| bio | website | mymathforum.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | United States | |
| age | 70 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 9 months |
| seen | Jun 20 '12 at 20:35 | |
| stats | profile views | 9 |
If I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, ...
If I know all mysteries and all knowledge, ...
If I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love,
I am nothing.
I hereby commit to contributing to this site without any rudeness, sarcasm, accusation, or any other unloving speech.
|
Dec 13 |
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Feb 2 |
comment |
What's the difference between running up a hill and running up an inclined treadmill? Is it? I really don't know... my top speed is equally slow on any flat surface :) But you're telling me that pavement (e.g.) is THAT much harder because of wind and surface composition ?!? That would be quite a surprise for me, and definitely something worth investigating. |
|
Feb 2 |
comment |
What's the difference between running up a hill and running up an inclined treadmill? dmckee, We are having a bit of a discussion about this on[fitness.stackexchange.com/q/5288/2841](Fitness SE). Q: is the a quantitative difference in the amount of work done by such a treadmill and the amount of work done by such a runner? |
|
Sep 13 |
comment |
Elastic collisions with neutrinos This question does not show any research effort |
|
Aug 13 |
awarded | Scholar |
|
Aug 13 |
accepted | Is anything actually 1 meter long (or 1kg of weight)? |
|
Aug 12 |
awarded | Student |
|
Aug 12 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Aug 12 |
comment |
Is anything actually 1 meter long (or 1kg of weight)? Stan, thanks for the answer. With the current definition of length in terms of time, don't we run into the same problem? In other words, is any event actually (exactly) one second/minute/hour long ?? |
|
Aug 12 |
asked | Is anything actually 1 meter long (or 1kg of weight)? |