General Discussion Entrar | Regístrate GRATIS
Última respuesta
Responder
The Elon Muck Report
Djack7-18 - 2024-05-04
How did you get your GED not knowing the difference between an adjective and a noun?
 58
Terry_Wrist - 2024-05-04
Anyhoo I hope that most of you all have a good one, Djack, Huevo and Eddie. Hi btw Huevo, hope you are keeping well.
TraineeBackDoor - 2024-05-04
.
127043440-2024-01-27-11-46-08
Huevographic - 2024-05-04
I'm well, Terry, thanks... a point is a circle without a radius, so it might fit the definition of a perfect circle.
 59 H
Djack7-18 - 2024-05-04
A point doesn't have a radius or circumference, so it can't qualify. Circles are 2 dimensional shapes.
 58
Djack7-18 - 2024-05-04
I dunno how we got the perfect adjective in there. Measurements always fall within a tolerance, cause nothing is perfect.
 58
Huevographic - 2024-05-04
No, in higher mathematics, a point can be considered a circle with an infinitely small radius. Infinity, in mathematics, often describes limits. A good example is Einstien's theory of relativity. If you plug in the actual speed of light, the theory of relativity produces infinite values for all permutations regarding mass, volume and time...
 59 H
Huevographic - 2024-05-04
The infinite values are the basis for the theory the speed of light cannot be achieved. Some theorists adhere to the possibility of two universes simultaneously coexisting. A sub-light speed universe where the speed of light can be approached, but never met or exceeded...
 59 H
Huevographic - 2024-05-04
The other universe exists in excess of the speed of light and cannot meet or go below the speed of light. It was either Isaac Asimov or Carl Sagan who wrote interesting books about theoretical physics put in layman's terms, if anyone is interested.
 59 H
Huevographic - 2024-05-04
A blackhole is often referred as a singularity with all its mass compressed into a point in space...not unlike the big bang theory.
 59 H

Anterior Siguiente
/ 300 
Responder
Volver a General Discussion