176 reputation
16
bio website
location
age
visits member for 1 year, 9 months
seen Mar 7 at 13:50
stats profile views 14

Dec
6
awarded  Constituent
Dec
6
awarded  Caucus
Jul
18
comment Ping-pong ball pontoon
unfortunately, the doc is now available as paid - e.g. from here sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0734743X07001832 :(
Jul
18
comment Ping-pong ball pontoon
Partially true. But the it is a function of diameter too. Imagine only an "one-ball" diameter, so balls are as "ooooooo" (vertically) down to water. For enough weight the ball column can reach 30m depth, and this depth the balls crunched by water pressure itself, so, therefore one of the limitation factors are - not possible to have bigger depth as 30m. (upvoting anyway - as only answer - but not fully accept this)
Feb
2
comment Ping-pong ball pontoon
For the above link - the sever is closed now - i'm not able get the doc too. :(
Jan
31
revised What objective criteria distinguish between valid science, fringe science and pseudoscience in physics?
deleted 7 characters in body
Jan
31
awarded  Commentator
Jan
31
comment Calculation of the maximum load to the bar
Thanx. By your equations I found: clag.org.uk/beam.html and engineeringtoolbox.com/beam-stress-deflection-d_1312.html and several others helpful articles.
Jan
31
accepted Calculation of the maximum load to the bar
Jan
31
comment What objective criteria distinguish between valid science, fringe science and pseudoscience in physics?
yes, it is confirmed by observations - but, not fully explained (yet). In the past, lightning was confirmed by observations - as god's anger... :) BTW, I don't want start any flame-war about any phenomenology-science acceptance. Simply saying than any theory (good or bad) need power to be accepted.
Jan
31
revised What objective criteria distinguish between valid science, fringe science and pseudoscience in physics?
added 89 characters in body
Jan
31
answered What objective criteria distinguish between valid science, fringe science and pseudoscience in physics?
Jan
31
comment Calculation of the maximum load to the bar
Exactly for what i looking. Thanx a lot! :)
Jan
31
accepted Clouds in closed hydrosphere
Jan
30
revised Calculation of the maximum load to the bar
edited tags
Jan
30
asked Calculation of the maximum load to the bar
Jan
18
asked Clouds in closed hydrosphere
Nov
12
comment Ping-pong ball pontoon
Sure - the "most precise" method will be experimentally test it in real... :) :)
Nov
12
comment Ping-pong ball pontoon
just found this 124.42.15.59/ck/2011-05/165/053/860/957/… - i hope it will help me getting the answer ;)
Nov
12
comment Ping-pong ball pontoon
Hm.. so.. probably the question is how much force can withstand the ball by contact-point forces... Is here a difference when the balls will be aligned in row (like vertical "oooooo" - 2 contact points only)? Any idea how to (approx) calculate the crushing force?