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Feb 6 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Feb 6 |
awarded | Autobiographer |
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May 31 |
comment |
Would a car tow rope withhold an adult person? @Stefano Borini: I am fully aware of this fact, but good job pointing it out! |
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May 30 |
accepted | What are the ideal centers of mass and rotation for a steadicam? |
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May 30 |
accepted | Which person can handle falls from big heights better: lighter or heavier? |
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May 30 |
asked | Would a car tow rope withhold an adult person? |
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May 25 |
revised |
Which person can handle falls from big heights better: lighter or heavier? added 8 characters in body; added 3 characters in body |
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May 25 |
revised |
Would an empty running microwave cause damage to itself or something else? added 700 characters in body |
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May 25 |
asked | Which person can handle falls from big heights better: lighter or heavier? |
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May 25 |
asked | Would an empty running microwave cause damage to itself or something else? |
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May 16 |
comment |
Why do 'dead' batteries work again after exchanging the places of the batteries in an electronic device? +1 for "but I haven't heard of a lot of things" |
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May 14 |
comment |
What's my weight when jumping on a bicycle from a higher to a lower ground? Could you please join all those formulas to one formula? So that I can count various values by changing weight of the driver and height of the jump? I can't really work it out of those many formulas, sorry :( I know this stuff is very clear and easy to you guys, but I just ... can't :/ |
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May 13 |
awarded | Teacher |
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May 13 |
answered | Do events exist after our death if we can't measure them? |
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May 12 |
accepted | What's my weight when jumping on a bicycle from a higher to a lower ground? |
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May 11 |
comment |
What's my weight when jumping on a bicycle from a higher to a lower ground? Your explanation looks amazing and since I'm no physicist, I wouldn't even dare to question your statement, but with all the respect I need to ask the following: I think I remember that if you push an object so that it slides on a thin ice, it will keep going forward, not breaking the ice, but when it stops, it will begin to press with its full weight on the ice and will break it. Therefore I figured that objects when moving have less "vertical mass" than when standing. Why doesn't this rule apply in this scenario, if ever? Or am I completely mistaken here? |
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May 11 |
comment |
What's my weight when jumping on a bicycle from a higher to a lower ground? I was expecting concrete, so yeah, I guess no mattress or anything like that. |
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May 11 |
comment |
What's my weight when jumping on a bicycle from a higher to a lower ground? can you please edit my post, Colin K, to improve anything you proposed? |
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May 11 |
comment |
What's my weight when jumping on a bicycle from a higher to a lower ground? hahahah yeah thanks, I fixed it, lol |
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May 11 |
revised |
What's my weight when jumping on a bicycle from a higher to a lower ground? edited body; added 1 characters in body |