:Does not seem to have helped their ranking for searches like "the company". --[[User:Fastfission|Fastfission]] 04:12, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Gender and blood ==
 
Say you had a drop of blood and wanted to know whether it came from a man or a woman. How difficult would it be? Would the easiest way be to look for the X or Y chromosomes in the blood cells? Can you even tell X and Y chromosomes apart with an optical microscope? —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 04:37, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Well for starters, [[red blood cell]]s have no nuclei and no chromosomes, so there wouldn't be much in the way of visual clues to sex unless you could pull down their little pants. [[White blood cell]]s can be stained to show [[nucleus|nuclei]] with [[Barr body|Barr bodies]] under the microscope. A Barr body is a partially inactivated second X chromosome and, though not infallible, is generally a better clue to female gender than a pink hair ribbon. Staining for Barr bodies is old technology however, and if you want something slightly newer and less fallible, you can rely on the good old peripheral blood karyotpe. Perhaps the most up-to-the minute test for sexing blood is detection of the SRY antigen, a pretty reliable indication that the owner also sports a set of testicles. So take your pick. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 05:26, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Alteripse, could you also measure the hormone levels in blood and figure out the gender that way? I was thinking testosterone and oestregen (modulo the small group of steroid-taking women and male sex offenders being treated with female horomones). Not my field, but just curious as to whether it would work. --[[User:Robert Merkel|Robert Merkel]] 05:40, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
::You could do that if you measured several hormones for adults, but all sex hormone levels are indistinguishably low during childhood. The SRY probe would be my preference for maximum (not perfect) gender identification regardless of age. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 16:29, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:This depends a lot on just how much time, money, and blood you have available. Instead of doing the classic karyotype, you could probably speed up the process by using a technique like [[FISH]]&ndash;fluorescence ''in-situ'' hybridization&ndash;to automate the identification of each chromosome. If you're just looking for gender and not chromosomal abnormalities&ndash;but you want to avoid any problems related to hormone therapies mentioned by Robert Merkel&ndash;you could do a DNA isolation from the blood and probe for Y chromosome specific genes using PCR. That would be pretty quick and easy, and nearly bulletproof.
:If you start getting into some of the less-common border cases, you can see things like 46XY karyotype combined with negative SRY antigen and malformed genitalia. (See [http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/499501_6 this page], '''warning''': some images may not be appropriate for some workplaces.) [[User:TenOfAllTrades|TenOfAllTrades]]([[User_talk:TenOfAllTrades|talk]]) 15:20, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Which is Correct Molar Mass or Molecular Weight? ==
 
Which is correct to use? molar mass (MM), a more recently introduced term, or molecular weight (MW), an older term still in widespread usage?.[[User:HappyApple|HappyApple]] 06:58, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
*[[IUPAC]] will let you have [http://www.iupac.org/goldbook/R05271.pdf relative molecular mass], [http://www.iupac.org/goldbook/R05270.pdf relative molar mass] or simply molar mass. [[WP:Chem|WikiProject Chemicals]] tends to use [[molar mass]] because it has units (g/mol) whereas the other two are dimentionless: editors like putting units in tables, even where they don't belong... The other advantage is that molar mass and relative molar mass are general terms, whereas relative molecular mass can only be used for molecular compounds (i.e. not [[sodium chloride]], for example). The links (to PDF files) are from the online version of the ''IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology'', better known as the "''Gold Book''". [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User_talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 07:38, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
**Don't they mean different things?--[[User:Hello fromSPACE|'''<font color=blue>Hello</font>''']]<small>''''from'''</small><sup>''''<small>SPACE</small>'''</sup> 00:08, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
:(Note: I edited the signature above. It had unclosed HTML tags changing font size and color for the rest of the page.) --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 00:29, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Literally, they mean different things, but this depends on who you talk to. I use whichever term that is clearest based on the context. If I were on the moon, I'd definitely use "molecular mass". We should contact NASA and see what they have to say! --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 01:37, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Fonts ==
 
I am looking for fonts for the following languages/scripts:
 
*[[Yi language]]
*[[Inuktitut]]
*[[Cherokee language]]
*[[Tibetan language]]
*[[Khmer language]]
*[[Burmese language]]
*[[Sinhala]]
*[[Buginese language]]
*[[Tigrigna language]]
 
Does anyone know where I can download fonts for these languages so that when text is cited from them it is displayed properly? Because Wikipedia makes such extensive use of relatively uncommon fonts there should be some sort of technical support page for fonts.
 
[[User:Theshibboleth|Theshibboleth]] 08:16, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Have a look at [[Free software Unicode fonts]]. --[[User:Heron|Heron]] 20:40, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Electrostatics ==
 
Ques: Two point charges of values q and 2q are kept at a distance d apart from each other. A third charge Q is to be kept along the same line in such a way that the net force acting on q and 2q is zero. calculate the position of charge Q in terms of q and 2q?
 
reply on: [removed]
 
:DYOH, and don't post your email address. Thanks. [[User:Garrett Albright|Garrett Albright]] 14:03, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
:That means ''Do You Own Homework''. [[User:DJ Clayworth|DJ Clayworth]] 18:25, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Mathematical Logic - Some Fundamental Results ==
 
The above section named "Some Fundamental Results" in the page "Mathematical Logic" has been changed by the user Otto ter Haar on the 9th of October. The old text read: "Given a first-order formula as its input, the procedure eventually halts if the formula is valid, and runs forever otherwise."
The new text reads: "Given a first-order formula as its input, the procedure eventually halts if the formula is valid or not valid, and runs forever otherwise."
I do not know or could not find out, what motivated ter Haar to enter this change but it would be an incredible (and unbelievable) result, contradicting all our knowledge of computational theory and computability. The only reason - which I could imagine - to justify this statement, i.e. that there is a theorem prover, which works for valid as well as invalid formulas, is to assume certain finite domains, and do model checking. Nevertheless, this should be somehow included in the modification of this article. Otherwise, it leads to a contradiction with the statement that first-order logic is recursively enumerable (which means all valid formulas can be constructed) and that it is NOT recursive (which means that there is no decision procedure for saying whether a formula is valid or not) - and these two statements are enormously important results for computational theory and are general textbook knowledge.
It is also unclear, in what situation the procedure would not terminate - since the modified statement implies that the procedure (the theorem prover) always halts (since in standard logic, there is only true or false).
It would be appreciated to get some feedback, especially by ter Haar, on this change and my concerns about it.
 
Christel Kemke
 
:Well, a good place to discuss that would be [[Talk:Mathematical logic|the talk page for that article]].
:That said, it seems to me that Otto is right. You can run a theorem-prover starting from the axioms of logic, and at some point, if a hypothesis is provable or disprovable, you will prove either the hypothesis or its negation. I may be thinking of this wrong, as I'm not an expert in this area. But something that makes me doubt your explanation is that you are confusing "true" and "false" with "provable" and "disprovable". By [[Godel's incompleteness theorem]], there must be statements that are neither provable nor disprovable, so the procedure does not always halt. '''[[User talk:Rspeer|<span style="color: #63f; text-decoration: none;">r</span>]]'''[[User:Rspeer|<span style="color: #333;">speer</span>]] 15:25, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== a system ==
 
 
what is a system/ why we refer to a computer as a system
:Have you read our article on [[system]]s? That should answer both questions readily. &mdash; [[User:Lomn|Lomn]] | <small>[[User Talk:Lomn|Talk]] / [[User:Lomn/RfC|RfC]]</small> 18:42, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== geographical landforms, erosion ==
 
What is the difference between a bluff, a butte, and a mesa? --[[User:165.83.196.106|165.83.196.106]] 19:32, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:You mean a [[bluff]], a [[butte]], and a [[mesa]]? [[User:TenOfAllTrades|TenOfAllTrades]]([[User_talk:TenOfAllTrades|talk]]) 20:15, 14 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=November 15=
== What does the measurement "uF" stand for? ==
 
What does the unit of measurement "uF" stand for?
: I'm pretty sure it is [[μF]], which stands for micro[[farad]]s. [[User:Titoxd|Tito]][[Wikipedia:Esperanza|<span style="color:#008000;">xd</span>]]<sup>([[User_talk:Titoxd|?!?]])</sup> 01:58, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
: To clarify it is '''μF''' and this stands for microfarad which is a measure of electical capacity in a capacitor.
 
*Note that though it should be &mu;F for microfarad, it's very common in places that don't do advanced fonts (electronics catalogues and the like) to find it as "uF". --[[User:DrBob|Bob Mellish]] 03:59, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== vi and text replacement ==
 
Hello! I'm trying to learn how to use [[vi]]. Could someone show me how to make a text substitution in vi? I'd like to replace the word "apple" with "orange" in a text file that I have. Thanks! --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 02:47, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:First, make sure you're in normal mode by pressing ESC (the escape key). Assuming you want to change all occurrences throughout the file, one command will do the trick:
:%s/apple/orange/g''<ENTER>''
:This can be broken down as:
:*<nowiki>:</nowiki> - activate command-line mode
:*% - a range of lines spanning from the first line to the last (i.e. the whole file); without this, the command operates only on the current line
:*s - use the substitute command
:*/apple/orange/ - "apple" is the pattern to search for, while "orange" is the text to replace it with. The pattern has a syntax similar to [[regular expression]]s if you want to get fancy with it.
:*g - Global substitution; without this, only the first match in each line is substituted.
:If you want to step through matches one at a time and decide whether to change each of them, replace the "g" flag with "cg". You can find more information by typing ":help :s" (assuming you're using [[Vim]]), and if you haven't found it already it would probably be a good idea to go through the tutorial (":help tutor") as well. Hope this helps! &mdash;[[User:David Wahler|David Wahler]] [[User_talk:David Wahler|<small>(talk)</small>]] 03:13, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
::Or, assuming you're currently positioned at the occurrence of "apple" you want to change (one of many ways to get there would be to type "/apple<ENTER>" without the quotes), entering "cworange<ESC>" (without the quotes) changes the word. Typing ":" as suggested above essentially takes you out of "visual" mode and lets you enter editing commands compatible with the line-oriented (non-visual) UNIX editor [[ed]] (vi is based on [[ex (editor)|ex]], which is a variant). In visual mode, any of the positioning commands ("w" to space ahead one word, "$" to move to the end of the current line, "l" to move right a character, etc.) can be prefixed with "c" which, rather than just positioning the cursor, changes the text from the current cursor position to wherever the cursor would end up as a result of the move command to what you type, terminated by entering <ESC> (similarly, prefixing "d" deletes through that point). If you're in a command line shell on a linux or unix system, "man vi" should give you more details. -- [[user:Rick Block|Rick Block]] <small>([[user talk:Rick Block|talk]])</small> 15:15, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::Thanks so much!!! This was very, very useful! :-) --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 02:54, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Question about light and eye. ==
 
If you step out of a lighted house into a dark backyard what sudden change occurs in your eye?What is this process called?
 
[[Pupil#Dilation of the pupil|Dilation of the pupil]], or the abnormal version, [[mydriasis]]? (I'm not sure how appropriate it is to redirect [[pupil dilation]] to [[mydriasis]]...) [[User:AySz88|AySz88]] 04:05, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
The two are not the same. Mydriasis is used for excessive, drug-induced, or neurologic-lesion-induced dilation. Partly analogous to the difference between erection and priapism. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 11:25, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
 
Don't forget the other, albeit slower mechanism the eye uses to adapt to darkness-- the synthesis of [[rhodopsin]] in the [[Rod cell|rod cells]] of the [[retina]]. Light exposure depletes rhodopsin from these photoreceptor cells, while darkness permits a metabolic re-stocking of this substance. Actually, full darkness is not necessary in order to replete rhodopsin stores; the rods are insensitive to red light, which permits darkness adaptation with the use of [[red adaptation goggles]]. Using these devices, the eye can continue to function using solely the color-descriminating [[Cone cell|cone cells']] ability to respond to red light, while the rods adapt to darkness.--[[User:Markitos76|Markitos76]] 16:15, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Can Menstruation will be happend without releasing egg? ==
 
Can anyone help me to get the answer for the question"Can Menstruation will be happend without releasing egg? "
*See [[menstruation]] which says: ''During the menstrual cycle, the sexually mature female body releases one egg (or occasionally two, which might result in dizygotic, or non-identical, twins) at the time of ovulation. The lining of the uterus, the endometrium, builds up in a synchronised fashion. After ovulation, this lining changes to prepare for potential implantation of the fertilised egg to establish a pregnancy. If fertilisation and pregnancy do not ensue, the uterus sheds the lining and a new menstrual cycle begins.'' Therefore, my answer would be no. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 11:14, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
But this is the problem with theoretical answers because the answer is certainly yes. Menstrual bleeding without ovulation is called [[anovulation|anovulatory bleeding]]. It is the most common type of [[infertility]]. It characterizes the menses of the first year after [[menarche]] in most girls. It characterizes many of the menses as [[menopause]] approaches. Women with [[polycystic ovary syndrome]] and several other types of [[hormone]] imbalances typically have menses despite chronic anovulation. Anovulatory menses are characterized by irregularity, unpredictability, variation of length and heaviness from period to period, lack of [[mittelschmerz]], and lack of premenstrual physical symptoms. Finally, any woman taking [[birth control pill]]s typically has menses without ovulation. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 11:23, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Chemistry / instrument for finding mass ==
 
What instrument is best suited in finding the mass of an object?
 
:Here on Earth where we have strong-ish gravity, probably a balance or weighing scales. These would not work in space however. [[User:Smurrayinchester|Smurrayinchester]] 14:58, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:In college we use to use a balance scale. Actually this will work in space also, if you are on a space station or something which rotates to provide simulated gravity.
 
:In zero gravity, you can find mass by measuring the acceleration of the object when you input some amount of force. F = ma -> m = F / a. But this is precisely what we do when we use a scale: F = weight, a = gravity. ☢ [[User:Kieff|Ҡieff]]⌇[[User_talk:Kieff|↯]] 17:04, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Aqua regia ==
Is [[Aqua regia]] dangerous to human's health? [[User:Roscoe x|roscoe_x]] 12:47, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Only if you touch it, or inhale the fumes. In general, liquids that can dissolve gold and platinum are bad for human health. [[User:TenOfAllTrades|TenOfAllTrades]]([[User_talk:TenOfAllTrades|talk]]) 12:53, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:: In spring [[1998]], a female graduate student of nuclear biology of Taiwan's [[National Tsing Hua University]] killed another female classmate at school over a love dispute. She strangled the woman and destroyed a part of the victim's body using self-made aqua regia. Anyway, most of the body was still there lying of the floor of an auditorium. It was found after a weekend break.
 
:: They searched the victim's e-mail and focused on her killer immediately. The suspect was caught in a few days and was sentenced for 18 years. She baptized while in jail. The principal of the University managed to defend her and visit her frequently after she was prisoned. She is expected to be released on 2007 if she's good enough.
 
:: Aqua regia is surely harmful. However, you may want a lot of it to dissolve a dead body. -- [[User:Toytoy|Toytoy]] 14:01, 15 November 2005 (UTC)We used to use a balance scale to weigh objects.
 
::*This seems like a semi-common confusion. "Gold disolves in ''aqua regia''" doesn't mean that ''only'' gold disolves in aqua regia. Aqua regia can disolve just about anything; the point is, gold won't disolved in any(?) other acid. --[[User:DrBob|Bob Mellish]] 17:15, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::: Incidentally, either this or simply [[nitric acid]] is used in [[Oscar Wilde]]'s ''[[The Picture of Dorian Gray]]'' for the same purpose, more successfully. {{User:Eequor/Signature/Syllabic}} 21:30, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== biochemistry of amino acids ==
 
Dear Sir(s),
 
Good day.
I was wondering about the structure of the amino acid Isoleucine, whether it is the same thing as "acetyl-DL-leucine ", or not.
 
Thank you for cooperation
 
Dr. Samaah Zohair.
Alexandria, Egypt.
 
The difference between leu and ile is which carbon a methyl group is attached to, so ile is not simply the acetylated form of leu. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 01:34, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Quarks ==
 
what is the history of quark, that would be easyly written on a time line? --[[User:70.105.42.63|70.105.42.63]] 20:19, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
: Some important dates related to quarks are listed in [[Quark#History]]. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 20:27, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
==[[Debian]]==
not a science question, strictly, but I guess I am most likely to get an authoritative reply here :)
-- I was updating my debian distribution with dselect, thinking no evil, and suddenly it turns out some kde packages are mutually exclusive, and at the same time dependent on each other. I spend time deinstalling and installing stuff, eventually I'm down to twm, with neither kde or gnome working. I figured there is maybe something wrong with my mirror and tried to get a list of debian mirrors. Lo and behold, http://www.debian.org/mirror/list gives me an empty list! Can anyone help me get my kde running again, and/or tell me where all the debian mirrors went? [[User:Dbachmann|dab]] <small>[[User_talk:Dbachmann|('''&#5839;''')]]</small> 20:23, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I don't know what's happened to the mirror list on the Debian website (or on deb's www mirrors), but the FTP servers have an (apparently) good list, see ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/README.mirrors.html (or your local mirror, ftp://ftp.COUNTRY.debian.org/debian/README.mirrors.html). I've no ideas on the making KDE work front, though. -- [[User:AJR|AJR]] | [[User talk:AJR|Talk]] 00:23, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Toxic steroids ==
 
# What are some common [[steroid]]al [[alkaloid]]s?
# Other than [[batrachotoxin]], which steroid compounds are [[toxic]]?
## Are they typically [[neurotoxin]]s?
{{User:Eequor/Signature/Syllabic}} 21:10, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
*[[Solanine]] and [[samandarin]] are toxic steroidal alkaloids which are common enough to have Wikipedia articles written about them. Many [[steroid hormone]]s are toxic in the wrong dose at the wrong time (and especially to the wrong gender, for sex hormones), [[vitamin D]] is notoriously toxic in overdose, so I guess it really depends on the level of toxicity you're interested in (or interested in avoiding!) Hormonal toxicity is not neurotoxicity, so I guess the answer to your third question has to be no. [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] 17:44, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Why did he say Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny? ==
 
Why did Ernst Haeckel say "Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny"? What was his point?
 
:Have a look at [[Recapitulation theory]], under the first heading, "Haeckel's theory". It's a pretty concise explanation. [[User:Shimgray|Shimgray]] | [[User talk:Shimgray|talk]] | 21:38, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== some beliefs of Chinese culture I would like to verify ==
 
My mother is not the superstitious type or anything, but she tells me some things I don't find documented in the standard textbook but tells me it's part of Chinese culture and medicine; but she was a former teacher herself so I'm just wondering perhaps whether some of it is real and documented, but not so common (ie. something like acupuncture?), undocumented for Western medicine but plausible, or false (perhaps misconceptions from my grandmother who is not prone to superstition either but perhaps picked up from culture as some [[urban legend]] or something); I can't recall most of these at the moment, but some of them are:
 
*Eating too much kangkong ([[Ipomoea aquatica]]) makes you weak (I wrote a scientific "answer" in there but it's really filler), supposedly becausethe hollow stem makes you weak and hollow like it (I think this was just a [[metaphor]] and not the actual reason for the belief?).
 
*Eating cold [[porridge]] will nearly ALWAYS result in a stomach ache (or at least 90% of the time) - doesn't seem to do anything with germs, if you refrigerate porridge and eat it later, you will get a stomach ache or its very likely you will. The explanation is that it will give you "wind" in your stomach, with my guess for the elaboration, that it is believed that coldness is incompatible with the nature of porridge (the latter part is my guess because Chinese culture always tries to maintain a balance between "heaty" and "cooling" foods, not to be taken literally, a refrigerated food is not always cooling and vice versa). This always seems to be true a lot: nearly everytime I ate porridge cold I always had a stomach ache afterwards (the last few times I didn't think it would matter and went against my mother's advice; it seemed I was mistaken)...nothing too sharp; sort of like a dull ache, not of satiation either.
 
*Males shouldn't eat overnight eggs (not sure whether this is just chicken eggs, or all eggs) because it will contribute to [[infertility]].
 
If I recall any others I'm also bound to ask them again. Oh by the way, what happens to [[convection]] in zero gravity?
 
-- [[User:Natalinasmpf|Natalinasmpf]] 22:28, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Are you eating porridge with milk or water. Every Chinese person I work with says that cold milk gives them a stomach ache. Some claim that they get a stomach ache when they see me drink cold milk every morning. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 23:36, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:: Congee ... it often involves milk, I think. But my mother doesn't mention anything about the milk being the factor, and I sometimes get an ache with a water-based porridge.
:::I should also point out that the Chinese were are visiting from China (and many who were raised there) have trouble with cold drinks as well. They even heat up Coke before drinking it. They say that kids in the larger cities are getting used to cold drinks, but the older people are stuck in their ways. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 00:58, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I'm not familiar with kangkong specifically, but I can make some guesses. Leaves generally have little nutritional value and are difficult for humans to digest. Although they might fill you up, eating too many will make you sick and give you diarrhea. Leaves make a poor staple compared to rice because they contain very few calories, for example two cups of rice contain 400 calories, while two cups of watercress (a leafy vegetable) contain only 8. --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 03:28, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:: I am a 36-year-old Chinese born and live in [[Taiwan]]. I don't find your mother's ideas practiced here. My father was born in Southern China and was grown up in [[Beijing]]. He also haven't heard of these things.
 
::* ''Ipomoea aquatica'' is a daily vegetable in Taiwan. If you like vegetables, you can eat it here almost everyday. I don't find its hollow stem leads to any metaphorical reading here. Some vegetables such as pineapple (sounds like "good fortune") and white turnip (also sounds good) are given as gifts though. A quick web search only results in a vague taboo: Do not eat ''Ipomoea aquatica'' during winter [http://www.pts.org.tw/~web02/2002s_followme/info.htm]. This is not widely practiced. I haven't heard of it. However, if you belong to the "cool" type, an herbal doctor may suggest you to eat less ''Ipomoea aquatica'' and eat more [[lychee]] which is a "heaty" food. [http://nricm2.nricm.edu.tw/pages/show.php?qry_dtnbr=26&qry_dsnbr=444]
::* Most Chinese are not heavy milk drinkers because they lack of an enzyme to digest [[lactose]]. And in many parts of Asia where dairy cows are in short supply (farm lands are used to grow rice and other food crops), people drink milk prepared from hot water and imported [[powdered milk]] at home. If you live in a typical Asian city, you may see many 4- to 6-story buildings are built without an elevator. Why? Land is so expensive, you just cannot afford to waste it! If you live inside such an apartment, you don't want to buy liquid milk. By the way, you don't have a place to park your car. So you may need to carry the foods from the supermarket (usually not far away) to your home on foot or riding a motorcycle. Anyway, many Asians are trained to drink hot milk. It was not until the 1980s did they invent milk powder that dissolves in water at room temperature.
::* Cold porridge is not welcomed here and in most of China. Cold porridge is not tasty because it does not smell that good. There's a Chinese saying, you wait for your porridge; your porridge does not wait for you. That means you have to wait for several hours until the rice in your porridge is almost dissolved. People love that texture. Some even to used a [[candle]] to cook a small pot of porridge over night. And when your porridge is ready, you eat it while it's still hot. People love the smell of the condensed glue-like mixture of rice and water.
::* Overnight eggs are not unedible here. Many of us were bringing eggs cooked last evening in our lunch boxes to school. In many Asian countries, children and some adults take [[lunch box]]es prepared last evening to school or work (see the "Outside Mumbai" section of [[dabbawala]]). Trust me, they love their eggs. People in China usually hate overnight tea. People DO hate overnight tea. You don't want to drink overnight coffee, do you? Are you serious about your freshly brewed coffee? We are serious about our tea. That's the point.
 
:: There were some food taboos circulated in China such as a widely referenced chart of foods you don't want to eat together printed on the back of a lunar calandar [http://microbiology.scu.edu.tw/lifescience/wong1/images/allerg05.jpg] (similar to the ''[[Farmer's Almanac]]'' of the West) (e.g.: [http://www.zcmf.95.cn/xiang.htm this Chinese page]; top left: spinach and milk gives you diarrhea). However, many such taboos are no longer be taken seriously. Debunking these myths had been popular elementary school science project topics in Taiwan during 1950s to 1970s. Many of today's kids simply do not know anything about these taboos.
 
:: The food chart are always printed on the back of a lunar calandar. And its list of deadly food combinations are never unified. Its format is always two badly drawn foods + symptom + cure. Such as:
 
::: 2. [[Carp]] and [[liquorice]] results in death. Cure: 75g of ''Ipomoea aquatica'' extract.
::: 3. [[Dog]] and [[mung bean]] results in stomach rupture. Cure: 40g of liquorice boiled in water.
::: 7. [[Frog]] boiled in tea results in death. Cure: You're dead.
::: 9. A pregnant woman must not eat [[crab]]s. Or your baby will be gone and there's no cure. [http://health.enorth.com.cn/system/2005/02/05/000959901.shtml]
::: 31. Crab and mandarin oranges are poisonous. Cure: Take some garlic juice. [http://health.enorth.com.cn/system/2005/02/05/000959901_01.shtml]
::: 52. Milk and spinach gives you diarrhea. Cure: mung bean soup. [http://health.enorth.com.cn/system/2005/02/05/000959901_02.shtml]
 
:: Some food combinations and cures are just too funny to be true. I love them. -- [[User:Toytoy|Toytoy]] 15:12, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::I really enjoyed reading your write-up, Toytoy. I hope you find an article to add this delightful information to because I think others would want to read this. The deadly food chart lunar calendar was very amusing. Thank you for sharing these cultural tidbits with us. --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 10:33, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::: These lunar calendars are usually free gifts printed by temples. They are not your typical wall calendars (usually free gifts printed by rice shops or other "secular" business). The lunar calendars (農民曆; ''nonmin li''; farmer's calendar) are used by farmers (time to plant/harvest ...) and ordinary people as well (when to/not to travel, have a wedding, moving, grand opinging, start building something ..., feng-shui or something like astrology). You may find some of them include updated modern life information ([[body mass index|BMI]] and [[glycemic index|GI]]; for Buddha's sake). However, I don't see these things very often during the last couple of decades. Many families used to place a copy of the calendar in their living rooms. Some scholars study the sociological aspects of these calendars. You may even find teachers who teaches you to decipher the ancient jargon-filled small print.
 
:::: Here are copies of the lunar calendar from an online book seller in Taiwan: [http://www.books.com.tw/exep/prod/booksfile.php?item=0010310898 Calendar for 2006] (NTD88 or less than US$3), [http://www.books.com.tw/exep/prod/booksfile.php?item=0010270153 Calendar for 2004] (NTD100 or about US$3). These covers are unlike the traditional ones (red background + lots of cheesy symbols of long life and good luck such as an old man and many fat kids in traditional custome with a big red peach and a white crane!). No wonder people love these free booklets (only if you go to a temple often, I guess).
 
:::: I found a Taiwanese [http://myweb.hinet.net/home4/bank168/etdy010-a040.htm calendar printer] here. If you want to give calendars to your customers, you can ask them to print your personalized calendars (100 copies minimum). However, I find the covers just too modernized. And the back cover, used to be the cheesy foods-that-kill-you chart, now becomes a real calendar ([http://myweb.hinet.net/home4/bank168/Lh2006/lh-06001-7.jpg the small Chinese letters are lunar dates]). No fun at all. I miss the good old days! By the way, [http://myweb.hinet.net/home4/bank168/Lh2006/lh-06001-5.jpg this page] talks about [[arthritis]], [[gout]] and [[osteoporosis]]. This is really too modernized for my taste. :)
 
:::: This [http://cgi.tw.ebay.com/Nankunshen-Temple-Chinese-Almanac-1990-Out-of-Print_W0QQitemZ7724802401QQcategoryZ69371QQcmdZViewItem#ebayphotohosting eBay page] of a 1990 calendar is partially in English. However, the cover is not traditional. The Nankunshen Temple is one of Taiwan's oldest and largest. -- [[User:Toytoy|Toytoy]] 13:30, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:It was also asked what happens to [[convection]] in zero g. I've clarified in the article that it doesn't occur. BTW, without convection, a flame behaves very differently in zero g. Here's a link[http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast12may_1.htm]. [[User:Samw|Samw]] 04:34, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Hair Synthesis ==
 
Briefly describe how mammalian hair is synthesised in the relevant organs.
*Briefly do your own homework. --[[User:Jpgordon|Jpgordon]] 23:19, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
*See [[hair]] and [[hair follicle]]. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 13:04, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=November 16=
== Identifying a stroke ==
 
I received an email with the following information:
 
<blockquote>
RECOGNIZING A STROKE
 
Thank God for the sense to remember the "3" steps. Read and Learn!
Sometimes symptoms of a stroke are difficult to identify.
 
Unfortunately, the lack of awareness spells disaster. The stroke victim may suffer brain damage when people nearby fail to recognize the symptoms of stroke.
 
Now doctors say a bystander can recognize a stroke by asking three simple questions:
 
1. Ask the individual to SMILE.
2. Ask him or her to RAISE BOTH ARMS.
3. Ask the person to SPEAK A SIMPLE SENTENCE (Coherently)
(i.e... It is sunny out today)
 
If he or she has trouble with any of these tasks, call 0-0-0 Immediately and describe the symptoms to the dispatcher.
 
After discovering that a group of non-medical volunteers could Identify facial weakness, arm weakness and speech problems, researchers urged the general public to learn the three questions.
 
They presented their conclusions at the American Stroke Association's Annual meeting last February. Widespread use of this test could result in Prompt diagnosis and treatment of the stroke and prevent brain damage.
 
A cardiologist says if everyone who gets this e-mail sends it to 10 people;you can bet that at least one life will be saved.
 
BE A FRIEND AND SHARE THIS ARTICLE WITH AS MANY FRIENDS AS POSSIBLE, You could save their lives.
</blockquote>
 
Is this correct? - [[User:Ta bu shi da yu|Ta bu shi da yu]] 01:14, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
It seems like a reasonably reliable screening method for a stroke, but I have trouble imagining a lot of lives saved. For this to actually save a lot of lives, the following facts would need to be true: (1) a large portion of strokes are misinterpreted as something else that does not seem to require urgent care, (2) a large portion of strokes go without early treatment that would lead to a fulller recovery than commonly occurs at present, (3) this screen would lead to an increased proportion of stroke victims getting early care that would produce a better outcome than getting later care. This is not my area of expertise but I suspect all three propositions are somewhat debatable. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 01:24, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:There is a fairly complete discussion of this on Snopes.com [http://www.snopes.com/medical/disease/stroke.asp here] --[[User:DannyZ|DannyZ]] 02:02, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Divergence and curl aren't enough ==
 
If you know the derivative of a function, then you know the function up to a constant. If you know the gradient of a scalar field, then you know the field up to a constant. But even if you know both the divergence and the curl of a vector field, that's not enough information to determine the vector field up to a constant. For example, <x,-y,0> has zero divergence and zero curl but it's not a constant. Is there a third property of a vector field that, together with divergence and curl, provides enough information? —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 01:28, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
: I think you might need all partial derivatives of each component. After all, you have those (in the form of a vector) with the divergence of a scalar field. The curl and the divergence only give you four equations (three for curl, one for divergence) when I suspect you need nine. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 09:35, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
::Hmmm, if I'm interpreting [[covariant derivative]] correctly, the covariant derivative of a 3D vector field would be a 3x3 matrix. Then the trace of this matrix would be the divergence, and the curl would be... something involving a permutation tensor or something. This is complicated; I think I'll just wait until I take tensor analysis in a few years. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 16:32, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
::: Yeah, that's right. Another way of saying it is just that <math>\frac{\partial f_i}{\partial x_j}</math>, where the <math> f_i </math> are the components of the vector field and i, j=1, 2, 3, can be written as a 3x3 matrix containing the elements you need to know. By the way, the curl is just given by <math>(\nabla \times \bold{f})_i = \epsilon_{ijk}\frac{\partial f_k}{\partial x_j} </math> -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 17:09, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== largest satellite in the solar system? ==
 
largest satellite in the solar system?
 
:Well, [[Jupiter]] itself is a "satellite" of the Sun, but I think you're looking for [[Ganymede (moon)|Ganymede]]. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 01:52, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
::[[Titan (moon)]] is bigger than Ganymede [[User:Theresa knott|Theresa Knott]] [[User talk:Theresa knott| (a tenth stroke)]] 06:34, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
:::Um, according to Wikipedia and several other sources Ganymede is larger that Titan in both size and mass. What's your source? —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 16:08, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
::::Ganymede is bigger than Titan in terms of mass, and has a larger diameter than Titan minus its (rather thick) atmosphere. Titan + its atmosphere has a larger diameter than Ganymede, and because until recently we've had trouble penetrating Titan's atmosphere, this led to confusion about how big it really was. From [[Titan (moon)|Titan]]:
:::::''Titan is [...] the second largest natural satellite in the solar system after Ganymede. It was originally thought to be slightly larger than Ganymede, but recent observations have shown that its thick atmosphere reflects a large amount of light causing an overestimation of its diameter.''
::::&mdash; [[User:QuantumEleven|QuantumEleven ]] &#124; &#91;&#91;User_talk:QuantumEleven&#124;(talk)]] 16:28, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== creatinine ==
 
I would like to know what is the normal range of creatinine levels for a woman taken from a urine test.
Thanks
--01:50, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
Nadia
 
:See our article on [[creatinine]], down at the bottom. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 01:54, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Notice that a creatinine measurement is nearly always a blood test, not a urine test. There is also a more complicated test of kidney function called a [[creatinine clearance test]] which involves simultaneous collection of both blood and urine. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 02:15, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== what is leukopenia? ==
 
See our [[leukopenia]] article. [[User:Theresa knott|Theresa Knott]] [[User talk:Theresa knott| (a tenth stroke)]] 06:37, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== About Chicken Eggs ==
 
AS per the science I would like to know. Is Chicken Egg Vegetarian food Or Non –vegetarian Food? I think world vegetarian organization accept it as a Vegetarian Food.
So how we accept it?.
I kindly request for Answer.
 
Opinions differ. See [[Vegetarianism]]. Some people who call themselves vegetarians won't eat eggs; others will. A word for vegetarians who eat eggs and drink milk is [[ovolactovegetarian]]s. A word for vegetarians who don't eat eggs or milk is [[veganism|vegan]]s. - [[User:Nunh-huh|Nunh-huh]] 06:43, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
You may already understand that "vegetarian" is more a cultural category like "kosher" than a scientific category. I only mention this because you asked at the science desk. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 11:48, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
From what I know, chicken eggs, that we eat are unfertilised, thus we are not eating any meat. However, it isn't a vegetable. [[User:Akamad|Akamad]] 23:25, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
*This is a perfect example of how this is a cultural not a scientific category. The entire biological world would consider an unfertilized egg part of an animal (as opposed to being a plant or a mineral), but apparently a haploid gamete is "fair game" (if you will pardon the expression) for vegetarians by someone's rules. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 01:18, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== FREQUENCY ==
 
WHAT IS THE VIBRATIONAL FREQUENCY IN HERTZ (hz) OF HYDROGEN, OXYGEN, AND WATER H20?
:Water has several different frequencies associated with it, because there are [http://chemistry.boisestate.edu/rbanks/inorganic/electromagnetic%20spectrum/vibrational_modes.htm multiple ways it can vibrate]. You can see some of those frequencies [http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/vibrat.html here], although I believe you'll have to multiply by the [[speed of light]] to get the frequency in [[hertz]]. I found those by googling for [http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=HPIC,HPIC:2005-35,HPIC:en&q=%22vibrational+modes%22+of+water "vibrational modes" of water]&mdash;I'll let you look for oxygen and hydrogen on your own. (Being [[diatomic molecule]]s, they'll be simpler.) -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 09:46, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
: P.S. Per the instructions at the top of the page, please don't type in all caps. And see "do your own homework" for the reason I'm leaving some of this for you to do on your own. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 09:46, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Building a cell phone ==
 
How would one go about building a cell phone? Even if one were succesful at this endeavor, would it even be possible to get any service? I was really surprised to see how little information I was able to find about this. I guess it's just not a practical thing to do.
[[User:Theshibboleth|Theshibboleth]] 08:57, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
: Presumably some of the components are [[patent]]ed, and so you'd need to reverse engineer them to make one legally (or get permission). The permission seems unlikely, and generally reverse-engineering a piece of complicated [[electronics]] is only feasible for a big electronics company. Come to think of it, since many of the components are electronics in the first place, you'd have to be an electronics company to put those together&mdash;unless you just bought a few pieces and hooked them together, which might be feasible. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 09:39, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:[http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/cell-phone6.htm Howstuffworks.com] has an article on how cell phones work. Not very technicle but there is some info available. [[User:Akamad|Akamad]] 23:29, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
*It's essentially a digital, GHz-frequency radio transmitter/receiver. So if you can build one of those, you're golden. If you look up the standard for [[GSM]] phones, which I think is readily available (probably on the web somewhere), IIRC it covers frequencies, data formats, etc., needed to interoperate with the standard. Of course there's also an authentication method so that only authorized units will get service. (I remember there's a interesting bit in the standard describing how each phone simulates a tiny bit of static during the "blanks" in conversation, otherwise people tend to think they've been cut-off.) --[[User:DrBob|Bob Mellish]] 23:53, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
*Apparently at least one person thinks it's possible: [http://www.surjpatel.com/] The project was linked from [[Boing Boing]] just a week ago. &mdash;[[User:David Wahler|David Wahler]] [[User_talk:David Wahler|<small>(talk)</small>]] 01:45, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
* If you're determined enough, you can make one out of [[embedded computer]] parts, which would be very primitive, but it will work. I am thinking you could come up with one of those WWII sets which weighed 10 pounds and was as big as a textbook. -- [[User:Natalinasmpf|Natalinasmpf]] 14:18, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== agricultural hollow blocks ==
 
Hi!!! We have an investigatory project in our school and our topic is all about agicultural hollow blocks. I need to know the procedure, materials, background, introduction and abstract of this project. Thanks!!!
:It sounds like you need to '''do your own homework''' per the instructions you read at the top of the page. Try searching ''agricultural hollow block'' at [http://www.google.com Google] for starters. &mdash; [[User:Lomn|Lomn]] | <small>[[User Talk:Lomn|Talk]] / [[User:Lomn/RfC|RfC]]</small> 15:39, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Bermuda ==
 
I was once asked if the bermuda triangle is real, not knowing the answer I told them that I would find out for them! So, is the bermuda triangle real or just a myth?
 
--[[User:Kkeene06|Kkeene06]] 16:45, 16 November 2005 (UTC)Keene-Mind[[User:Kkeene06|Kkeene06]] 16:45, 16 November 2005 (UTC)--
:Look at [[Bermuda Triangle]]. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 16:51, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
*The area is real and there's enough real reports of people going missing in the area. However, the reason of these disappearances is still not known for sure. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 18:58, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
The best explanation I heard for the disappearance of so many ships in this area is that the continental shelf off the coast of America contains a lot of methane gas which is frozen due to the pressure in the deep ocean. The shelf is not hugely steep and if there is an underwater land slide this methane is released as a kind of big Jacuzzi, like swamp gas. (ever stuck a stick in the bottom of a muddy pond and seen bubbles rise up?) Ships cannot float on water full of bubbles and they sink. Others catch fire and sink if the gas is ignited by the ships boilers/electrics. It’s all very local and all very quick. This might explain some of the strange disappearances but not all and I might add that this is just what I read somewhere as a possible explanation for some of the disappearances.--[[User:Eye|Eye]] 23:13, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
:According to the [[Bermuda Triangle]] article, there is no justification for claiming that the Bermuda Triangle has a higher rate of lost ships/planes than anywhere else over the ocean. Basically, you can claim there's a nasty area south of Hawaii and give it a cool name. Then, go through history and claim every ship/plane that went down there was lost due some mysterious force. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 23:46, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== How Curcumin is Made From Tumeric ==
 
Please describe the chenical process by which curcumin is extracted from tumeric. What percent of tumeric yields curcumin?
:Neither [[turmeric]] or [[curcumin]] explained those two specific facts, but between them they have enough links and references you could probably find it. And googling for "curcumin extraction" found [http://www.fao.org/inpho/content/compend/text/ch29/ch29_02.htm this] among the first few links that explains how to do it. - [[User:Taxman|Taxman]] <sup><small>[[User talk:Taxman|Talk]]</small></sup> 13:56, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Static Electricity on Dry Nights ==
 
I notice I get shocked more around the house on dry nights. Why is that? - [[User:R_Lee_E|Cobra Ky]] [[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|25px]] ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:R_Lee_E talk], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/R_Lee_E contribs]) 19:45, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
:Dry air is a great insulator. It inhibits electrical flow. So, in dry air, the surface electricity on your body (and on other things) doesn't leak into the air easily. Eventually, the buildup will be enough that a spark can jump a small gap. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 19:51, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::It's nothing to do with the conductivity of air. To quote [http://www.ce-mag.com/archive/01/07/mrstatic.html Mr Static], "The effect of increased air humidity is to increase the thickness of the moisture layer on or in all surfaces, and this layer contains electrolytic ions that provide neutralizing charges." --[[User:Heron|Heron]] 17:11, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
= November 17 =
== How much annual precipitation does a tropical rain forest receive? ==
Is this a homework question? If so, the answer lies within [[tropical rain forest|the question]]. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 01:43, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== what is the scientific name for a boa constrictor? ==
According to [[Boa]], it's ''Boidae Boa''. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 01:13, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
:A Latin binomial such as ''[[Homo sapiens]]'' consists of the genus and the species names. [[Homo (genus)|Homo]] is the genus to which we, humanity, belong (along with ''[[Homo erectus]]'', ''[[Homo floresiensis]]'' - all of which are extinct) and sapiens is the specific species name. Boidae is the family which includes several genera, one of which is Boa. In short, the Latin binomial for [[Boa constrictor]] (eg. ''[genus] [species]'') is, anticlimactically, ''Boa constrictor''. --[[User:OldakQuill|Oldak]] [[User_talk:OldakQuill|Quill]] 17:10, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Animals!!! ==
 
What type of animal is Scorpion!? {{unsigned|67.70.39.83}}
 
: According to [[Scorpion]], it's an [[arachnid]], just like a spider. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 01:14, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Cows ==
 
How many organs cow have (stomach) {{unsigned|67.70.39.83}}
 
: It's got four stomachs. Past that, take a look at [[cow]]. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 01:31, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Black holes ==
 
Is BLACK HOLE real? Can it like kill someone? If black hole sucks you in where are you going to be??? {{unsigned|67.70.39.83}}
 
: In order: very probably, yes, and squished to nothingness in the middle. For more info, see [[black hole]]. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 01:30, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:: I keep thinking that the experience of crossing the event horizon (without being spaghettified or incinerated by the orbiting matter) would take an extraodinarily long time, seeing as how you'd be approaching the speed of light fairly rapidly. (tangentially, would it compress time enough for basic particles to decay before they reached the "center"?) Or have I got relativity backwards? [[User:Tzarius|Tzarius]] 06:23, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::: It would take a long time (in fact, forever) from an outsider's perspective. From the perspective of someone falling in it would be very, very fast&mdash;a few seconds for all but the most enormous black holes. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 06:36, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::Oh dear, there's that again. I wanted to read up on the subject before pursuing this any further, but now that it has come up again... Doens't a black hole also compress space? In other words, isn't there a large (infinite?) amount of space inside a black hole, which, from the outsider's perspective, is little more than a point? Mass makes a dent in space. A huge mass could thus stretch this into something big enough to hold a universe of its own. Right? [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 10:01, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::: No, I don't think that's true. I know the pictures show space appearing stretched, and going "infinitely far down" for a black hole, but that's not what's meant to be conveyed by the analogy of gravity as curved space. The distances inside appear rather finite when you're falling in. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 22:37, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:However, the closest known black hole to earth is apparently [http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/astronomy/v4641_microquasar_000114.html 1600-odd light years away]. Given that the furthest a human has travelled from earth is about one light-second, and the furthest an unmanned probe has travelled is less than fourteen light-hours away, we're not likely to get anywhere near the thing in your or my lifetime. --[[User:Robert Merkel|Robert Merkel]] 22:55, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::But that's the closest ''known'' black hole. A problem with black holes is that they're black, which makes then a bit hard to see. :) Of course there are ways to detect them, but the known ones are probably a minute fraction of the existing ones (are there any estimates on that?). If one were to approach the Sun that would probably be the end of us. What the chances are is probably little more than a wild guess, but if it were a frequent phenomenon then we'd see that happening all over the universe (which we don't?), so I'd agree that you can count on it not happening in our lifetimes. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 08:42, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:''Neutron Star'' by [[Larry Niven]] suggested that the tidal effects (difference between gravitation on your closest and nearest points) meant that a close approach to a neutron star would be fatal. I suspect the same must apply to black holes, so that there can be no way a living human can pass through the event horizon. (But if one could, could he take a string telephone?) [[User:Notinasnaid|Notinasnaid]] 09:44, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== size of a lymphocyte ==
 
It says that a lymphocyte's nucleus is about 7 micrometers in diameter. What is the size of the rest of it? What is the ration between the cytoplasm and the actual nucleus? And what are the other parts to a lymphocyte besides its nucleus?
 
: Circulating [[lymphocyte]]s usually have a nucleus that fits in that range. Most have only a thin rim of cytoplasm around their nucleus, so the cells as a whole tend to be not much larger than about 8µm or so. (Activated lymphocytes are considerably larger, up to twice that [around 15-18µm], but I suspect you're talking mainly about circulating lymphocytes.) Despite its small size, the cytoplasm does contain organelles, including [[endoplasmic reticulum]], a small [[Golgi apparatus]], [[mitochondria]], and [[lysosome]]s. Hope that helps. --[[User:Diberri|David Iberri]] 14:54, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Scince ==
 
What are the differences and similarities between a conventional camera and a digital camera? Please explain to me by words and by Venn diagram. Thank you!--[[User:67.70.39.83|67.70.39.83]] 02:26, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
:Please '''do your own homework'''. The articles [[camera]], [[digital camera]], and [[Venn diagram]] should help. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 02:28, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
::What's a "Scince"? And, thanks for signing your own stuff. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 02:31, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
I ment Science =)
 
== Venn ==
 
Hmmm... What is Venn diagram and how it works?--[[User:67.70.39.83|67.70.39.83]] 02:33, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:See [[Venn diagram]] --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 02:37, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::(Hey HC, edit conflict) Please read [[Venn diagram]] and then if you are in need of help well then ... c'mon back. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 02:47, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Can you explain it to me in your own words?
 
:What part of the article would you like us to clarify for you?--[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 03:48, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
OK, for example i have two candys, both candies have similarities (like taste) and differences (like shape) so how do I draw Venn diagram about this two candys?--[[User:67.70.39.83|67.70.39.83]] 04:18, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Draw two big circles that overlap a bit. (The images at [[Venn diagram]] should illustrate this.) Label one circle with the name of one kind of candy (suppose it's "candy A"), and the other circle with the other kind of candy ("candy B").
 
Write things that are similar between candy A and candy B in the middle section (the intersection of the two circles). Differences should go in the rest of the circle. For example, if candy A is square and candy B is round, you would write "square" in the "candy A" circle, and "round" in the "candy B" circle.
 
I hope this helps. The [[Venn diagram]] article is terribly written, so I don't blame you for not understanding it. '''[[User talk:Rspeer|<span style="color: #63f; text-decoration: none;">r</span>]]'''[[User:Rspeer|<span style="color: #333;">speer</span>]] 04:29, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== heat transfer ==
 
Pour hot water in a glass with a silver spoon in it:
:a)why will the spoon get hot?
:b)why will the glass heat up?
:c)why does the glass break when the water is too hot? {{unsigned|203.84.189.18}}
::Did you make this question up or did your teacher? DYOH. Read the [[Heat]] article and then if you need help well then c'mon back. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 03:27, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Ebola Virus ==
 
Which cells does the Ebola Virus attack. Also I need info on the genetic make up.
 
:Try [[Ebola]]? —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 12:06, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Sugar High ==
 
What exactly is a Sugar High if there is such a thing. What is the biology behind it. Doing this for my bio coarse.
 
:See [[Sugar#Sugar and hyperactivity]]. "Sugar high" is widely regarded as a myth; high [[blood sugar]] doesn't make you hyperactive, it just makes you lose your appetite. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 12:11, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
 
A Sugar High is a concept of American folk biology. The concept is that excessive sugar will somehow make someone either "intoxicated" (e.g., [[Twinkie defense]]) to the point of diminished judgement or responsibility, or in its milder forms, euphoric. Either response of course, puts sugar in the cultural Bad Food category. The first concept is nonsense and the second perhaps has a nidus of scientific fact in the middle of the cultural concretion.
 
In terms of verifiable science, there are perhaps two relevant phenomena. First, sucrose tastes good, and this [[taste]] sensation is strong enough that studies have shown it can be used as an [[analgesic]] in infants-- this is part of the basis of the euphoria concept. Second, it is possible to show in animals that high or low dietary [[carbohydrate]] intakes produce somewhat differing effects on level of arousal of the [[autonomic nervous system]]. Unfortunately for the Sugar High meme, however, the effect of carbohydrates is generally sedating rather than arousing. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 12:21, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Though note that the Twinkie defence wasn't that excess junk can diminish ones judgement, it was that consuming excess junk can be a good ''indicator'' of judgement alread having been diminished. Unfortunately, it got seized on as arguing the former, which probably helped fuel the myth... [[User:Shimgray|Shimgray]] | [[User talk:Shimgray|talk]] | 12:21, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
::I have never heard this interpretation. If you think about it for a moment it is actually lamer than the popular one-- which of the following is the correctly unpacked version?:
#It's not that this Twinkie on this day made him temporarily unable to tell right from wrong or control his impulses, but that '''too many twinkies on too many days made him more permanently unable''' to tell right from wrong or control his impulses;
#It's not that this Twinkie on this day made him temporarily unable to tell right from wrong or control his impulses, but that '''eating Twinkies is itself ''prima facie'' evidence of a mind so incompetent''' that he was unable to tell right from wrong or control his impulses.
And which is the lamer defense? [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 12:54, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::It's what our article on the [[Twinkie defense]] says... or rather, the original "twinkie defense" was that the consumption was an indication of a disturbed state, but now the ''usage'' of the phrase is to mean "junk food makes bad" as you mention. Apologies for being unclear, but I read it as referring to the original case rather than the general concept of a "twinkie defense".
::In the original situation, basically, eating twinkies is not itself a sign of being screwy. Eating lots of twinkies and coke, when you've spent x many years eating good healthy salads and never touching junkfood, is possibly a sign (in context with other factors) that there's something up - imagine meeting a friend, who dressed very smartly as long as you can remember, to find they're unwashed, with tangled dirty hair, a ragged shirt and patched jeans. Not in and of itself an indication of a mental disorder, but a plausible ''outward manifestation'' of one, and not unreasonable as something to mention as corroboration if you're already arguing he had an undiagnosed disorder.
::The problem is that "he was silly in the head and went shootin'" is pretty hard to reconcile with the case as it is presented - in the light of the case, it's a pretty lame defence - but verdicts of diminished responsibility through insanity are not uncommon, and this was just one where people could seize on something as "the loophole". Snopes has a decent writeup linked from the article. [[User:Shimgray|Shimgray]] | [[User talk:Shimgray|talk]] | 23:44, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
:::Golly, Shimgray, I could almost imagine how a guy in a three-piece explaining it like that mighta sorta coulda been taken seriously. You have a future in litigation! [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 00:17, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::I suspect the doctor in question believed there had been some kind of undiagnosed mental issues (to be fair, premeditated murder almost always means some!) and was casting around for evidence to support this. And in those circumstances, hearing of a major change in behaviour, especially one logically inconsistent with past behaviour, would presumably be a godsend. Reading the sfchronicle link, it notes that they brought up that ''White cast aside his normal habits and grew slovenly, quit working, shunned his wife, grew a stubble beard and rather than eat his healthful diet, indulged in Twinkies and Coke...'' - pretty notable changes for any individual, and taken together...
::::It does seem that one defense attorney made the connection in a vague aside about the modern "sugar rush" concept - ''Whether or not ingestion of food stuffs with preservatives and sugar in high content causes you to alter your personality somehow, or causes you to act in an aggressive manner, I don't know. I'm not going to suggest to you for a minute that that occurs. But there is a minority opinion in psychiatric fields that there is some connection...'' - but he certainly didn't intend it to be his actual case; it was more something he'd heard vaguely, thrown in because, hey, you probably can't have enough little details to support diminished-capacity. [[User:Shimgray|Shimgray]] | [[User talk:Shimgray|talk]] | 00:41, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== How to know if an Octopus a male or female? ==
 
I am doing research for my little daughter on the above topic. After a long time for search but still got no answer. Could you help on this? Thanks a lot.
Mike Wong in HK.
 
:It may depend on what kind of octopus you're thinking of, of course. But [http://pharyngula.org/print.php/638_0_1_0/ this] post from the biology blog Pharyngula, suggests that even the octopuses themselves would have a hard time answering your question: "These octopuses seem to be able to recognize that the other is a conspecific, but do not recognize whether the other is male or female, at least not until after they begin copulation. Put two octopuses together, and within 3-4 minutes, a male will have pounced on the other, whether it is male or female, and inserted his hectocotyl arm into it's mantle. There didn't seem to be much in the way of perceptible preliminaries. Once copulation began, the male would figure out whether he was having sex with a male or a female." [[User:David Sneek|David Sneek]] 08:15, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::The short answer is that, in general, male [[Octopus|octopuses]] are distinguished by a modified third arm, called a [[hectocotylus]], that is used in mating. More detailed information can be found at the Cephalopod Research website [http://www.australiancephalopods.com/occy_sex.html here] and at The Octopus News Magazine Online [http://www.tonmo.com/forums/showthread.php?t=4803 here]. --[[User:DannyZ|DannyZ]] 03:11, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Identifying Bacillus bacteria ==
 
Dear Wikipeida,
I am a medical laboratory science student. I was identiftying this unknown bacteria of Bacillus thuringiensis. I incorrectly identified it as Bacillus cereus, a very close relative of my unknown organism? I was wondering if anyone from this Wikipedia site knew any major birochemical, cellular, or any differences between the two species which would aid in an identification between the two speicies. Any insight would be great, thanks.
 
:Well, a bacteriology manual would be a better place to look for this information. But.... ''B. anthraxis'' can be distinguished from other bacillus species because it has a capsule (and also, hopefully, by the fact that no one will be giving it to you as an unknown). ''Bacillus thuringiensis'' is distinguished from ''B. cereus'' and ''B. anthraxis'' by being pathogenic for lepidopteran insects (moths), and by producing an intracellular parasporal crystal in the process of sporulation. As you probably know, nomenclature of microorganisms frequently changes, and these organisms are so closely related that some would place two (''B. thuringiensis'' and ''B. cereus'') or all three in one species. I'm a little surprised that you'd be tested on distinguishing ''B. thuringiensis'' from ''B. cereus'': presumably you're not expected to perform DNA sequencing. "Bacillus species" has usually been close enough for most microbiology labs that I know of. - [[User:Nunh-huh|Nunh-huh]] 02:51, 19 November 2005 (UTC) You may find [http://www.hpa-standardmethods.org.uk/documents/bsopid/pdf/bsopid9.pdf this .pdf file] of interest. At least under the proposed UK guidelines, standard operating procedure distinguishes three classes: ''B. anthraxis'', ''B. mycoides'', or ''B. cereus or B. thuringiensis''. It doesn't try to distinguish cereus and thuringiensis. - [[User:Nunh-huh|Nunh-huh]] 02:56, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== chemistry ==
 
who is calld the '''''king of all chemicals''''' and what is its formula
 
:Hmm, a [http://www.google.com/search?q=%22king+of+all+chemicals%22 Google search] turns up only one result, which says it's [[love]]. That sounds good enough to me. =P —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 12:16, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Excellent answer to a question I didn't expect anyone to answer. Rock on! --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 07:16, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Could Chernobyle have been "Sabotage" ? ==
 
Could this attached story be a "factor" or "cause" to the "Chernobyl accident " ?
Regards,
 
The Toxic Reverend
Radiation Expirements on Humans
http://www.angelfire.com/nm/redcollarcrime/radia.html
CIA slipped bugs to Soviets
Memoir recounts Cold War technological sabotage
By David E. Hoffman
 
The Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/front.htm
Updated: 12:13 a.m. ET Feb. 27, 2004
 
''News article removed, view it at the following URL:'' http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4394002/
 
:Um, the contents of the Reference Desk are GFDL just like any other page, right? —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 12:44, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::I've removed the text of the news article as a copyvio. The original poster claimed a fair use rationale, but [[Wikipedia:Fair use|wikipedia guidelines]] say that ''in general, extensive quotation of copyrighted news materials... is not fair use''. The article is still available at the URL linked above. &mdash;[[User:David Wahler|David Wahler]] [[User_talk:David Wahler|<small>(talk)</small>]] 13:03, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:To answer the question, read our article on [[Chernobyl]]. Research points to flaws in personnel procedures as well as overall reactor design rather than point-failure of components. Given that, it's impossible to hang a sabotage label, and unlikely that tainted industrial contributions from the US would have had any meaningful effect. &mdash; [[User:Lomn|Lomn]] | <small>[[User Talk:Lomn|Talk]] / [[User:Lomn/RfC|RfC]]</small> 15:30, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:FWIW, I don't think so. For one thing, Chernobyl was of a completely different design to any American reactor, so there was little point in stealing American reactor control code except as something to learn from, rather than copy directly. Secondly, the alleged sabotage supposedly related to oil pipeline control code, not reactor control code. Thirdly, I have my doubts about the sabotage story for that oil pipelines. I do research into software testing; the story of how the sabotage caused spectacular but casualty-free damage in such a precise manner after the Russians had configured and modified the software for their own uses is just a tad too cute to be believable. Fourthly, the sabotage theories do not square with any of the Soviet inquiries into Chernobyl; sure, they were conducted in Soviet times, but as I understand it no new evidence has emerged to suggest a massive cover-up. Finally, the idea that America would sabotage a Russian nuclear reactor makes no sense. It's not like Chernobyl was producing anything that the Russians didn't already have in quantities sufficient to wipe most of the West off the map (heck, they still do). Imagine that the US had been caught doing so, killing a bunch of civilian reactor workers and potentially thousands of Russian (and even Western European) citizens. It would have completely fractured NATO (and other friendly countries around the world like Japan and Australia). Heck, the Russians might just have gotten mad enough to start a war over such an act; probably not, but there'd be a real risk. And for what payoff? Destablizing the man whose reforms, even then, looked like the best chance for a better relationship between East and West since the Cold War began? So, no, I don't think this conspiracy theory makes sense. And when similar suggestions were made on the article's talk page, I asked the Russian Wikipedians to comment. They thought it was complete nonsense also. --[[User:Robert Merkel|Robert Merkel]] 23:22, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== willies ==
 
how long is the longest willy in the world?, send your answer to [email removed] as soon as possible please. thankyou for your dedication.
 
:We have an entire article on [[human penis size]]. This is also the first entry at [http://www.world-sex-records.com world-sex-records.com]. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 12:20, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
: More specifically [http://www.world-sex-records.com/sex-001.htm]. --[[User:R.Koot|R.Koot]] 12:23, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Why do you guys instantly think penis? Is this freudian? :) Willie and Willy are also names, so maybe the asker wants to know the who the longest person named Willie is. And 'willie willie' is also Aussie lingo for a miniature whirlwind (so how big can those get?). Then again, I suppose you've probably understood him correctly.... [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 09:27, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
::Looked it up. The
 
Why restrict the answer to humans only, who are rather pint-sized when compared to some other mammals. "hippopotamus and elephant can be several feet in length" and in " large Rorqual whales the penis can be 10 ft. long". [http://www.world-sex-records.com/sex-298.htm] [[User:BlankVerse|<sup><font color="green">''Blank''</font></sup>]][[User talk:BlankVerse|<sup><font color="#F88017">''Verse''</font></sup>]] 14:39, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Women are preoccupied with large willies and men preoccupied with small vaginas, isn't life full of problems. :-) --[[User:Eye|Eye]] 21:19, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Microsoft Excel cell fillup ==
 
I want to fillup empty Excel data cells smartly. Let's say I have a table like this:
 
John Murder
Rape
Arson
Jack Extortion
Armed robbery
Sally Mass killing
Driveby shooting
Tom Jaywalking
Murder
 
(10,000 bad guys and 100,000 crimes in total ...)
 
If I select John and let Excel fills it up downwards, it'll become:
 
John Murder
John Rape
John Arson
John Extortion
John Armed robbery
John Mass killing
John Driveby shooting
John Jaywalking
John Murder
 
This is not what I need. I need John-John-John-Jack-Jack-Sally-Sally-Tom-Tom. How do I do this. It'll be painful to do that manually. -- [[User:Toytoy|Toytoy]] 10:14, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I don't know of a built-in method, but a fairly simple [[Visual Basic]] macro to do it could something like:
 
<pre>
Dim i
Sub wiki_list()
For i = 1 To X ' Change X to the number of entries in the list (including column title)
Range("A" & i).Select
If Selection.Value = "" Then
ActiveSheet.Paste
Else: Selection.Copy
End If
Next i
End Sub
</pre>
 
:Change the X to the exact number of fields you wanted filled. If you haven't used a macro, simply click 'Tools', select 'Macro' and 'Macros'. Type a word into the top box that appears, and click 'create'. Then paste the following at the top of the text editor that appears. Then, hit the play button on the toolbar at the top. (Note: You cannot undo macros, so save the list first, in case it goes wrong). If anyone can do it any better, please say how! <nowiki></nowiki><font style="color:#00BB55"><u><b>s</b>murray</u></font><font style="color:#00AA77"><u>inchester</u><sup>([[User:Smurrayinchester|User]]), ([[User talk:Smurrayinchester|Talk]])</sup></font> 15:29, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Here's a way to do it without macros. Let's say your list of names is in column A, and the crimes are in column B.
:*Create a new column between the two by highlighting a cell in column B and choosing ''Insert - Column''. The new column is column B and the crimes are now in column C.
:*Copy the first name in the list from A1 to B1.
:*in cell B2, enter the following formula: ''=IF(A2="",B1,A2)'' (in English, this means, if the cell to the left of this one is blank, copy what's in the cell above this one; if not, copy what's in the cell to the left.)
:*Highlight B2 and drag the lower right corner to copy that formula into the rest of the cells in column B.
:*'''Optional''': if you need everything back in the original columns, highlight column B, choose ''Edit - Copy'', then (with column B still highlighted) ''Edit - Paste Special''. In the Paste Special dialog box, click the "Values" option, then click OK. Then, right-click on a cell in column A, choose ''Delete...'' and then choose the "Entire Column" option and click OK.
:[[User:Chuck Carroll|Chuck]] 18:57, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
===Another macroless option===
#Highlight all the values in the column including the blanks
#From the Edit menu, choose Go To . . .
#Click Special
#Click on Blanks
#Click OK
#Type =
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[[User:Nricardo|Nelson Ricardo]] 00:41, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Understanding Eye Movement Patterns - does the human eye commonly move in a "flipped" number 6 motion? ==
 
I am trying to relocate a piece of information that I recall reading years ago.
It was an article / study that tracked how our eyes commonly move when we are confronted with new information - such as a new package, a new magazine cover, a billboard, a print ad, etc.
I seem to remember that the researchers discovered that our eyes commonly move in what I would call a flipped number 6. (Sorry, i am bad a trying to describe spatial stuff - so bear with me) the pattern described was as if the eye were writing a backward "6" - starting at the upper left of the picture, and scanning right and down, and looping back up and to the left - ending at about the center of the item.
Can anyone help me validate this? I have tried the following searches - and again - I am a first time user, so I may not be searching effectively:
tracking eye movement / how does the eye move when confronted with new information / how does the eye scan a page / etc - and I have had no success so far.
 
Thank you very much in advance for helping me with this.
 
CMT--[[User:61.213.181.82|61.213.181.82]] 10:45, 17 November 2005 (UTC) (is that the correct way to sign? Thanks for tolerating a first time user!)
 
<blockquote>
The term you're looking for is [[Eye tracking]], here are some related links that I'll add to the article:
* [http://www.poynterextra.org/eyetrack2004/main.htm Eyetrack III study]
* [http://www.eyetools.com/inpage/research_google_eyetracking_heatmap.htm eyetools study]
* [http://www.arringtonresearch.com/windowlayoutframes.html ViewPoint EyeTracker software]
* [http://www.a-s-l.com/5000_series.htm Applied Science Laboratories trackers]
The first document features something that vaguely looks like an inverted "6". However, it's important to note that the path that the eye takes varies quite a bit depending on what it's looking at. For example, my eyes automatically seek the upper, left-hand corner of an English document; but when confronted with Hebrew, they go to the upper right without any conscious thought on my part. When looking at artwork, my eyes tend to seek out areas of the highest contrast first and then follow contours. These trackers are very useful for determining what people notice in an advertisement, which things are distracting, and which elements are overlooked. Lastly, you did a great job asking the question. Cheers! --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 07:57, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
</blockquote>
 
:See also [[saccade]], which describes the track of the eye as more zig-zag in nature. --[[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 15:21, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Raise in temperature of a road tankers contents whilst in the sun ==
 
Is there an equation to compare the effectiveness of insulation for a stainless steel road tanker?
 
I wish to compare a insulated tank to an un-insulated tank.
 
Some facts and figures:
 
The uninsulated tank is cylindrical, 9 metres in length and 2 metres diameter and has a external surface area of 69m²
The tank is constructed from 3mm thick 304 grade stainless steel which has a thermal conductivity, k, of 16.2W/m.°C
There is 30,000kgs of liquid product inside the tank with a specific heat capacity of 3.9kJ/kg.°C
 
The product temperature is 5°C, the ambient temperature is 25°C
 
What will be the rate of temperature increase for the product in the uninsulated tank?
 
The insulated tank is the same tank as above but is insulated with a 70mm thick polystyrene external layer surrounded by a 0.7mm thick stainless steel cladding panels.
 
The polystyrene has a thermal conductivity, k, of 0.038W/m.°C
 
What will be the rate of temperature increase for the product in the insulated tank?
[[User:213.218.255.233|213.218.255.233]] 14:14, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:There is some missing info. The difference in temps between the inside and outside is critical, as is the amount of sunlight hitting the tanker and it's reflectivity. The wind, humidity, and air pressure would also play a role, as would any precipitation. If both temps are equal and it is night and there is no precip, then there should be no temp change in either case. Given the limited info you have, I would just say the ratio between the two rates of temp change would be approximately [(16.2W/m)/(0.003m)] / [(0.038W/m)/(0.07m)], if we ignore the thin layer of stainless steel on the insulated tanker. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 16:47, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Programming a gas furnace thermostat for max efficiency. ==
 
Is it better to set the temperature low when the house is unoccupied? The furnace then runs longer to raise it to a comfortable temp. when programmed to come on. Or is it better to maintain a more moderate temp. with the furnace only coming on periodically to maintain it? Also, does it use much more gas to maintain it at 70 degrees F as opposed to 65 degrees? (Note: Thermostat has available 4 changes for Mon - Fri and two for Sat-Sun)
 
Would apreciate comments 15:07, 17 November 2005 (UTC)~--[[User:4.225.202.248|4.225.202.248]] 15:07, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:A climate-control system is more efficient when the target temperature is closer to the ambient temperature (that is, a house at 80 F when it's 30 F outside cools much faster, and so requires more energy to maintain, than a house at 70 F in the same conditions). Consequently, it's better to set the thermostat low when unoccupied. Similarly, it's better to set the thermostat high in the summer to avoid unnecessary air conditioner use. &mdash; [[User:Lomn|Lomn]] | <small>[[User Talk:Lomn|Talk]] / [[User:Lomn/RfC|RfC]]</small> 15:33, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Agreed. Turn the temp down to the lowest level you can stand, in winter, to save energy. One common misperception is that a furnace that is on longer is less efficient. This is true for some variable speed engines, such as a car engine, which are less efficient when running full-out. However, a gas furnace only runs at one speed and one efficiency. In fact, running it once for a long period is actually more efficent than many short runs, since there is some inefficiency associated with poor convection during start-up and running the fan after shut-down. There are some other concerns with turning the temp low when you are gone, however:
 
* The pipes could freeze if it gets too low, especially pipes in exterior walls, such as those to outside faucets. Ideally, those pipes should be drained in winter.
 
* Low temps could be uncomfortable for some pets, like dogs, and dangerous for others, like birds or tropical fish. Measures such as a warm dog bed or heated fish tank could fix these problems.
 
* Temp variations, and the associated humidity variations, can be hard on wooden furniture. If your home is full of expensive antiques, keep the temp constant. If you have cheap furniture, don't worry about it, it will likely go out of style before it splits or warps. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 16:34, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== The flooding k's ==
 
Could there be any sensible reason why my computer occasionally starts flooding letter k's wherever the pointer happens to be? Usually it happens when I haven't touched the keyboard for, say, 15 seconds. It looks very natural and human in that it keeps short pauses and sometimes slows down. It's quite nasty when trying to formulate the next sentence in my head. The keyboard is a USB one and the OS is Debian. Thanks! &ndash;[[User:80.186.221.15|80.186.221.15]] 16:25, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I'd suggest there's a [[keylogger|broken wire]]. You need [[tinfoil hat|one of these]] to fix it. [[User:Alphax|Alphax]]&nbsp;<sup >[[User talk:Alphax|&tau;]][[Special:Emailuser/Alphax|&epsilon;]][[Special:Contributions/Alphax|&chi;]]</sup > 07:40, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:It could be a broken or incompatible keyboard. It might be a malfunctioning or incompatible USB hub, dongle or port. It might be an old kernel or USB subsystem that doesn't work properly with your keyboard. Unless you're using a common USB device and running a modern Linux kernel, you are liable to encounter problems. Try connecting your keyboard directly to different ports on the motherboard. Try unplugging the USB keyboard and use a PS2 keyboard. Try just leaving the keyboard unplugged and see if it's still happening. I seriously doubt that this is caused by a keylogger, because those are designed to be quiet, and this isn't. PS: Alphax, that wasn't funny or helpful. --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 08:23, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Familial Alzheimer Disease / Mutation ==
 
I would like to know if Familial Alzheimer disease is a spontaneous mutation, and if so what fixes the mutant allele in the population? I read a research article that refered to the allele as a "private mutation", occuring only in idividual families excluding non relatives. Is a private mutation the same as a spontaneous mutation.--[[User:131.204.83.180|131.204.83.180]] 17:40, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Our article on [[Familial Alzheimer disease]] should anwser your question. The condition is inhereted in an [[autosomal dominant]] pattern, which means that only one parent needs to have an inhereted or spontaneously mutated gene associated with FAD for the condition to be passed on, thus with about ~50% chance of the offspring getting a mutant copy of the gene, the disease then has a pretty good chance of becoming fixed in the population. I haven't come across the term "private mutation" before, but often papers focus on a particular family and this term might be being applied to the specific muation in one of the FAD associated genes common in that family.--[[User:Petaholmes|nixie]] 03:39, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:"Private mutation" is a sort-of unfortunate term. It means, essentially, "observed only in one family" - or in this case, "the correlation between this mutation and Alzheimer's is observed only in this one family". It gets stretched sometimes to "only in a few families". It's mostly used to indicate that there's no reason to use the test for screening a general population. Alzheimer's can be caused by any number of mutations, in several different genes on several different chromosomes. All mutations are spontaneous, but if it's familial the original spontaneous mutation is being transmitted genetically in the usual manner - it's not re-occurring. A mutant allele will persist in the population until it dies out by being selected against, or by chance. - [[User:Nunh-huh|Nunh-huh]] 08:11, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== nanotechnology ==
 
what is the role of a chemical engineer in nanotechnology.
 
Nanotech, as you probably know, is the science of making REALLY small things. A chemical engineer working for nanotech, therefore, focuses on making very small but useful molecules. Examples include carbon rods and "buckyballs", or buckminsterfullerene. These molecules can be used to help develop nanorobots, as the structures developed lend strength to the tiny machines.
 
[[User:Articuno1]]
 
== Groaning Islands ==
 
Robert Harris's novel Archangel mentions ferries from Archangel in Russia to a) Murmansk; and b) "the Groaning Islands". I've heard of Murmansk, but Google shows no trace of the Groaning Islands. Are they real? [[User:Markalexander100|Mark]][[User talk:Markalexander100|<sup>1</sup>]] 19:43, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Do you know the names of nearby landmarks, regions or relative directions? Did the author provide the Russian name? I used a detailed map and looked for islands whose Russian names might match along the coast from Arkhangelsk to Murmansk to Norway -- nada. I didn't have any luck with any of the Russian-language searches I tried. There are a baffling number of islands in the area, but only a few are named on the map. Many islands there served as [[Gulag|forced labor camps]], so it's possible that this was an unofficial name that reflects their gruesome history. If this was an official name, it's likely that they've since been renamed to something more pleasant. Oh well. On tangential note, I had fun looking at the map and was amazed by the bizarre names of the area's landmarks. I've translated some of them back into English for your amusement: "Ninth", "Little-Granny's-Hut", "Rounded", "Petro(leum)-Factory", "Semi-Islandish", "Fix-Up", "White-Mustache", "Big-Shelf", "Wolfy", "Third-Stream", and the mysterious "Giant-Western-Face". --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 10:15, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:: ;) My only clue is that I found a map on the net (though I can't find it again) which showed one ferry route going west to Murmansk, and another east off the edge of the map. So maybe somewhere along the coast in that direction? [[User:Markalexander100|Mark]][[User talk:Markalexander100|<sup>1</sup>]] 14:28, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::I looked in the other direction all the way to [[Hokkaido|Hokkaido, Japan]]. Once past the [[Nenets autonomous district|Nenets Okrug]], the map was basically blank and unsettled for thousands of kilometers and only the [[Severnaya Zemlya|huge islands]] had names, and none of those matched. [[Taymyria]] (population density: 1 person every 22 km^2) had a countless number of unlabeled islands. Unless someone else has a better idea, I'm afraid these islands are going to remain clandestine a bit longer. --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 21:52, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::Ah well, thanks for trying! [[User:Markalexander100|Mark]][[User talk:Markalexander100|<sup>1</sup>]] 00:11, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Could it be due to the groaning of shifting sea ice around these islands? --[[User:Eye|Eye]] 21:22, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== gallbladder ==
 
If the function of a gallbladder is to store bile to be used to help digest fat, what happens to the digestion system after a gallbladder is removed? What breaks down the fat in foods after digested? When a person does have their gallbladder removed, do they tend to be heavier due to the fat content in their system? [[User:150.176.244.119|150.176.244.119]] 20:55, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
: Like you said, the [[gallbladder]] is just a reservoir for bile produced by the liver. Removal of the gallbladder ([[cholecystectomy]]) doesn't prevent bile from reaching the small intestine; without a gallbladder, bile is delivered from the liver directly to the duodenum. So folks without gallbladders are able to digest fats just about as well as folks with gallbladders. And the process is the same: bile emulsifies fats and enzymes from the pancreas digest them. Hope that helps, [[User:Diberri|David Iberri]] ([[User talk:Diberri|talk]]) 03:03, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::I suppose the gallbladder has a function, and that might be to release the bile when it is needed, when food passes by. So lack of the bladder could reduce the efficiency of the bile (too much when it isn't needed and therefore too little when it is). So I can imagine it would still increase the chances of obesity. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 10:03, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::Actually, being obese increases the chances that your gallbladder will be removed. You'll have a hard time finding anything which demonstrates that it makes much of a difference to anyone whether they have a gallbladder or don't. - [[User:Nunh-huh|Nunh-huh]] 02:32, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::I should think an inability to digest fat would lead to weight loss, not gain, as those fats would pass thru the system unused. A negative would be diarrhea, which is also cause by fat binders like [[chitosan]] and undigestable fat substitutes, like [[olestra]]. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 16:05, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::I'm kicking myself right now. Stupid! [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 12:24, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Atomic Theory of Matter ==
 
What is the theory of Matter? Can u summarize it for me please?
 
: Reading our [[atom]] article would be a good place to start. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 23:19, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
: Also see [[atomic theory]]. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 23:20, 17 November 2005 (UTC)
 
The basic idea is that ordinary matter is composed of [[isotope]]s of the [[chemical element|elements]] in the [[periodic table]] and [[ion]]s of those atoms. Note that this excludes matter in [[nuetron star]]s, [[black hole]]s, and some other special cases. These atoms are in turn made of [[protons]], [[nuetron]]s, and [[electrons]], which are in turn composed of [[quarks]], which are in turn made of [[string theory|strings]], etc. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 15:17, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=November 18=
== Where was typhoid fever first found?? ==
:See [[Typhoid fever]]. It is as old as mankind. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 01:42, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Molar concentraion of NaOH ==
 
How do you calculate the molar concentraion of 24.05 ml of NaOH poured into 25 ml of HCL?
To help: the molar mass of NaOH is 40g/mol
:See [[molar concentration]] and '''do your own homework'''. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 01:44, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I am trying! But I do not understand how! The thing is that I don't know how to change 24.05 ml of NaOH into moles.
 
::There is something missing in your question...you need to know the concentration of that 24.05 mL of NaOH before you can proceed. Does your question sheet state what it is? If not, then assume a concentration of "X" and continue... --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 01:49, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
 
== What is cave diving? ==
 
[[Spelunking]] will probably help you. &mdash; [[User:Knowledge Seeker|Knowledge Seeker]] [[User talk:Knowledge Seeker|&#2470;]] 04:51, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
[[Cave diving]] will help you even more. [[User:DJ Clayworth|DJ Clayworth]] 21:38, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Light - Photons ==
 
1. Is light a continuous stream of photons? If so, light traveling from a distant star must connect the observer with the past in a very real way. In other words, along that continuous stream of photons some photons actually belong to part of the stream that is thousands of years older than other parts of the stream. How can such a structure exist? This stream of photons not only crosses vast distances of space, but also of time -- yet it remains a single unified structure that can carry a continous stream of information.
Gary O--[[User:65.66.151.189|65.66.151.189]] 04:06, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
: Light is made of photons, yes. And yes, photons arriving now from other star systems left many years ago. As for how such a structure can exist, you might read [[electromagnetic wave]], [[wave-particle duality]], [[photon]], [[light]], or [[speed of light]], depending on what you mean. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 04:13, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Light travels in packets of energy called [[quanta]]. - [[User:R_Lee_E|Cobra Ky]] [[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|25px]] ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:R_Lee_E talk], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/R_Lee_E contribs]) 04:15, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::: And those quanta (a general term) are called [[photon]]s, in the case of light. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 04:17, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Keep in mind nothing exists '''now''' except you. This may be the basis of subjective reality. Just like light, sound travels in waves, and takes a certain amount of time to reach you from the source; just on a much larger time scale compared to light. And even the electrical signals of your firing synapses take a finite amount of time to traverse your brain, so even '''you''' might not exist in the '''now'''. - [[User:R_Lee_E|Cobra Ky]] [[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|25px]] ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:R_Lee_E talk], [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/R_Lee_E contribs]) 04:22, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Oh yummy, that's a philosophically wonderfully confusing way of looking at things. I found the question a bit odd - how can one see the stream of light particles as a structure, as an entity. But if there is one entity one can be sure of it's the [[Self-concept|self]] (cogito ergo sum). But different parts of that self 'exist' at different moments in time. So what, then, is 'now'? If reality and therefore the 'now' is defined by me (in my case, that is) then there can't be different nows for me. Or do I exist in different nows at the same time? I'll have to sleep on this one. I feel a [[Zeno paradox]] coming up, but I don't want to go there right now (whenever that is). [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 10:36, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
Going back to the original question: think about a snapshot photograph of a stream of water coming from a water hose and that the stream is an entity of water molecules being emitted from that hose. The water molecules at the end of the stream furthest from the hose are ''older'' than the water molecules that have just come out of the hose. Now go to live action: watch as the hose is modulated (wiggled around) and watch that information travel in time to the end of the stream. I think that's the concept you are trying to capture. As always, analogies eventually fail so don't take this water stuff too far. :-) --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 02:21, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Let's see if we can unravel the question a bit further...:
:# Is light a continuous stream of photons? - This is actually quite a difficult question to answer, because there are a number of concepts which are underlying this. I would say "no, not really...it does not have to be." - keep in mind that photons are really just a particular concept for light - a particular model which describes certain behaviours of light. In reality, we don't really "know" what light is, but we know from science and systematically repeatable experiments that it ''behaves'' sometimes like particles, sometimes like waves, and sometimes like a mixture of the two. It's perfectly okay to think of light in that manner, but it is slightly misleading, as it is subtlely mixing up the particle and wave models for light.
 
:# ...If so, light traveling from a distant star must connect the observer with the past in a very real way.
:Yes, I would agree, in some sense this is the case. If you look outside on a very dark night, you are in some sense, looking at some sources of light that has travelled millions of years to you! You are literally "looking back in time!".
 
:Your comment "...This stream of photons not only crosses vast distances of space, but also of time -- yet it remains a single unified structure that can carry a continous stream of information...." -- You can think of it this way: Light is a form of energy, and in its purest form, there is nothing more to light than light itself... so in some sense there is some unity behind all this. However, I would not overextend these ideas. There is much beauty out there between physics and philosophy, and is always a good idea to know which end of the continuum you are leaning on! Hope this helps :-) --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 03:49, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Hoff Lu's Equation of Irreversibility? ==
 
I came across this, but had no idea what it is. Google doesn't give much answers. Care to shed some light?
 
-- <font color="#FF0000">'''Миборовский'''</font> <sup>[[User:Miborovsky|U]]|[[User talk:Miborovsky|T]]|[[Special:Contributions/Miborovsky|C]]|[[Special:Emailuser/Miborovsky|E]]</sup> 07:38, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== keyboard shortcut for WindowsXP to create a new folder ==
 
I had been looking for the keyboard shortcut for WindowsXP to create a new folder for a very long time, but I still can't find one.
does anyone know what it is?
I'm sick of clicking the mouse and wait for the menu pop-up, just for creating a new folder.
 
thanks! guys!
 
:Unless you're on the desktop, you can do Alt, F, W, <nowiki>[Enter]</nowiki>; alternatively, try Alt-D, Alt-F, <nowiki>[Enter], [Enter]</nowiki>. Neither is very elegant and probably not much faster than waiting for the right-click menu (which sometimes takes ''ages'', doesn't it?). Plus, either may fail if your version of Windows is not in English. There is a program advertised at [http://biglasagne.webpark.pl/downloads.html this website] which claims to be able to give you a shortcut key to create a folder using VBScript, but I haven't tried it personally (see the discussion [http://www.annoyances.org/exec/forum/win98/1065825341 on annoyances.org]), so use at your own risk. As far as I can tell, there is no built-in shortcut in Windows for creating a new folder (someone would have found it by now). Maybe in [[Windows Vista]]... Either way, Good luck! &mdash; [[User:QuantumEleven|QuantumEleven]] | [[User_talk:QuantumEleven|(talk)]] 09:21, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
: On a related note, if your context menu is taking forever to load when you right-click, you can download some freeware ([http://www.snapfiles.com/get/shellexview.html snapfiles.com]) called "ShellExView" which lets you view and enable/disable shell extensions installed on your system. Disable enough of them that you never use anyway, and your right-click menu should start appearing much more quickly. --[[User:Peruvianllama|PeruvianLlama]]<sup><small>([[User talk:Peruvianllama|spit]])</small></sup> 10:23, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Technology behind Submarines ==
 
What is the technology behind Modern Submarines? How do a submarine Sink and what does it do to come back to the surface of water? What kind of driving mechanism does it equip to steer sush a under water giant? Where does a submarine use nuclear tecnology? What will be the maximum speed of a submarine? Is there any time limit for a submarine to remain under water? What are the various components of a typical Submarine? --[[User:61.17.220.200|61.17.220.200]] 10:09, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:The Wikipedia article, [[Submarine]] would be a good place to start. Plus there are plenty of external links on that article. Also check out the [http://science.howstuffworks.com/submarine.htm howstuffworks] article. - [[User:Akamad|Akamad]] 10:48, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::With modern nuclear submarines, they can desalinate ocean water to make drinking water and produce oxygen by electrolysis. The nuclear power plant can operate for years. The physical limiting factor is then food for the crew. However, the isolation and separation from loved ones also creates a psychological limit. Perhaps having married couples on board would solve this problem, but would require more space to be devoted to "family crew compartments". Similar issues arise with long term space travel (with current technology, it takes years even to get to other planets in our own solar system). [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 15:05, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== whole cell simulation ==
 
what are virtual erythrocytes
*An [[erythrocyte]] is a red blood cell. "Virtual" means you're talking about a blood cell simulated in a computer. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 19:14, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Ports question ==
 
I understand there is a command in Command Prompt to find out what ports your firewall is using/allowing. Can somebody tell me what this command is, and perhaps a little more detail on what to do? -[[User:Rhymeless|Tim Rhymeless]] [[User talk:Rhymeless| (Er...let's shimmy)]] 10:27, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
*Assuming you're using windows, the command "netstat" will show you all the ports currently in use. Under XP, "netstat -b" will also display which applications are using which port. If you install a software firewall like Kerio or Zonealarm, you can get a friendly GUI view of the same info. --[[User:DrBob|Bob Mellish]] 16:09, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
*:You'll need to use <code>netstat -a</code> (or <code>netstat -ab</code>), or you'll only see existing connections, rather than what ports are being listened on. --[[User:Pidgeot|Pidgeot]] <small>[[User_talk:Pidgeot|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/Pidgeot|(c)]] [[Special:Emailuser/Pidgeot|(e)]]</small> 19:14, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Netstat isn't a msWindows thing. It also works on the Unix family of OS's (which includes Linux). Actually, that's probably where it came from, with the msWindows version being an imitation. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 08:56, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== septic tanks and photographic processing ==
 
Can normal developing and priniting chemicals used in B & W photogrphy damage a septic tank sewage treatment system; if yes, is there any method of filtering the chemicals from the drainage?
 
:A home septic system depends on robust anaerobic bacterial activity for its long term survival. My rule of thumb is ''can bacteria survive in this stuff''? My quess is that it is your best interest to bottle it up for disposal elsewhere. --[[User:Hydnjo|hydnjo]] [[User talk:Hydnjo|talk]] 15:46, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Polar "radiant"—? ==
 
On a globe, all meridians converge at the poles. If you wanted to express it the other way—the meridians emanate from the polar point—what would that polar point be called, the polar "radiant" (like with a meteor shower, the meteors appear to radiate from a single spot, which is called the radiant), or is there a better or more proper name?: See [http://www.geometrie.tuwien.ac.at/karto/norm11.html this image]. [[User:Kaimbridge|<b>~</b><font size="+1" color="f87217" face="system" class="title" title="Kaimbridge M. GoldChild">Kaimbridge</font><b>~</b>]] 15:51, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:In a meteor shower there is movement, so specifying a 'direction' (outward) makes sense. With meridians, that is not the case, so I wonder why you would want to use a different viewpoint and name. Put differently, they'd still be called 'poles'. What is the reason for your question? [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 09:02, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Well, because I plan on discussing "transverse graticule", where the "pole" is on the equator (imagine the pole on [http://www.geometrie.tuwien.ac.at/karto/norm11.html '''this image'''] is on the equator). I had thought the term may be "apex" or "vertex", but when its on the equator (or obliquely in between the equator and pole), those don't seem appropriate—the term I am looking for is meant to describe the meridians "sprouting" out of a single point (i.e., "radiating"), such as I tentatively have it now, in discussing the "transverse graticule's radiant". There very well may be a specific geometric (or other general math) term that names this idea that I either can't think of or haven't heard of. [[User:Kaimbridge|<b>~</b><font size="+1" color="f87217" face="system" class="title" title="Kaimbridge M. GoldChild">Kaimbridge</font><b>~</b>]] 15:10, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::There is the movement of magnetic particles along the magnetic lines of force, which eminate or terminate at the magnetic north and south poles, resulting in auroras. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 14:52, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::[[Magnetic particle]]s? Never heard of those! I thought that the magentic lines were a projection to visualise magnetism. And therefore static. If they have a direction then they must have a speed also. Do they?
:::But back to the question. Failing the magnetic field, there is no direction, like I said. The opposite alternative to 'radiant' could be 'convergent' (or 'converg''a''nt'?). A more static word could be 'node'. Which sounds conveniently similar to 'pole'. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 12:45, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::That was my term for particles affected by magnetism, which would be charged particles, including ions, free electrons, and free protons (unless you consider those to be hydrogen ions). Iron-containing particles would also be affected by magnetism, but I wouldn't expect any of them in the upper atmosphere. Also note that a [[photon]] carries the electromagnetic force, according to [[gauge boson]] theory, so could also be called a "magnetic particle". [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 07:14, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
::::Then how about "transverse vertex"? [[User:Kaimbridge|<b>~</b><font size="+1" color="f87217" face="system" class="title" title="Kaimbridge M. GoldChild">Kaimbridge</font><b>~</b>]] 15:28, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Commodore 64 Help ==
 
A Turkish user sent the following email to the Wikipedia help mailing list.
 
At my home I have a Commodore 64 which has been sitting in the cupboard for
many year without any use. Just yesterday I wnted to install it and use it.
However I forgot to use it.
 
I have some games on the cassette and I also installed all connections.
After the installation the screen (TV) came as READY. I need to run one game on the cassette however I can not remember what I write and what command I have give the COMMODORE 64 for running the game programme.
 
Please kindly send me simple explanation for that.
 
Thanls for any help you can offer him or her.
 
[[User:Capitalistroadster|Capitalistroadster]] 16:58, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
:Going from memory, you type '''list''' to list files on tape or disk. Then, you type '''load "''file''",8,1''' - but I can't remember what the ,8,1 is for. Those may not even be the correct numbers. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 18:02, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
::For disk games, you have two options. You can either try <code>LOAD "*",8,1</code> to load the first program (usually works with official disks), or you can do <code>LOAD "$",8,1</code>, <code>LIST</code>, <code>LOAD "PROGRAM NAME",8,1</code>. Either way, type <code>RUN</code> after this to start the program.
::For tapes, rewind the tape to the beginning, type <code>LOAD</code>, and press Play on the tape player. Once it finds the program, press the Commodore key. If you need to find a specific program, use <code>LOAD "PROGRAM NAME"</code> instead of just <code>LOAD</code>.
::As for what ,8,1 means, it refers to the disk drive. Actually, older versions of the C64 might not recognise the ,1 part, if memory serves me correctly. --[[User:Pidgeot|Pidgeot]] <small>[[User_talk:Pidgeot|(t)]] [[Special:Contributions/Pidgeot|(c)]] [[Special:Emailuser/Pidgeot|(e)]]</small> 19:10, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:<code>LOAD "''filename''",''device number'', 1
:The device number for the tape drive, if I remember correctly, is 1. The default for the disk drive is 8 (and 9 for a second floppy disk drive). The final '1' specifies that the code loaded should be loaded into the same place in memory that it was saved from. This allows some programs to run automatically once loaded, without requiring the use of the <code>RUN</code> command.
:If you use the LOAD command without a device number or trailing ,1 (that is, <code>LOAD "''filename''"</code>), the tape drive will be assumed. [[User:TenOfAllTrades|TenOfAllTrades]]([[User_talk:TenOfAllTrades|talk]]) 20:48, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Drilling projects ==
 
What are three or four of the deepest drilling projects on record?
 
:There is a list provided [http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2003/AdamCassino.shtml here], not too much detail though. [[User:Akamad|Akamad]] 22:58, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Prime Modular Fields ==
 
How do you prove: '''Z'''mod(n) is a fied if and only if n is prime?
 
:Start by proving it has no [[zero divisor]]s. That means it's an [[integral ___domain]], and every finite integral ___domain is a field. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 20:27, 18 November 2005 (UTC)
 
 
== Software Companies ==
 
Is there a cost implication or technical hurdle which prevents software companies adding multiplayer co-op modes to their first person shooter releases on the PC platform? :)
 
:Adding multi-player code to a game is a major undertaking that requires lots of time, planning and skilled programmers. However, once this code is written, it's easy to add the various multi-player modes, such as death-match, co-op, capture the flag, etc. I'm not sure why so few add co-op mode. --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 09:55, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::I thought the big hurdle was how differently you have to make the singleplayer (campaign) portion of the game, to allow multiple players. IE in [[Serious Sam]], it was planned from the beginning, so levels had respawn points and triggers didn't trap players behind doors and such. Whereas [[Half-Life 2]] with its precarious balance of triggers, scripting and level changes, would require a complete redesign and would probably need to scrap half the puzzles because they wouldn't work in co-op play. Co-op is a blast though! [[User:Tzarius|Tzarius]] 23:21, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=November 19=
== Fantastic ==
 
I am amazed how wikipedia functions. It seems infinetly filled with knowledge. How was this accomplished?
vedam
 
:That's the power of [[open source]], which is the power of numbers. Anyone who wishes to contribute may do so. And on Wikipedia it's instant; you don't even need to log in, a barrier used on many other sites. Suppose the number of contributors corresponds to 1% of the population of the US (where most English language contributors will come from). That would be some 3 million. Suppose in the past year they have on average spent 1 hour per day working on Wikipedia. That's 3 million x 365 = roughly 1 billion hours. There are close to 1 million articles on the English Wikipedia (ranging from stubs to very extensive articles). So on average about 1000 hours will have been spent on each article. Of course this is a very rough calculation, but the point is that the numbers are just staggering.
:Which is also the power of Linux. With 5 billion people on Earth there will always be a huge workforce of volunteers for Linux. So unless some other OS replaces it, Linux is here to stay (which can't be said for microsoft because they have to pay their employees and thus depend on revenues). The same goes for Wikipedia, but of course the number of potential contributors is much greater (few know something about the workings of OS's, but everyone knows ''something'' about ''something''). And Linux has been around for some time now. Wikipedia was started only a few years ago and has only become widely known in the last year or so.
:So the number of contributors may easily grow a tenfold (or more) in the next few years. So if you're impressed now, this is nothing. Wikipedia will take over the internet! No, seriously, one of the flaws of information on the Internet is that it is not structured. Wikipedia adds the structure that was lacking. Also, on a personal site you get personal viewpoints. Here, such pov (point of view) is less (though certainly not completely erased) by the number of contributors. I can't wait until countries like India start to get connected and contribute (at a larger scale), so the US pov's will get more opposition. We're not quite there, but still it's already huge, as you noticed. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 09:35, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:More specifically, it's one of the most successful examples of the bazaar project development model, as first explicitly described by [[Eric Raymond]] in his essay [[The Cathedral and the Bazaar]] based on his observations of the Linux development model by Linus Torvalds. It was highly innovative as one of the first large-scale applications of the model to a non-software project. Credit also has to go to the [[wiki]] concept, which provided the technical means to make it happen, [[Jimbo Wales]] for the very substantial financial contribution he has made in hosting the project and, for some time, acting as its benevolent dictator, and also, in the beginning, [[Larry Sanger]], whose early efforts to establish the culture of the place were a huge contribution. Beyond that, there's a cast of thousands who deserve credit. --[[User:Robert Merkel|Robert Merkel]] 09:54, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:And by all means, feel free to contribute to Wikipedia, check out [[Wikipedia:Welcome, newcomers]] for more info. [[User:Akamad|Akamad]] 22:54, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:[[Wikipedia:Technical FAQ]] provides some interesting information on the mechanics of how this works, what the components are, etc. Lots and lots of open-source software. As for POV, I've been impressed by what I've seen. Contributors seem enthusiastic about learning and sharing, and are open to new information, corrections and perspectives. Yay. --[[User:Avijja|Avijja]] 10:16, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Have you looked at any articles about politics? Such as [[communism]]. Or, say, [[Cuba]]. Loads of revert wars there with more stress on pov-pushing than basic info. I've largely moved away from those because you just can't 'win'. This really needs t be dealt with, and I don't really know how. Having said that, ''any'' source on these subjects is likely to be biased. It's just in the nature of the subjects. Wikipedia has the potential to overcome this pov nonsense by giving, for example, first the basic facts anyone agrees on and then ''all'' pov's, so people can make up their own minds. But as long as neutral people shy away from such articles and leave them to the pitbulls that is not likely to happen. This really is a major issue on Wikipedia. Or else it should be. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 12:40, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Even tried multi ==
 
O all-knowing Wikipedia, to whom no HTTP error is too obscure, pray tell what be the ''multi'' in the [[404 error]] text "Even tried multi"? Because [[w:Multi]] sure doesn't help. —[[User:Blotwell|Blotwell]] 07:42, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
:Pay no attention to the [[Wikipedian]]s behind the curtain. According to Google, you can search [http://www.w3.org/ here for "even tried multi" and "HTAA_MULTI_FAILED".] --[[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 11:26, 19 November 2005 (UTC) Following my own advice, I see that the URL which generated this 404 error is "Not found - file doesn't exist or is read protected [even tried multi]".
 
:Googling for the error text gives the source code of whatever Web server produces that message as the first hit. From there, I see that the error is produced in code that does "multiformat handling".
 
:Looking up "HTTP multiformat handling", it seems that the idea is to allow a URL to still be valid if a file's extension changes (because the file is put up in a different format). If the server can't find the exact file you requested, it looks for another file with the same base name and a different extension. If it fails at that, then it just gives you the 404 and informs you that it "even tried multi". '''[[User talk:Rspeer|<span style="color: #63f; text-decoration: none;">r</span>]]'''[[User:Rspeer|<span style="color: #333;">speer</span>]] 19:15, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== A nuclear reaction effect ==
 
I am trying to remember the name of a phenomenon. While touring a nuclear reactor, I remember looking into one of the cooling pools and seeing the core (or rather what one can see of the core, as it is not the core itself, obviously). There was a blue light emanating from it and I asked my dad about it. My recollection of what precisely is fuzzy (hence my desire to remember the name), but it seemed that the light was a result of super-excited particles tearing out faster than the speed of light (in water) and reacting with the water, creating the eery blue light. I recall stumbling upon the name and I believe it was Something Effect (imagine that), something being the actual name. I believe it started with an M, but I'm not certain. If someone knows the name that would be of great help, then I could read about it again.
 
--[[User:Mogman1|Mogman1]] 08:09, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:In the words of Chairman Kaga, "if I am not mistaken", that would be [[Cherenkov radiation]], caused by [[beta decay]]. - [[User:Nunh-huh|Nunh-huh]] 08:16, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
:Also spelled [[Cerenkov radiation]] --[[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 13:43, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Static electricity question ==
 
Okay, it's getting to be the time of year for cold weather, fleece jackets and static electricity. So here's a question that's baffled me for a while.
 
Suppose my jacket has acquired a lot of static charge. If I am holding or wearing the jacket and I touch something metal and grounded, I get a ''bit'' of a shock. But if I take the jacket off and touch something metal and grounded ''through'' it - so here the fleece and the metal are in contact, and my finger is not between them - I get a much larger shock.
 
The explanation I had thought of was that the more direct contact between the fleece and the metal meant there was less resistance for the static discharge, resulting in a stronger spark, and my finger would still be next to the spark and feel it.
 
But here's the weird thing. Suppose I take the jacket off and put it over the back of a chair with a metal frame, ''without'' touching the frame. There's no static discharge. But if I then touch the frame through the jacket, ''then'' I get a big static shock (and the fleece becomes much less staticky). Why does that happen? Why won't it discharge until my finger is there?
 
--'''[[User talk:Rspeer|<span style="color: #63f; text-decoration: none;">r</span>]]'''[[User:Rspeer|<span style="color: #333;">speer</span>]] 19:04, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:You must be from the northern hemisphere. Imagine the smile on the face of a Kiwi when he reads your opening sentence. :)
:Anyway, a first consideration is that when you take off the fleece jacket that will make it extra staticky (as you named it so eloquently). Other than that I can not think of an explanation. But in your last case I wonder how you would know there is no static discharge between the jacket and the chair. Do you do it in the dark to watch for sparks? [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 14:03, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Resources vs. Reserves ==
what is the difference between resources and reserves
: Check [[factors of production]] (the economic meaning of "resource") and [[reserve]] (second definition), if you're talking about economics. (I hope this isn't homework!) --[[User:AySz88|AySz88<font color="#FF9966">^</font>]][[User_talk:AySz88|<font color="#FF6633">-</font>]][[Special:Contributions/AySz88|<font color="#FF3300">^</font>]] 22:03, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Conjugate Acid/Base pairs ==
 
Would this be a correct definition of a conjugate acid/base pair: Conjuage acid/bas pair is the acid and base that is formed from the acid after the romoval of one proton. eg H<small>3</small>PO<small>4</small> / H<small>2</small>PO<small>4</small> where the H<small>3</small>PO<small>4</small> is the acid conjugate pair, and the H<small>2</small>PO<small>4</small> is the bas conjugate pair. <br> Thanks for your help --[[User:144.139.163.41|144.139.163.41]] 23:27, 19 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Yes, that's correct, except it should be H<sub>2</sub>PO<sub>4</sub>'''<sup>−</sup>''', because it's a negatively charged ion. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 02:50, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=November 20=
== Subatomic particles electric charge ==
 
Hi, was wondering if any body knows what actually gives a subatmoic particles (protons, quarks, etc.) their electrostatic/electrostatic charge??
 
Thanks,
 
Matt
 
:It's an inherent property, just like mass. To quote the [[Electric charge]] article, "Electric charge is a fundamental conserved property of some subatomic particles." --[[User:Borbrav|Borbrav]] 01:32, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:In other words, they're just like that and nobody knows why. Maybe [[God]] made them that way. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 03:02, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Charged particles attract or repel each other by the exchange of [[virtual photon]]s; maybe that will give you some enlightenment. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 03:07, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::[[Protons]] get their charge from their constituent [[quarks]], but no, as far as I knows no one knows why they have such a charge or how it arises. Incidentally, it is believed that the [[mass]] of a particle arises from interactions with hypothetical [[Higgs boson]]s; that is, without the Higgs boson particles have no inherent mass. This concept does not appear to be discussed in the [[Mass]] article, and I lack a more detailed understanding, so I cannot explain further. &mdash; [[User:Knowledge Seeker|Knowledge Seeker]] [[User talk:Knowledge Seeker|&#2470;]] 03:09, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::: It's discussed at [[Higgs boson]] and [[Higgs mechanism]], although the explanation isn't complex enough to explain fully and probably too complex for most people to read well. (A great compromise.) -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 15:49, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:For a very technical answer: in [[Quantum Field Theory]], the conservation of charge arises from the mathematical [[symmetry|symmetries]] of the [[Dirac equation]] by [[Noether's theorem]]. This method gives that [[fermion]]s have a charge of ±1 in some units&mdash;for [[electron]]s/[[positron]]s, this is ±1 [[elementary charge]]. However, it is not known why the charges of [[quark]]s are exactly ±1/3 or ±2/3 of this value, a property very important to the fact that [[atom]]s are [[neutral]]. -- [[User:SCZenz|SCZenz]] 15:49, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Choked unconscious ==
 
If you are choked unconscious with your eyes open, do they remain open for the full period of your unconsciousness?
 
:I wouldn't think so. So long as you are alive I would expect the brain's function of closing eyes when not in use to continue. However, if you were choked so near to death that significant brain damage occured, then perhaps that part of the brain would no longer work, after all. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 03:47, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== LDR history ==
 
Hi all if someone knows please tell me when is LDR (light dependent resistor) is invented and by whom. No useful results on google (searched "LDR "invented by"" and "photoresistor "invented by""). Urgently needed. Thanks! --<span style="color: #58738c;">[[User: Antilived|antilived]]</span> <sup><span style="color:#FFC16F;">[[User_talk:Antilived|T]]</span> | [[Special:Contributions/Antilived|C]]</sup> 08:16, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:You'd probably be better off searching for '[[photodiode]]'. - [[User:Mako098765|mak]]''[[User_talk:Mako098765|o]]'' 09:04, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::The first result on google have the date and person but is '[[photodiode]]' the same thing as '[[LDR]]'? As far as I can remember LDR allow current to past both ways. --<span style="color: #58738c;">[[User: Antilived|antilived]]</span> <sup><span style="color:#FFC16F;">[[User_talk:Antilived|T]]</span> | [[Special:Contributions/Antilived|C]]</sup> 09:14, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::*Nope, an LDR isn't the same thing as a photodiode. Try searching on "selenium cell", this was the first type of LDR and I think it was invented around the end of the 19th century. --[[User:DrBob|Bob Mellish]] 16:35, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== swelling under both ear ,excessive growth of gland due to face seem eagly can it cure? ==
 
Dear sir,
i have the problem regarding the swelling around both ear at the lateral part of the ear
i meet to some doctor to reduce that swelling ,but it goes invain due to such swellin on the face face seem to very eagly,
 
some doctor told it is the excessive growth of the saliva gland ,i dont know what is the actual reason behind the but it is not due to the obesity,the inflamation like the growth of laterl part of chick under ear and around the ear and on the jaw ,please sugget the remady
on this thanks
 
It would be helpful to know precisely where the swelling is. For example, swelling of the external ear, or [[pinna]], presents a completely different problem than swelling of the [[parotid gland]] or the angles of the [[mandible]].
 
Assuming your doctor is correct in that the swelling is located in the parotid gland, the problem could be any of a number of things: viral parotitis ([[mumps]]), autoimmune disease such as [[Sjögren's syndrome]] or Miculicz syndrome. An important criterion for diagnosis would include the time line of symptoms-- i.e., how suddenly the swelling appeared, and how long was its duration.
 
In any case, you might want to prevail on your doctor to provide more information, or to refer you to a facility or another doctor that can. Some of these conditions are not trivial, and their significance to health goes beyond simply being a cosmetic liability. --<br /> Mark Bornfeld DDS<br/>[http://www.dentaltwins.com dentaltwins.com]<br/>Brooklyn, NY 17:02, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I agree, consult another doctor if the first one can't help. This sounds like it could be an indication of a potentially serious condition. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 07:07, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== [[Vacuum metal deposition]] ==
 
I'd like to write a Wikipedia article on VMD, but finding sources is pretty hard. Not only that but several sources say different things. One says gold will bind to fingerprints, other says it will bind to surrounding surface. One says it will release ions, other says it releases atoms. Can someone provide a definitive or at least a reliable source detailing the procedure? - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 16:30, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
:I would suggest that your title is ambiguous, and this might be the reason for your difficulty. Do you mean to discuss [[chemical vapor deposition]] or [[sputtering]] methods? Both will produce thin films of high purity metal on surface, but by different mechanisms. [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 16:48, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
*Most sources talk about evaporation. Does that cause gold and zinc particles to ionize? - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 17:28, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
**Sounds like sputtering, which releases '''atoms''', or possibly Au<sub>2</sub> molecules in the case of gold. ''Note'': to ionise a gold atom requires 890&nbsp;kJ/mol, about the same energy as to cleave ''three'' carbon&ndash;carbon single bonds... [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 08:13, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== ph of solution when weak base added to weak acid ==
 
How does one calculate the pH of a solution when a weak acid is added to a weak base? How does the method differ to weak base and strong acid etc. Is it acid specific?
 
Such a question is off the specification for my Chemistry course, the teacher didn't know so I'm interested!
 
---DK
 
:This can be a very tricky question indeed! The answer to this questions depends on how accurate you want your calculations to be. What you need to do is to essentially use a different set of equations where the assumptions for calculating pH are slightly relaxed. --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 22:23, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Well I have no experience in the field. The general difficulty of the course is simply a weak acid-strong base or vice versa titration. Can you give me a rough plan on how to tackle such a question? They all carry the format of a volume and concentration of weak acid with the a weak base with given concentration and volume and Ka for the weak acid.
 
The general solution for the case of a weak acid/weak base leads to a [[cubic equation]] for the hydrogen ion concentration, which is obviously not simple to resolve. In general, weak acid/weak base titrations are impossible to perform with a coloured indicator or a pH meter, although they are sometimes possible by [[conductimetry]]. This is probably why they are not on your course specification. [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 07:05, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Unsuccessful diet pill ==
 
Greetings;
 
Does anyone know the name of an early unsuccessful pill that tries to interfere with the proton-motive force inside mitocondria?
 
Regards,
 
[[User:206.172.66.150|206.172.66.150]] 18:50, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
It rings of a bell, but I can't remember at the moment; what it probably does is try to make "holes" in the walls between the [[matrix (biology)|matrix]] and [[intermembrane space]] of the mitochrondria, that way, energy production from [[glucose]] is less efficient, ie. instead of 36-38 [[adenosine triphosphate|ATP]] per glucose molecule, it is 20+ or even less or something. Hence, you burn more food/glucose (and [[fat]] which is converted to glucose) for the same amount of activity. This is dangerous of course, because if it ends up being that it takes more energy to metabolize food than it produces, then you have an energy loss just by thinking or breathing, rather than merely slowing down energy production. I've come across the article before. This should lead someone else in the right direction. -- [[User:Natalinasmpf|Natalinasmpf]] 21:16, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
*Was it based on dinitrophenol (DNP)? The following [http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/phs64.html web page] was the top of the quick google search i did. [[User:Daycd|David D.]] [[User talk:Daycd|(Talk)]] 21:19, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:*That sounds just about right. -- [[User:Natalinasmpf|Natalinasmpf]] 21:37, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::*make "holes" in the walls between the [[matrix (biology)|matrix]] and [[intermembrane space]] of the mitochrondria -- Yep!!!!!!!!!!!! that sounds exactly like the material I should be addressing on my "Oxford Tutorial", in fact, the first part of that presentation talks about how the proton-motive force was setup in the first place. And I know that it's the inner mitochondrial membrane that prevents the protons from diffusing back into mitochondria, instead they have to go through specialized proteins embedded into the mitochondrial membranes called "ATP synthases" that makes ATP from the energy gained from protons going back to mitochondria. So if DNP makes "holes" in the walls of mitochondria membrane than it allows protons to diffuse back into the mitochondria, defeating the purpose of the original membrane scheme. (I'm the original question asker, I came back to school so my IP is different). Thanks a loooooooooooooooooooooooooooot [[User:129.97.252.63|129.97.252.63]] 18:46, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::* To feel comforted about your success, does this project documenting the process of [[phosphorylation]] discuss and how it was set up deal with [[endosymbiotic theory]] and how the eukaryote evolved, or are you dealing with something else? -- [[User:Natalinasmpf|Natalinasmpf]] 23:16, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
::::* Dear Natalinasmpf: actually the topic is really simple -- "Describe how the proton-motive force is set up and how interfering with the proton-motive force was the focus of an early unsuccessful diet pill.", and we're required to do a short presentation on it. No fancy topics like the endosymbiotic theory or how eukaryotes evolved -- too much for a 5-minute presentation! ;-) [[User:129.97.252.63|129.97.252.63]] 05:52, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
::::*You may want to rephrase that question, I'm not quite sure how you are trying to connect endosymbiosis to the original question? More relevant would be to consider the function of the mitochondria in brown fat with regard to babies and thermoregulation. Or to consider how plants generate heat to give off volatile chemicals, such as the arum species (the ones that smell like rotten meat), to attract flies. [[User:Daycd|David D.]] [[User talk:Daycd|(Talk)]] 23:30, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
Dinitrophenol is an "uncoupler". It dates back to the 1960s as a tool for investigating mitochondrial electron transfer in vitro and in cell cultures, but it was never marketed or even entered in clinical trials as a diet pill because of obvious toxicity potential. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 21:46, 20 November 2005 (UTC) I stand corrected. References are always better than top o' the head. Thanks for the additional info. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 22:19, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
*DNP was definitely used as a diet pill. I was just not sure if it was still on the market. Some more research shows that it was banned by the FDA in 1938. Quotes from the following paper [http://www.ispub.com/ostia/index.php?xmlFilePath=journals/ijapa/vol1n2/obesity2.xml Obesity Part 2:Pharmacotherapy] by David E Oeser, Pharm.D. are as follows:
:::"''Dinitrophenol (2,4-DNP) was introduced in 1933 for the treatment of obesity and soon found its way into numerous “anti-fat” patent medicines (Tainter et al. 1933). Dintrophenols induce weight loss by uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation, thereby markedly increasing the metabolic rate and body temperature. However, the use of these compounds was abandoned in 1937 because of reports of severe intoxications and deaths. Dinitrophenol is used currently as a wood preservative and insecticide. Tainter ML, Stockton AB, Cutting WC. Use of dinitrophenol in obesity and related conditions JAMA 1933;101:1472-5. ''"
 
:However, despite the known dangers, it appears the drug is still available. Two health pages caught my attention that said that "''It is currently being marketed and used by body builders, and is also advertised and marketed on the Internet. The extent of DNP use is unknown at this time.''" [http://www.sonoma-county.org/da/DNP_alert.htm] [http://www.oklahomapoison.org/news/index.asp?InterestID=246] [[User:Daycd|David D.]] [[User talk:Daycd|(Talk)]] 22:17, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
::Went to a body building forum and sure enough they are taking DNP [http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=567172&highlight=dnp ]. Could body builders become extinct in the near future? [[User:Daycd|David D.]] [[User talk:Daycd|(Talk)]] 23:27, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
 
Thank everyone sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo much for all these helpful hints! Now I can finish this little "Oxford Presentation" that I'm going to give tomorrow. [[User:129.97.252.63|129.97.252.63]] 18:46, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Synthesis of melanin ==
 
 
Can you help with the equation for the synthesis of melanin?
 
 
Substrate enzyme product
tyrosinase
 
See our article [[melanin]]. I put the reactions there. [[User:Alteripse|alteripse]] 22:16, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Subject: DVD programming -- scene selection menus, etc. ==
 
Does anybody have any good references for the "computational
model" underlying entertainment DVDs?
There's quite a bit of variation in the way the scene selection
and other menus work, and in the kind of effects that can
accompany the special features.
It seems that each DVD's menu tree must, in effect, be written in
some kind of programmng language, but obviously one that is
ultimately represented in some nicely device-independent form,
since the DVD's can not only be played on general-purpose
computers (both PC's and Macs) but
also of course on dedicated, single-purpose DVD players.
I'm curious to know what the specification of that "programming
language" is, and what features it supports. (And it's the
low-level, on-disk form I'm curious about, not any higher-level representation that a
particular piece of DVD authoring software might present.)
[[User:Ummit|Steve Summit]] ([[User talk:Ummit|talk]]) 19:52, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I'm not sure on the specifics, but [http://www.dvd-replica.com/DVD/productinfo.php this] page looks promising if you want the nitty gritty. All to do with [[virtual machine]]s and bytecode. [[User:Tzarius|Tzarius]] 23:08, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:: Hey, that looks like the stuff! Their full doc kit is payware, and the crippled excerpts on the site are so badly written that I'm not too inclined to pay for their "e-book" if it's more of the same, but the site gives good background, and suggests lots of terms to use for more-targeted searches. Thanks! [[User:Ummit|Steve Summit]] ([[User talk:Ummit|talk]]) 22:26, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=November 21=
== [[Arbiter (electronics)]] ==
 
Could a few people with experience in electronics and physics verify the factual accuracy of [[arbiter (electronics)]]. There has already been some discussion on the talk page and this article will be part of an RfC I will start tomorrow. &mdash;''[[User:R.Koot|R. Koot]]'' 01:10, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== ''[[E. coli]]'' size ==
 
Would someone tell me the size of an average ''E. coli'' bacterium, length and width. Thanks. -- <font color="#FF0000">'''Миборовский'''</font> <sup>[[User:Miborovsky|U]]|[[User talk:Miborovsky|T]]|[[Special:Contributions/Miborovsky|C]]|[[Special:Emailuser/Miborovsky|E]]</sup> 03:39, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I'm not so sure, but [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3607993.stm apparently] one of the weighed 665 femtograms... --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 04:14, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::"straight rods from 0.5-1 to 1.5 micrometer in diameter and from 2 to 6 nanometer in length, depending on the growth phase and environment." [http://www.pasteur.fr/recherche/unites/REG/Microbes.html]
 
:::Rozen and Lenski (2000; [[American Naturalist|Am.Nat]]. 155:24-35) reported two strains, one was 1.251 ± 0.051 x 10<sup>-15</sup> L, the other was 0.700 ± 0.008 x 10<sup>-15</sup> L
 
::::Thanks. -- <font color="#FF0000">'''Миборовский'''</font> <sup>[[User:Miborovsky|U]]|[[User talk:Miborovsky|T]]|[[Special:Contributions/Miborovsky|C]]|[[Special:Emailuser/Miborovsky|E]]</sup> 00:24, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== GARBAGE ==
 
What happens to garbage when it is thrown down the chute?
 
:It is simply passed through a process where the total [[entropy]] of the garbage is increased :-) --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 04:12, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Depending on which chute you throw it down, it either ends up in the laundry or in a [[dumpster]] and eventually on to a [[landfill]]. [[Dismas]]|[[User talk:Dismas|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 05:20, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::Some buildings also have a chute which leads to an incinerator. Those are usually marked, as not everything should be incinerated, such as a mercury thermometer. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 07:00, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::Is the speed of the garbage regulated at it goes down the shoot, or is it allowed to go as fast as it can? I imagine you could get some fast moving garbage in a high-rise building.--[[User:Commander Keane|Commander Keane]] 10:14, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::Like a cat falling off a building, it should stabilise at a certain speed due to air resistance. But in a chute the air has less freedom to escape to the sides, so presure will build up beneath the garbage. How much depends on the size of the bag and whether it is in a bag in the first place. I suppose there will be rules concerning this (especially the bag bit, which will likely make a big difference due to floppyness). [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 12:53, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::::That's the [[terminal velocity]]. Garbage is typically light enough, and garbage bins are constructed of such thick material, that the garbage won't destroy even an empty bin. However, if someone dropped a series of canon balls or bowling balls down the chute, they would make an awful noise and seriously dent an empty bin, at the very least. Rubber flaps spaced down the chute could slow the rate of descent, but would also get covered with rotting food, and stink up the chute quite a bit, unless some automated cleaning system was also installed in the chute. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 19:18, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Jump down one and see. :) I actually saw that in a film once, and they landed in the basement on a pile of garbage, which broke their fall, so make sure it hasn't just been collected. :) Once you've done this, could you tell me the results, because these chutes don't exist in the Netherlands, so I can't try it myself. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 12:53, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Calculus Problem Error ==
 
'''I've been helping a student with his calculus, but can't seem to locate the error here. Maybe you guys can help ?'''
 
- A piece of heavy stock paper is cut into a circle with a 4 inch radius. The paper is cut from one edge to the center and shaped into a cone-shaped holder. What is the max. volume of the resulting cone ?
 
:<math>V = piR^2H/3 \;</math>
 
Drawing the cross section of half the cone, we get:
 
+
|\
|.\
|..\
|...\
|....\
|.....\
|......\4
|.......\
|........\
|H........\
|..........\
|...........\
+------------+
R
 
Using the Pythagorean Theorem, we get:
 
:<math>H^2 + R^2 = 4^2 \;</math>
 
Or:
 
:<math>H^2 + R^2 = 16 \;</math>
 
Or:
 
:<math>R^2 = 16 - H^2 \;</math>
 
Or:
 
:<math>R = \sqrt{16 - H^2} \;</math>
 
We can now plug this into the volume formula:
 
:<math>V = piR^2H/3 \;</math>
 
To get:
 
:<math>V = pi[\sqrt{16 - H^2}]^2H/3 \;</math>
 
Or:
 
:<math>V = pi(16 - H^2)H/3 \;</math>
 
Or:
 
:<math>V = (16piH - H^3)/3 \;</math>
 
Or:
 
:<math>V = 16piH/3 - H^3/3 \;</math>
 
The solution is to set the first derivative equal to zero, using the power rule:
 
:<math>V' = 16pi/3 - H^2 = 0 \;</math>
 
So:
 
:<math>16pi/3 = H^2 \;</math>
 
Or:
 
:<math>\sqrt{16pi/3} = H \;</math>
 
But this gives us a cone height of 4.09, which is larger than the circle radius of 4.00 we had to start with. What went wrong ? [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 05:24, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:The error appears to be at the following step:
 
:<math>V = \frac{\pi \left ( 16-h^2 \right ) h}{3}</math>
 
:You forgot to distribute the &pi;. The next step should be:
 
:<math>V = \frac{16 \pi h - \pi h^3}{3}</math>
 
:<math>V = - \frac{\pi h^3}{3} + \frac{16 \pi h}{3}</math>
 
:<math>V' = - \pi h^2 + \frac{16 \pi}{3}</math>
 
:<math>0 = - \pi h^2 + \frac{16 \pi}{3}</math>
 
:<math>\pi h^2 = \frac{16 \pi}{3}</math>
 
:<math>h^2 = \frac {16}{3}</math>
 
:Taking the positive root only:
 
:<math>h = \sqrt {\frac{16}{3}} = \frac{4 \sqrt{3}}{3} \approx 2.309...</math> which is less than the paper circle's radius of 4.
 
:Hope that helps! (and hope that's right!) &mdash; [[User:Knowledge Seeker|Knowledge Seeker]] [[User talk:Knowledge Seeker|&#2470;]] 06:30, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Yep, that's it, just a basic math error. Thanks ! [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 06:28, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Can hypothermia/frostbite cause a person too enter a comotose state? ==
 
I'm writing a story in which a young boy in an attempt too escape a dangerous situation starts his snow mobile and drives away wearing only regular street clothes (Jeans, t shirt, hoodie). After roughly an hour of driving away completely without direction, the boy turns and only too have the machine break down on him. After over an hour of walking in the tempratures (5 - 20 below) he passes out and is later recovered and brough too a hospital. What I'm asking ultimately is if these circumstances could cause a person too enter a comotose state or unconcious state?
 
Thank you for your help.
Fullmetal[[User:66.230.81.77|66.230.81.77]] 06:17, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Severe hypothermia will cause unconciousness, but once normal body temp is restored the person is usually either awake or dead. It might be possible, in a few cases, for them to suffer oxygen depletion to the brain and some subsequent brain damage as a result which causes a coma. However, as the oxygen needs of a body in the low metabolic state of hypothermia are so low, it would take much longer than usual for this brain damage to occur. A person who has "drowned" in cold water might manage to suffer enough oxygen deprivation to end up in a coma, for example.
 
:Frostbite doesn't figure into any of this as that affects the extremities, ears, and face, not the brain. A person would be long dead before frostbite affected the brain.
 
:BTW, "unconciousness" isn't really the right term for the state of a person in severe hypothermia. While they are not concious, they also have a greatly reduced pulse rate, suppressed breathing, and much lower metabolic rate than is normally associated with unconciousness. This state most closely resembles the hibernation stage of other animals.
 
:Also, I think at those temps, for 2 hours, in those clothes, a young boy would be dead, not in hypothermia. You might want to make it a bit warmer than that. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 06:39, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Whoever said which temperature scale it was? AFAIK 5 to 20 below in your silly "Fahrenheit" thingy is colder than 5 to 20 below in Celsius which everyone else uses. &mdash; [[User:JIP|<font color="#CC0000">J</font><font color="#00CC00">I</font><font color="#0000CC">P</font>]] | [[User talk:JIP|Talk]] 08:42, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::20 below is still plenty cold in Celsius. As far as the metric system, temps seem to be the least valuable thing to change to metric, since they don't suffer from the division into groups of 3, 128, 5280, etc., like other types of measurement do under the US system. Neither system works as well in formulae as the absolute scale systems of Rankin/Kelvin. The most valuable thing to change over to metric would be time, with it's weird divisions of 60, 24, 7, 28-31, and 365.25, which make all time math a real pain. The only division we are really stuck with is the number of days in year, but the rest we could fix in a milliday. While we're at it, let's all go to UTC time and drop these silly time zones and daylight savings time, which are no longer appropriate with the Internet and other worldwide communications systems. It really is the same time everywhere, measured from the Big Bang (or Creation from your favorite diety), we just pretend the time is different in different places. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 17:50, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
*Sounds interesting, please let me know where I can read the story once you finish it. - [[User:131.211.210.16|131.211.210.16]] 08:28, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Gravity ==
What would happen if there was a place in the world where gravity was heavier, or lighter, than everywhere else? What would that place look like? If it was on sea, would the water level be different? &mdash; [[User:JIP|<font color="#CC0000">J</font><font color="#00CC00">I</font><font color="#0000CC">P</font>]] | [[User talk:JIP|Talk]] 08:41, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
:There is. All over the world local gravity varies slightly due to differences in the composition of the earth (types of rocks, densities & masses, etc). It's not really noticable though without specialist equipment. [[User:AllanHainey|AllanHainey]] 10:13, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
::However, if the gravity varied in a noticeable way, what would it cause? Would a large enough variation in gravity cause the sea level to be non-even? &mdash; [[User:JIP|<font color="#CC0000">J</font><font color="#00CC00">I</font><font color="#0000CC">P</font>]] | [[User talk:JIP|Talk]] 10:21, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
:::Most probably yes. Changes in gravitational fields already cause significant changes in sea levels &ndash; see [[tide]]. &ndash;[[User:Mysid|Mysid]] 12:43, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::Most certainly, I'd say. You'd get that if the centre of gravity of the planet weren't at the geometric centre. Maybe because a collision with another planet during the solidification stage knocked off some bits or added the metal core of the other planet to the side. That would attract the water on the surface to that side. The rock would want to go there too, but, being solid, it can't. The instability this causes would, however, probably also cause tidal friction in the rock, causing it to liquifiy, and over time (millions of years?) the heavy elements (metals and such) would move to the geometric core and things would be back to normal. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 13:10, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::Does this mean that, if by some hypothetical strange accident, there were a place in the sea (say, a few square kilometres in area) that constantly had significantly different gravity than the surrounding areas, the water level would actually be locally uneven? If the gravity in that area was heavier, there would be a mound of water standing out from the sea, and if the gravity was lighter, there would be a hole in the water? &mdash; [[User:JIP|<font color="#CC0000">J</font><font color="#00CC00">I</font><font color="#0000CC">P</font>]] | [[User talk:JIP|Talk]] 13:21, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::::::I think you have it backwards, a stronger force of gravity would cause the water level to be lower in that area. Since gravity acts over a wide area, the region would be many miles across, however. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 17:21, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::::I was intuitively thinking that water tends to flow from areas of lighter gravity to areas of higher gravity, so more water would stack up at the point of higher gravity, because water takes up space and can't move through itself. Likewise, areas of lighter gravity would tend to empty of water. But I suppose my intuition was wrong - and the concept of water flowing upwards instead of downwards seemed pretty strange anyway. &mdash; [[User:JIP|<font color="#CC0000">J</font><font color="#00CC00">I</font><font color="#0000CC">P</font>]] | [[User talk:JIP|Talk]] 18:15, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:::::You might be interested in the concept of [[mascon]]s, mass concentrations which are found in the moon, and are significant enough to cause low lunar orbits to be significantly unstable. They remain there, despite tidal effects; this is probably due to the lack of active geology, IIRC. [[User:Shimgray|Shimgray]] | [[User talk:Shimgray|talk]] | 16:50, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
:Not to ignore other comments here, but consider this - an easy way to get more gravity in one place is to have the dense center of the Earth off-center (as mentioned). Then, the Earth would wobble, not spin. It spins on the center of mass, not the geometric center. But, there's one more issue - the sun. The center of the Earth is attracted to the sun - but if the center was off-center, there would be a strong pull of one side of the Earth toward the sun. Eventually, that side would always face the sun. Perhaps the spin would change so that the planet would roll around in orbit with the north pole pointing right at the Sun (I think Uranus does that). It could also slow down so it makes one rotation each orbit around the sun (keeping the same side facing the sun) just like the Moon does around Earth. --[[User:Kainaw|Kainaw]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Kainaw|(talk)]]</sup></small> 21:37, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
==Solar power for the USA==
Hi. I read a while ago that an array of photovoltaic solar panels 100 miles square in the Nevada desert or Arizona would generate enough electricity to meet all USA power needs. My question is how much would this cost (& how does this compare to the total cost of a nuclear power plant - including decomissioning cost & storage of radioactive material, etc). I'd assume that the solar array would need to be raised off the ground (say enough to allow a car to drive under it) for maintenance & that the solar panels should tilt (both to catch the sun better & to knock off any dust/sand that blew onto them) so some engineering cost would be needed as well as the costs of the panels. Anyone have any ideas? [[User:AllanHainey|AllanHainey]] 10:13, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Don't forget the ''energy cost''. Manufacturing anything consumes energy, so this has to be subtracted from the energy benefits over the lifetime of the item. It used to be said that manufacturing a solar panel consumed more energy that the panel could ever generate. I read that recent innovations have improved this. But still, we still might not have enough energy and other raw materials to manufacture 10000 square miles of solar panel. Also, transporting energy has significant losses. Could electricity be delivered from Arizona to New York without losing most of it? Did the original calculation just add up the electricity generated (locally) and ignore increased distribution costs? Just some things to factor in. [[User:Notinasnaid|Notinasnaid]] 12:13, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I'm pretty sure it will have been meant in a for-the-sake-of-argument kind of way. It would be stupid to focus totally on one energy source (or one source of anything for that matter). Just as it was stupid to totally focus on first coal and then (now) on oil. How constant is the sunshine in Arizona? Probably very constant now, which will be the reason to put the panels there. But climatic change will be global warming ''globally'', but ''locally'' anything can happen. What if Arizona becomes occasionally cloudy in 50 years? You'd need another energy source to compensate for that. To add to Notinasnaid's observations, how would you run a car in Vermont on solar power generated in Arizona? Either the power would have to be put into some fluid fuel the car can drive on or the car engine would have to be replaced. And that sort of thing takes time. Vermont had better find its own energy source. By the way, about the distribution cost, I mentioned in another thread that the investments in the infrastructure for the distribution of oil-products have already been made. For other energy sources we have to start anew, which is one cause for the delay in changes. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 14:05, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::There is one other huge problem with how constant the sunshine is in Arizona...it tends to stop completely every night. Unless we want the power supply to stop at sunset, some method would be needed to replace the missing electricity, such as another power source that could be fired up each night or some massive battery storage system, which would have losses of it's own, and require a great deal of energy to create, and potentially might contain many toxic materials. Also note that this huge array of solar panels would be roughly equivalent to paving all that land as far as environmental damage. No plants could grow, due to the lack of sunlight, and no animals could eat the plants, and no animals could eat those animals, etc. This would potentially wipe out many species, such as the [[saguaro cactus]].
 
::There is one source of energy which we could rely on exclusively: nuclear fission. Unless the laws of physics change, that should continue to work until all radioactive material on the planet has been used up. As this is many million years from now, nuclear fusion, which doesn't require radioactive materials, should be perfected by then. The current foolish placement of nuclear reactors on the surface near populated areas would need to be changed, however. A sensible place for them would be in an old mine, on stable ground, in remote areas, with cooling towers and a military base on the surface above them. The cooling towers don't contain any highly radioactive material, so are safe, if attacked, although their destruction could take the plant offline. Hence the need for the military base with anti-aircraft missiles and anti-missile missiles, as well as concrete barriers to prevent truck bombs from reaching the towers. Radioactive waste could be stored permanently within the mine, not foolishly shipped around the country in search of a permanent home, as is done now. A breeder reactor and facility for refining the fissable material could also be located in the mine, so only slightly radioactive material needs to be shipped in, under heavy guard, from where it is mined. An underground electrical distribution system would also be needed, as high tension power lines are another natural target for terrorists. Reliance on nuclear power and electric/hydrogen fuel cell cars would significantly reduce carbon emissions and hence global warming, and would also end the dependence on foreign oil which leaves the world vulnerable to the actions of unstable governments. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 17:06, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Mathematical shape ==
Is there any special name for the shape generated by <math>\{ x \in R^2 | |x| < 1 \and |x| \notin Q \}</math>, which I think has non-zero area but no interior points? &mdash; [[User:JIP|<font color="#CC0000">J</font><font color="#00CC00">I</font><font color="#0000CC">P</font>]] | [[User talk:JIP|Talk]] 11:39, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Not sure, but this immediately made me think of [[z-transforms]] and certain implementable poles and zeroes... --[[User:HappyCamper|HappyCamper]] 11:47, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
You might want to include a pic or link to the pic. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 16:38, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
:Any picture would only be a crude approximation, as this is all about infinite numbers. To be specific, it's an infinite series of concentric rings, all of which have radii less than 1. None of the rings touch or intersect each other, but no matter how closely you look at it, the gaps between them won't increase, as between any two rings there's another ring. &mdash; [[User:JIP|<font color="#CC0000">J</font><font color="#00CC00">I</font><font color="#0000CC">P</font>]] | [[User talk:JIP|Talk]] 18:12, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
I don't think it has a specific name, as a shape, but the set might be named after whichever mathematician first thought it interesting enough to publish on. I'm also not an expert on such things, but it sounds distinctly [[fractal]]-ish. It also reminded me a little of the [[Cantor set]], which is similarly impossible to properly represent with a picture (or even really visualize, for that matter). --[[User:Peruvianllama|PeruvianLlama]]<sup><small>([[User talk:Peruvianllama|spit]])</small></sup> 22:34, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Solution (in chemistry) ==
 
Can the elements in a solution be seperated back out into their original form? Does a solution act as a mixture or as a compound, or can a solution act as both depending on the elements in solution?
*Yes, as long as those elements didn't react with each other (or the water) it should be possible to separate them again. How easy it is to do depends on what elements you are talking about. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 14:15, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
One thing one should realise, that yes, you can separate solutions' components if they did not react, but every time you mix them, you increase the total [[entropy]] in the system. -- [[User:Natalinasmpf|Natalinasmpf]] 23:06, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
*This is an experiment you can do at home kids! Dissolve a couple of teaspoons of salt in a glass of water. Pour the water into a shallow dish and leave in a warm place for a couple of days. You retrieve the salt unchanged. We do it in 8th Grade in France (and sometimes in 4th Grade as well, depending on the school). [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 07:16, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
**But you won't get nice, big, pourable salt grains, of course. You just get a dish with a salty crust covering it. <tt>:)</tt> Not really it's "original form", ''per se'', but still salt, I suppose, and it's still a good experiment. In fact, I think some of the dishes in my sink might be performing it right now, unfortunately... <span class="user-sig user-horsepunchkid">&mdash;[[User:HorsePunchKid|<span style="font-family:monospace;font-variant:small-caps;cursor:crosshair;white-space:nowrap;">HorsePunchKid</span>]]&rarr;[[User talk:HorsePunchKid|<span style="color:#070;cursor:help;" title="Kame-san says: Talk to me!">&#x9F9C;</span>]] <span class="user-sig-date">[[2005-10-22]]&nbsp;07:20:33[[ISO 8601|Z]]</span></span>
 
== fiber optics ==
 
How data is trasnfarred through fiber optics?
*See [[optical fiber]] and [http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/fiber-optic.htm the HowStuffWorks article on Fiber optics]. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 14:11, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
After edit conflict:
:Ehm... optically. In other words, it's light that is sent through the fibres, which remains confined to the fibre because it bounces off the walls. That's what I know from the top of my head. For more see [[fibre optics]]. [[User:DirkvdM|DirkvdM]] 14:16, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== mathematics ==
 
how e=mc2
*Please read the instructions at the top of the page:
::'''Be specific''' - explain your question in detail if necessary, addressing exactly what you'd like answered.
This means that you should ask your question using a full sentence, preferably more. - [[User:MacGyverMagic|Mgm]]|[[User talk:MacGyverMagic|<sup>(talk)</sup>]] 14:18, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Oh come on, I think ''How E=mc²?'' is a perfectly good sentence. =P Well, maybe it should be ''How does E=mc²?''. Anyway, we have an article on [[E=mc²]]. —[[User:Keenan Pepper|Keenan Pepper]] 15:07, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
::Because energy has mass. Everything exhibit both wavelike and particulate properties, therefore E=mc². One cool implication of this is that when [[absolute zero]] is reached, nothing exists. -- <font color="#FF0000">'''Миборовский'''</font> <sup>[[User:Miborovsky|U]]|[[User talk:Miborovsky|T]]|[[Special:Contributions/Miborovsky|C]]|[[Special:Emailuser/Miborovsky|E]]</sup> 00:28, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
:::You haven't read our article on [[zero point energy]], obviously! [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 07:18, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Internet telephony ==
 
How will a Internet telephone be?
Is Vonage a Internet telephone?
What is the minimum speed/bandwidth that a Internet telephone need?
Should I have a Internet connection in my area to have a vonage phone?
What is the quality of calls made in a Internet phone?
Is it similar & continuous like any other ordinary phone?
Will I get a Internet conection with vonage or is it seperate?
 
: See [[Internet telephony]]. --[[User:Diberri|David Iberri]] ([[User talk:Diberri|talk]]) 22:33, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== stomiatoid fish ==
 
i need to know what a stomiatoid fish is, what it eats, the climate in which it lives, etc. thank you [[User:68.38.82.246|68.38.82.246]] 15:03, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
:Take a look at [http://www.gma.org/fogm/Stomiatids.htm Stomioides nicholsi]. --[[User:JWSchmidt|JWSchmidt]] 16:03, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Pit M1 against M3? ==
 
The [[M3 Lee]] is a [[World War II]] [[tank]] with a 51 mm front armor made of ordinary steel. If a modern [[M1 Abrams|M1A2]] tank fires a round of 120 mm armour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot ([[APFSDS]]) at it at close range, would the [[depleted uranium]] [[kinetic energy penetrator]] fly straight through it from head to tail?
 
Since the M3's steel armor is not too slanted, the effective thickness of armor cannot be too thick. I think many modern penetrator can easily 500 mm.
 
Then how about a 75 mm thick [[M4 Sherman]] or an 180 mm thick [[Patton tank]] if you only have steel plates?
 
Can several modern tanks sink a heavily armored WW2 main battleship if the ship stays within their effective firing range? I mean you can aim at a point slightly below its water line. And if a tank cannot destroy all watertight compartments, several tanks may carry the required amount of ammunition. -- [[User:Toytoy|Toytoy]] 16:56, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
IIRC, velocity tends to decrease rather sharpy (even if it is only one or two feet) after entering the water, ironically high powered weapons suffer this even more, unless it is equipped to travel through water, such as a tank-fired [[torpedo]]? :D. -- [[User:Natalinasmpf|Natalinasmpf]] 23:04, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
: I guess not either. The penetrator will bounce once it hits water surface. All you can do is to shoot anywhere above waterline but that's not too harmful. Even if the penetrator could penetrate below waterline hull, the 2-3 cm diameter and its also small fins does not punch a big hole. If you don't use depleted uranium that burns when it hits target, a small clean-cut hole with low water pressure can be repaired by trained sailors in minutes. Even if you have a dozen tanks firing at a battleship at will, you may not do too much damage.
 
: Ship hulls have at least two spaced layers. Even if you managed to punch multiple holes below waterline to a single water-tight compartment, the filled water would easily stop further damage by making the penetrators unable to hit the other wall. -- [[User:Toytoy|Toytoy]] 00:40, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Scanning and filing recipes ==
 
Hi &mdash;
 
I've got a huge stack of NYT (& other) recipes clipped from newspapers. Now this stack is rather unweildy. Does anyone know of any software which I could use to scan the recipes in and then 1) convert the image to text, and 2) be able to recognize ingredients or keywords and allow the creation of a searchable index?
 
I know that ''1'' exists (anyone know of open-source/freeware, though?), but no idea about ''2''.
 
Thanks! &mdash; [[User:Asbestos|Asbestos]] | [[User talk:Asbestos|<FONT COLOR="#808080">Talk </FONT>]] [[User:Asbestos/RFC|<FONT COLOR="#808080"><small>(RFC)</small></FONT>]] 17:24, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I believe most scanners comes with their own OCR (Optical Character Recognition) software, so you could use that for free. With newspaper clippings, you will need to be careful in adjusting the threshold to avoid "bleed thru" from the other side of the page, which will throw off the OCR software. The indexing is a more difficult issue. Just looking for keywords doesn't work very well. If you've used a Google search you see how many unrelated things are found in any search. For eggsample, if you were trying to list "egg dishes" as a category, you would also get things which are not egg dishes, but only contain small amounts of egg as part of the recipe. I think you would do better to manually index and categorize them, say by dragging them into folders for each type of recipe, and then adding indexes for other ways to organize recips, like low-fat, low-carbs, low-protein (for those cult leaders interested in brainwashing their followers), etc. [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 18:37, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
::[http://jocr.sourceforge.net/ GOCR] is an open-source [[optical character recognition|OCR]] program. &ndash;[[User:Mysid|Mysid]] 08:01, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
=November 22=
== White Opossums ==
 
A reader in Memphis, Tennessee sent the following question to the help desk.
 
I spotted a WHITE opossum last night in my back yard. I do have a picture (happy to send if you want) of it (it came up to my sliding glass back door) and it is fully white, not a speck of grey, brown or black on it. Is this a common color for some opossums? I don't think it is but wanted to ask.
 
Any help you can give him would be greatly appreciated.
 
[[User:Capitalistroadster|Capitalistroadster]] 02:41, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
*I bet it looked kinda like [http://www.visualsunlimited.com/browse/vu214/vu214000.html this.] And enature.com has a brief discussion of [http://www.enature.com/expert/expert_show_question.asp?questionID=24744 albinism in opossums]. --[[User:Jpgordon|jpgordon]][[User talk:Jpgordon|&#8711;&#8710;&#8711;&#8710;]] 04:22, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Theories on the speed of the Tyrannosaurus rex ==
 
There have been many different theories on wheather the T-rex was fast or slow. Does any scientist out there know which theory is currently most excepted by the scientific community? (fast or slow) [[User:Banana04131|Banana04131]] 04:45, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:It certainly looks to me like it's built for speed, and any predator has to be fast enough to catch it's prey (or have some other way to trap them). [[User:StuRat|StuRat]] 05:41, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Hydrolosis ==
 
Why does hydrolosis of starch take longer than hydrolysis of sucrose? --[[User:69.165.33.225|69.165.33.225]] 05:35, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I am not a chemist, but my guess would be that it's because [[starch]] is insoluble in water, whereas [[sucrose]] is soluble. So the starch will not dissolve, leaving it in larger clumps with low surface area, but the sucrose would dissolve, vastly increasing its surface area and making it easier for [[hydrolysis]] to occur. <span class="user-sig user-horsepunchkid">&mdash;[[User:HorsePunchKid|<span style="font-family:monospace;font-variant:small-caps;cursor:crosshair;white-space:nowrap;">HorsePunchKid</span>]]&rarr;[[User talk:HorsePunchKid|<span style="color:#070;cursor:help;" title="Kame-san says: Talk to me!">&#x9F9C;</span>]] <span class="user-sig-date">[[2005-10-22]]&nbsp;06:13:33[[ISO 8601|Z]]</span></span>
 
== The pills that the Goebbel children took ==
 
Greetings:
 
Does anyone know of the name of the pills that Mrs. Goebbel forced her children to bite in "Der Untergang"? It seems like such a quick and painless death. I would like to know where I can buy them so that I could use them in times of need.
 
Regards,
 
[[User:129.97.252.63|129.97.252.63]] 05:55, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:I didn't see the film, but it seems that at this point the director had to take some liberties, because it is not certain how Magda Goebbels killed her children; according to the [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magda_Goebbels#Mord_an_den_Kindern_und_Selbstt.C3.B6tung German Wikipedia] she most likely gave them cacao with some kind of barbiturate, which would not lead to a very speedy death, I think. [[Magda Goebbels|Our article]] says she first put them to sleep with morphine and then fed them cyanide, which kills quickly but not without pains and convulsions. Maybe it's better to live. [[User:David Sneek|David Sneek]] 07:27, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
::A quick and painless death is something of an [[oxymoron]] in [[toxicology]]: you can have quick or you can have painless, but not both. [[Cleopatra]] is said to have conducted numerous experiments on prisoners before choosing [[asp (reptile)|asp]] [[venom]] as her means of suicide. [[User:Physchim62|Physchim62]] [[User talk:Physchim62|(talk)]] 07:49, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Biochemistry question ==
 
How would I arrange these terms from least to greatest by "representative size"?:
*[[triglyceride]]
*[[disaccharide]]
*[[carbon]] [[atom]]
*[[protein]]
*[[carboxylic acid]]
 
I assume the atom would be the smallest, and the disaccaride quite large, but I'm abysmal at [[biochemistry]]. Can anyone lend a hand? [[User:Neutrality|Neutrality]]<sup>[[User talk:Neutrality|talk]]</sup> 05:59, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
:Does "representative size" have some concrete definition in biochemistry? All I could think is that they're asking for the typical [[molecular weight]], though obviously in the case of proteins and such, that can vary a lot. Here's roughly what I'd guess in that case, though you'll probably need to research each one to get an accurate weight:
:#carbon atom (element, very small)
:#carboxylic acid (simple acid, pretty small still)
:#disaccharide (just about the simplest sugar you can have)
:#triglyceride (big but simple fatty acid)
:#protein (can be huge)
:Hope that helps! <span class="user-sig user-horsepunchkid">&mdash;[[User:HorsePunchKid|<span style="font-family:monospace;font-variant:small-caps;cursor:crosshair;white-space:nowrap;">HorsePunchKid</span>]]&rarr;[[User talk:HorsePunchKid|<span style="color:#070;cursor:help;" title="Kame-san says: Talk to me!">&#x9F9C;</span>]] <span class="user-sig-date">[[2005-10-22]]&nbsp;06:08:13[[ISO 8601|Z]]</span></span>
 
== Getting sound on Debian Linux ==
 
I'm new to Linux, and I love it, except for the fact that I can't get sound to work. I tried Google and tried one website's solution, but it didn't work for some reason. I'm running GNOME desktop environment on a Dell Latitude D810, if that helps. If there's anything more you need me to tell you, just ask. I really miss being able to listen to CDs, so any help you huys can offer would be great. Thanks in advance!
 
:One place you might get some instant feedback help is #debian on irc.debian.org. Be warned, they're sometimes a little less polite than you might hope.
 
:Things to check first. Type "gnome-volume-control" at the command line and see whether your soundcard has been detected (and if so, what chipset it is). If it's been detected, turn the volume up on the CD channel (I know this sounds insulting but some people forget to check). If not, run the "lspci" command to find out what's actually in your computer.
 
:One other important question people will want to know is what version of Debian you're running, and whether you have a custom kernel. --[[User:Robert Merkel|Robert Merkel]] 06:17, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== biology ==
 
Hope you can help me. Here in my question? _____________________ is the change with in a population. Some individuals with in this population posses certain characteristics/adaptations and those will prodouce more off spring?
 
I need to know the word meaning in the blank above.
Thank you Mike
:Do you think this might be less obvious as a homework question if you rephrased the question in your own words? Have you checked out the population genetics pages on the web? [[User:Daycd|David D.]] [[User talk:Daycd|(Talk)]] 07:06, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
 
== Need help about pig's behaviour ==
 
Hi!I'm Anne, i need some information about pig's natural behaviour. Actually i do my research on that. Please help me.Thank you
 
With regard to [http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=pig's+natural+behaviour&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 pig's natural behaviour] I would have thought a google search would be pretty productive. [[User:Daycd|David D.]] [[User talk:Daycd|(Talk)]] 07:54, 22 November 2005 (UTC)