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On page 138 at the bottom, it is written:
"...(compare that to the largest nuclear bomb ever built, which had a yield of about 100 megatons)." This is techincally incurrect. The largest bomb ever built had a yield of 50 megatons (the Soviet, "Czar Bomba"). That same bomb, when planned, was set for a yield of 100, yes, but wasn't built to that standard. She topped off as a triple stager, yielding a mighty impressive 50 megatons- so powerful that when exploded, in Siberiria, she broke windows in Finland. <font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Lord General MB on 2002-05-26 21:45 ]</font> |
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The Bad Aviator said:
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Weight and drag are the other two components of the equations. |
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Yes, and no.
Propellers do have an airfoil profile in order to push air. But that does not make them a wing. Wings give lift, propellers give "push", or thrust. Helicopter rotors are a lot more complex than just a propeller aimed up. They have lots of controls to stabilize the rotors and adjust the blade angles to provide the controlled lift, to steer, etc. Look, we're talking about technical terminology as precise as "force", "acceleration", or "theory". "Thrust" has a specific meaning - the propulsion of the plane. If you want to talk about other pushes on different parts of the plane, refer to them as forces. It's the terminology of physics. |
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If you Ignore YOUR Rights, they Will go away. |
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Essentially a plane flies because the wing pushes the air down (action), and the reaction force is the air pushing the wing up. See excellent web page "How the airplanes fly" at http://www.allstar.fiu.edu/aero/airflylvl3.htm to see what's wrong with popular Bernoulli folklor. |
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SeanF "Ask to understand, but don't challenge unless you have the knowledge."--NEOWatcher The contents of this post are ©2008 by SeanF and may not be copied or retransmitted in any form without the express written consent of SeanF |
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On page 126 the Bad Astronomer wrote, referring to the May 2000 planetary alignment, "Just a few months into the new century we had to deal with yet another instance of the shadow of our primitave need to blame the skies." The new century began with 2001. By the same reasoning that the second term of a president's reign begins with year 5, or the second week in the month begins with day 8.
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/faq/docs/millennium.html Dana <font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Dana_Mix on 2002-08-17 17:45 ]</font> |
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Holy mackeral! That's a very good catch, and I am very embarrassed by that one.
The third printing is already at the publishers (they were backordered 1500 copies out of 4000!), so I'll have to get that one in for the fourth. Thanks! |
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I'm hoping that this does not turn into an interminable debate on the subject. Perhaps we should start a new thread--and I think it should be only new info not already presented at the USNO site that Dana_Mix linked. Quote:
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Consider the sentences "There are no apple in my basket" and "There is no apple in my basket". To me the first is correct and the second is faulty. The application of the word "no" has the same meaning as the word "none" in the sentence under discussion so I would go with the word "are".
Phobos |
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On the date-of-the-millennium question, the late Steven Jay Gould related an interesting story.
He discussed the issue with a savant, who could barely tie his shoelaces but was a whiz at dates -- telling you the day of the week for an arbitrary date in the year 8726, and the like. Gould asked this fellow when the 21st century started. He answered without hesitation, "January 1st, 2000. The first century only had 99 years." Not definitive, of course, but it's an interesting perspective! |
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Phobos, I think you're talking about the discussion at the bottom of page one of this thread?
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I think it's called "agreement of number." It's the same as if you were to say "There are two apples in my basket" or "There is one apple in my basket." The number has to agree. "Are" applies to the plural "apples" and "is" applies to the singular "apple." Um... Or am I beating a dead horse? Anyway, the sentence "There are no apple in my basket" is a violation of the rules of standard formal English as understood at this space-time coordinate. Silas |
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Most people think the new century began with AD 2000. But science sites, encyclopedias, and government sites are right. http://dir.yahoo.com/Science/Measure...rd_Millennium/ The first century began AD 1. The second began with AD 101, and the 21st with AD 2001. but I'll be happy to debate it. best regards, Dana |