It's just a big stone, really
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But it proves that small objects can impact bigger objects. Besides...millions of people walk that street every day. Thus it would stand to reason that the concrete is strong and well made. David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
David Stone wrote: Besides...millions of people walk that street every day. Thus it would stand to reason that the concrete is strong and well made. If everyone was to walk around wearing sharpened high-heeled shoes that would not necessarily be the case. David Stone wrote: But it proves that small objects can impact bigger objects. It has nothing to do with the size of two objects, it is what they are made of that counts. A penny (at least sterling pennies) are made of copper, thus is stands to reason that copper has a high density or whatever the heck that property was that was mentioned in my physics lecture when we discussed this exact same example than concrete.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
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But it proves that small objects can impact bigger objects. Besides...millions of people walk that street every day. Thus it would stand to reason that the concrete is strong and well made. David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
David Stone wrote: Besides...millions of people walk that street every day. Yeah, but people are soft and squishy. And they mostly wear shoes. Very considerate of things they walk on, people. Unlike pennies. When's the last time you saw a penny wearing shoes? I thought so. Inconsiderate little copper-colored bastards...
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
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Mike Mullikin wrote: Your analogy doesn't work - you're trying to humanize a frozen rock No, I was taking the piss without being sarcastic. Mike Mullikin wrote: Here is a scenario to consider if we don't practice... Godzilla again! Think how it all started. and yes I *do* know Godzilla is a sci fi story! :)
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
David Wulff wrote: Godzilla again! Think how it all started. Don't get me wrong. I don't deny there is a slight risk in what they are planning. Especially since it's the European Space Agency. ;P It's more a matter of probability. The Earth WILL be hit by a large asteroid (large enough to end life on the planet) in it's future. It's just a matter of time. Will it be in 2019? Or will it be in 10 million years when man is long extinct? Why not try to be prepared to deal with it, even if you run a slight risk of creating a 100 foot radioactive lizard? ;)
Mike Mullikin :beer: The daisies in my arse are better than the depressive so called reality you are sniffing and accepting. Paul Watson
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David Stone wrote: , if we knock the rock a bit, we're just going to send it somewhere far off into space. And if a rock knocks us? ...? David Stone wrote: But the Godzilla reference was dealing with chaos theory No, it was about us (people) jumping in with new ideas "for the best" without taking the responsibility for the possible actions. We just don't know what could happen (or indeed what might not happen) but we want to jump right on in and play around anyway?! These are the big boys' toys now - break something and you're in for it.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
David Wulff wrote: And if a rock knocks us? ...? We're trying to prevent the rock from knocking us. :| But what you're suggesting is chaos theory. The idea that a little thing here accumulates to a huge thing later due to a bunch of unrelated things happening and giving you a massive result. You're saying that if we hit the rock here, it could eventually go so far of course as to kill all life on another planet, or blow up a star, or hit the Vulcan spaceships passing by earth because we're so stupid that we're shooting asteroids...right? David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
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David Wulff wrote: we are an infitismal part of an infinite picture - making the slightest changes could damage the larger system irepairibly Aren't these two thoughts completely at odds with one another? Neil Van Eps "When you are courting a nice girl an hour seems like a second. When you sit on a red-hot cinder a second seems like an hour. That's relativity." -Albert Einstein
Neil Van Eps wrote: Aren't these two thoughts completely at odds with one another? I don't see why? For example, the smallest of changes to a chromosone can massively effect an orgasnism. Nice sig! :-D
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
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Exactly my point. If NASA is off by 2 degrees, the astronauts overshoot the moon by hundreds of kilometers. (Yes. An American using metric...shocking isn't it? :-D) David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
David Stone wrote: American using metric...shocking isn't it lol :) So what is the imperial equivalent? Two and a quart turnip roots? ;P
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
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David Wulff wrote: Godzilla again! Think how it all started. Don't get me wrong. I don't deny there is a slight risk in what they are planning. Especially since it's the European Space Agency. ;P It's more a matter of probability. The Earth WILL be hit by a large asteroid (large enough to end life on the planet) in it's future. It's just a matter of time. Will it be in 2019? Or will it be in 10 million years when man is long extinct? Why not try to be prepared to deal with it, even if you run a slight risk of creating a 100 foot radioactive lizard? ;)
Mike Mullikin :beer: The daisies in my arse are better than the depressive so called reality you are sniffing and accepting. Paul Watson
:)
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
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David Stone wrote: Besides...millions of people walk that street every day. Thus it would stand to reason that the concrete is strong and well made. If everyone was to walk around wearing sharpened high-heeled shoes that would not necessarily be the case. David Stone wrote: But it proves that small objects can impact bigger objects. It has nothing to do with the size of two objects, it is what they are made of that counts. A penny (at least sterling pennies) are made of copper, thus is stands to reason that copper has a high density or whatever the heck that property was that was mentioned in my physics lecture when we discussed this exact same example than concrete.
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
David Wulff wrote: A penny (at least sterling pennies) are made of copper No clue what a sterling penny is, but AFAIK they stopped making pennies from copper (at least primarily) here, after copper become worth more than $0.01... They are mostly zinc now.
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
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Exactly my point. If NASA is off by 2 degrees, the astronauts overshoot the moon by hundreds of kilometers. (Yes. An American using metric...shocking isn't it? :-D) David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
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David Stone wrote: Besides...millions of people walk that street every day. Yeah, but people are soft and squishy. And they mostly wear shoes. Very considerate of things they walk on, people. Unlike pennies. When's the last time you saw a penny wearing shoes? I thought so. Inconsiderate little copper-colored bastards...
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
Shog9 wrote: Inconsiderate little copper-colored bastards... Josh, let me give you the name of a friendly little phsciatrist that I'm sure lives locally to you... he's called Al. Co'hol. I think you should go and see him right away and not come back till tomorrow... :rolleyes:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
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David Stone wrote: Besides...millions of people walk that street every day. Yeah, but people are soft and squishy. And they mostly wear shoes. Very considerate of things they walk on, people. Unlike pennies. When's the last time you saw a penny wearing shoes? I thought so. Inconsiderate little copper-colored bastards...
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
That's my point. I'm saying that the penny goes into the concrete because it's hard and it hits a hard object at a high downward velocity. Thus David Wulff's analogy to throwing rocks at a mountain is flawed because we will be able to move a large rock with a (relatively) small satellite. Besides, a mountain is anchored to the earth. An asteroid is anchored to nothing but itself. David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
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David Wulff wrote: And if a rock knocks us? ...? We're trying to prevent the rock from knocking us. :| But what you're suggesting is chaos theory. The idea that a little thing here accumulates to a huge thing later due to a bunch of unrelated things happening and giving you a massive result. You're saying that if we hit the rock here, it could eventually go so far of course as to kill all life on another planet, or blow up a star, or hit the Vulcan spaceships passing by earth because we're so stupid that we're shooting asteroids...right? David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
David Stone wrote: But what you're suggesting is chaos theory No it's not - not at all. As you said youself, that relies on unrelated events. David Stone wrote: We're trying to prevent the rock from knocking us. :| I think you missed my point. :suss:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
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Shog9 wrote: Inconsiderate little copper-colored bastards... Josh, let me give you the name of a friendly little phsciatrist that I'm sure lives locally to you... he's called Al. Co'hol. I think you should go and see him right away and not come back till tomorrow... :rolleyes:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
Funny you should mention him; i've scheduled an appointment later this evening. At one time, they would let him come into work and assist in on-the-job therapy, but heath care just isn't what it used to be here...
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
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Yeah, i know, i was just playing the part of resident moron, since i've nothing intelligent to contribute and am bored. Personally, i think we should get organized and all throw rocks at a mountain until we've moved the *earth* out of the path of the asteroid...
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
How's next Tuesday night at 7:00pm sound? :-D David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
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That's my point. I'm saying that the penny goes into the concrete because it's hard and it hits a hard object at a high downward velocity. Thus David Wulff's analogy to throwing rocks at a mountain is flawed because we will be able to move a large rock with a (relatively) small satellite. Besides, a mountain is anchored to the earth. An asteroid is anchored to nothing but itself. David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
Yeah, i know, i was just playing the part of resident moron, since i've nothing intelligent to contribute and am bored. Personally, i think we should get organized and all throw rocks at a mountain until we've moved the *earth* out of the path of the asteroid...
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
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But I don't think energy has anything to do with how a penny imbeds itself in cement. I believe that is an issue of velocity. Which would lead to the penny being imbedded in the cement. David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
Every movement needs a transformation of energy. I don't believe a penny would stick in the cement if you through it of the ESB. If it would the american cement would be kind of crap ;)!
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How's next Tuesday night at 7:00pm sound? :-D David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
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David Stone wrote: But what you're suggesting is chaos theory No it's not - not at all. As you said youself, that relies on unrelated events. David Stone wrote: We're trying to prevent the rock from knocking us. :| I think you missed my point. :suss:
David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk
One 18yrs male, red and white, good condition; daily servicing required. £500 collect ono.
David Wulff wrote: I think you missed my point. No. You said "What if a rock knocks us?" I said "We're trying to prevent the rock from knocking us." I got your point, I'm just saying that that's the whole purpose of shooting a satellite at the rock...so that we can shoot satellites at things that try to actually come at us. David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
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Prolly not enough time for me to find a mountain. I could throw beer bottles at a local bluff though... :)
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Shog9 If I could sleep forever, I could forget about everything...
Good idea. Maybe then we can warm up Alaska by knocking earth closer to the sun. David Stone It seemed similar to someone saying, "Would you like to meet my knife collection?" Ryan Johnston on Elaine's sig
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Right, but it is a mountain that is moving through space along a certain path. If you hit it just right, you can slightly (very very very slightly) change its path. Over the course of time, that small change becomes continuously more significant. Ryan Johnston
As long as they don't smash into it infront your right.