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Previously on "Science in Secondary Schools"

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  • Zippy
    replied
    Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
    ok.
    are you still there ?


    No. I'm hiding behind the sofa like I do when the Jehovah's Witnesses come round

    Leave a comment:


  • Menelaus
    replied
    Originally posted by ASB View Post
    Why not just butter the cats back to produce a perpetual motion machine just before it hits the ground? Won't need to worry about whether it's alive, dead or a probability thingy then anyway.
    Good idea. Wrap copper wire around it and attach a couple of magnets - you'd be able to generate a small electrical current

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by Menelaus View Post
    ... a third state...
    Bloody Furious

    Leave a comment:


  • ASB
    replied
    Why not just butter the cats back to produce a perpetual motion machine just before it hits the ground? Won't need to worry about whether it's alive, dead or a probability thingy then anyway.

    Leave a comment:


  • Menelaus
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    So the cat is either dead or not dead... which is it?
    Neither - that's the point of the experiment; it's in a third state, hence cat-as-waveform

    Leave a comment:


  • Menelaus
    replied
    Originally posted by BrowneIssue View Post
    We made a rail gun in physics.

    PK & I nearly made TNT in A level Chemistry but we got stopped about ten minutes from finishing. There's nothing like boiling concentrated nitric acid fumes corroding a rubber bung to attract a Chemistry teacher's attention...

    ... except a reputation.
    Sweet! I was tulip at chemistry, I'm afraid - hence getting an E (and I don't mean the street parlance for MDMA either, more's the pity)

    Leave a comment:


  • BrowneIssue
    replied
    Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
    If you'd paid attention in Physics you'd have learned how to make really really big explosives.
    We made a rail gun in physics.

    PK & I nearly made TNT in A level Chemistry but we got stopped about ten minutes from finishing. There's nothing like boiling concentrated nitric acid fumes corroding a rubber bung to attract a Chemistry teacher's attention...

    ... except a reputation.

    Leave a comment:


  • Menelaus
    replied
    Originally posted by BrowneIssue View Post
    Damn! You had to ask the question. Now the uncertainty has collapsed.

    He might have been, had you not asked.
    ah, cat as waveform

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by darmstadt View Post
    ...Chemistry taught me the basics of making explosives...and Physics, erm, sleeping.
    If you'd paid attention in Physics you'd have learned how to make really really big explosives.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrowneIssue
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost


    Is Shrodinger coming into this soon?

    Damn! You had to ask the question. Now the uncertainty has collapsed.

    He might have been, had you not asked.

    Leave a comment:


  • Menelaus
    replied
    Originally posted by BrowneIssue View Post
    He joined the Armed Forces. So, yes, I suppose.
    Oi! Not all service personnel are psychopaths.

    Some of us left the services well-adjusted. Now, excuse me whilst I have this session of sitting in the corner with my nervous twitch.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrowneIssue
    replied
    Originally posted by Pogle View Post
    Did he grow up to be a psychopath?
    He joined the Armed Forces. So, yes, I suppose.

    Leave a comment:


  • EternalOptimist
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost


    Is Shrodinger coming into this soon?

    damn that lizard. trumped me again



    Leave a comment:


  • expat
    replied
    Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
    If you drop a cat or a guinea pig from the fifth floor it probably won’t die as it’s terminal velocity is much lower than that of a human and insufficient to kill it as long as it lands on its legs. It may well have sore legs for a while though, and I’m not suggesting people throw cats or guinea pigs out of windows. Save that treatment for uppity project managers and agents.
    You can drop a mouse down a thirty-yard mine shaft, and on arriving at the bottom, it gets a slight shock and walks away - a rat is killed, a man broken, and a horse splashes.
    -- JBS Haldane

    Leave a comment:


  • Pogle
    replied
    Originally posted by BrowneIssue View Post
    When I was ickle, my big bruvva showed me the correct way to throw a cat.

    You pick it up one handed with your hand under its ribcage / tummy. Then lift your arm very fast and at the last moment pull your hand back (with fingers bent) so as to get the cat spinning fast.

    The cat will stick its legs out rigidly in an attempt to do something when it lands. That's the amusing bit. This ensures that when the spinning cat hits the ground, it won't be getting up in a rush. Not with a maximum of three functional legs, anyway. That's the non-amusing bit.

    NB: I only attended the lecture; I have never attempted to reproduce the experiment.
    Did he grow up to be a psychopath?

    Leave a comment:

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