Originally posted by DimPrawn
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Fascinating and useful fact thread
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To nit-pick, the official definition of weights and measures as used in commerce defines weight to be that of a measurement of mass rather than a force (unlike most physics interpretations), so you always weigh the same, on the moon as well as under it. -
If you fold a bit of paper a mere 100 times, it would be 12 billion light years in length. Which is about the radius of the known universe. Has anyone told NASA?Comment
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Yes;Originally posted by GillsMan View PostIf you fold a bit of paper a mere 100 times, it would be 12 billion light years in length. Which is about the radius of the known universe. Has anyone told NASA?
And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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I make it a million million light years.Originally posted by GillsMan View PostIf you fold a bit of paper a mere 100 times, it would be 12 billion light years in length. Which is about the radius of the known universe. Has anyone told NASA?Comment
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Sorry but names of phobias, and collective nouns, are not interesting to adults.
There should be a name for that fact.Job motivation: how the powerful steal from the stupid.Comment
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Scientists have determined that of all known facts, 87.37% are not actually true.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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Think you're mixed up here. Mass is always the same, weight is the measurement of the force acting on a mass, therefore it will be different depending where you are (Earth / Moon etc). Weight is also a vector.Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostTo nit-pick, the official definition of weights and measures as used in commerce defines weight to be that of a measurement of mass rather than a force (unlike most physics interpretations), so you always weigh the same, on the moon as well as under it.It's about time I changed this sig...Comment
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Did you even read what I wrote?Originally posted by MrRobin View PostThink you're mixed up here. Mass is always the same, weight is the measurement of the force acting on a mass, therefore it will be different depending where you are (Earth / Moon etc). Weight is also a vector.Comment
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...and the remaining 125% don't understand percentages.Originally posted by TimberWolf View Post4 out of 3 people don't understand fractions.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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