Blogs
 


  Oddworld Forums > Blogs > I, BM


I, BM

299 792 458 m·s^−1 6.67384(80)×10−11 m³·kg^−1·s−2 6.626 069 57(29) × 10^−34 J·s 1.054 571 726(47) × 10^−34 J·s 4π × 10^−7 N·A^−2 = 1.256 637 061... × 10^−6 N·A^−2 8.854 187 817... × 10^−12 F·m−1 376.730 313 461... Ω 8.987 551 787... × 109 N·m²·C^−2 1.602 176 565(35) × 10^−19 C 9.274 009 68(20) × 10^−24 J·T^−1 7.748 091 7346(25) × 10^−5 S 12 906.403 7217(42) Ω 4.835 978 70(11) × 10^14 Hz·V−1 2.067 833 758(46) × 10^−15 Wb 5.050 783 53(11) × 10^−27 J·T^−1 25 812.807 4434(84) Ω 5.291 772 1092(17) × 10^−11 m 2.817 940 3267(27) × 10^−15 m 9.109 382 91(40) × 10^−31 kg 1.166 364(5) × 10^−5 GeV^−2 7.297 352 5698(24) × 10^−3 4.359 744 34(19) × 10^−18 J 1.672 621 777(74) × 10^−27 kg 3.636 947 5520(24) × 10^−4 m² s^−1 10 973 731.568 539(55) m^−1 6.652 458 734(13) × 10^−29 m² 0.2223(21) 1.660 538 921(73) × 10^−27 kg 6.022 141 29(27) × 10^23 mol^−1

Science This is where those blogs I have written that pertain to science will go. If you needed this description to tell you that, you're clearly reading the wrong person's blog.

I was wrong. THIS is the best thing Experimental Vibrational Analysis for Hire.

Posted 12-13-2008 at 08:41 PM by Bullet Magnet
Updated 12-13-2008 at 09:09 PM by Bullet Magnet
Visual Image Reconstruction from Human Brain Activity using a Combination of Multiscale Local Image Decoders

I'll make this as simple as I can for you.

This is the image that the subject looked at.
v
^
And this is the image that Now Yukiyasu Kamitani at ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories in Kyoto, Japan, directly extracted from the subject's brain via an
...
Posted in Science
Comments 21 Trackbacks 0

This is the best thing EVAH

Posted 12-12-2008 at 07:11 PM by Bullet Magnet
Posted in Science
Comments 10 Trackbacks 0

Here Be Dragons: a guide to critical thinking.

Posted 12-08-2008 at 08:01 PM by Bullet Magnet
Updated 12-08-2008 at 08:19 PM by Bullet Magnet
If you have forty minutes to spare, I strongly advise you to spend them watching this video. To some, I'm sure it is preaching to the choir, but it never hurts to ensure you are remaining vigilant. Watch it, learn it, pass it on, and stop the madness.

Posted in Science
Comments 6 Trackbacks 0

The one time a muggle beats a scientist.

Posted 11-28-2008 at 03:06 AM by Bullet Magnet
Updated 11-28-2008 at 03:47 AM by Bullet Magnet
This was too brilliant not to share.

The Difference
Posted in Science
Comments 12 Trackbacks 0

Canadian prairie assaulted by extraterrestrial source!

Posted 11-23-2008 at 09:06 PM by Bullet Magnet
Around 5:30 p.m. MT (7:30 p.m. ET), 22nd of November, a fireball was seen in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, western Ontario and even North Dakota. It crashed into Alberta-Saskatchewan border, and probably left a few fragments that scientists are searching for even as we speak.

The dashboard camera of an Edmonton, Alberta, police car recorded the whole thing:

Posted in Science
Comments 10 Trackbacks 0

A sea biscuit's life.

Posted 11-17-2008 at 01:47 PM by Bullet Magnet
Clypeaster subdepressus, more commonly known as the sea biscuit or sand dollar, is a common coastal Echinoid, or sea urchin. Echinoderms like these are deuterostomes like us, meaning we are more closely related to them than the seemingly more similar arthropods, annelid worms and molluscs, who at least have a complete nervous system and unfailingly both a mouth and and anus.

This charming video portrays the beautiful development cycle of a sea biscuit from fertilisation to final metamorphosis....
Posted in Science
Comments 1 Trackbacks 0

A near miss.

Posted 11-07-2008 at 05:45 AM by Bullet Magnet
This image is nothing short of horrifying.


Heeeeelp meeeeeee! Heeeeelp meeeeeee!
Posted in Science
Comments 8 Trackbacks 0

Mosasaur

Posted 10-31-2008 at 12:43 PM by Bullet Magnet
Updated 10-31-2008 at 12:51 PM by Bullet Magnet
This is the most awesome fossil ever.

I challenge you to find better, bearing in mind that you will be judged against my own personal preferences and therefore have most likely already lost.

Mosasaurs were squamates, even lepidosaurs, like snakes and lizards, making them, of all the Mesozoic vertebrates, most justified in having the suffix "-saur" in their genera.
Posted in Science
Comments 8 Trackbacks 0


Whaaaaaaaaaaaat?

Posted 10-22-2008 at 09:16 AM by Bullet Magnet
Someone explain this to me.

Posted in Science
Comments 8 Trackbacks 0





 
 
- Oddworld Forums - -