good one, how about this?stickelmania said:your shadow?AmericanIdiot1993 said:What is as big as you are and yet does not weigh anything?
2 fathers and 2 sons go fishing. Each of them catches one fish. So why do they bring home only 3 fishes?
good one, how about this?stickelmania said:your shadow?AmericanIdiot1993 said:What is as big as you are and yet does not weigh anything?
Nothing only light can move at the speed of light (ironic no?) and light has no mass... it'd pass right through.GHMonkey said:What happens when two object going light speed collide?
Actually its the combination of all senses and emotions.Mozared said:This might be a risky one for this thread, but;
What's the ultimate feeling pleasure in life? Love, an orgasm, or something else?
One of the fathers is a grandpaAmericanIdiot1993 said:good one, how about this?stickelmania said:your shadow?AmericanIdiot1993 said:What is as big as you are and yet does not weigh anything?
2 fathers and 2 sons go fishing. Each of them catches one fish. So why do they bring home only 3 fishes?
WHO DOESN'T!? O_Ohappysock said:Haha gotta love that filmLukeje said:I don't know that!happysock said:African or European?Lukeje said:What... is the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow?
*Aaaaaaaaaaaargh!*
'tis in fact 54. Some common sense and observance while reading the series would lead you to this logical conclusion.Da pyro man 999 said:Befor you ask the most obvious one, the meaning to life is 42(hitch hickers guide to the galaxy)come up with one.
If a woodchuck could chuck wood a woodchuck would chuck all the wood chunks that a woodchuck could.quiet_samurai said:And what those objects are.3rd rung said:explain how you got them going the speed of light first then I will give you an answerGHMonkey said:What happens when two object going light speed collide?
OT: How much wood could a coodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
The official version is: "What happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object?". The answer stays the same though:Supreme Unleaded said:One Question that will get you guys going is what happens when an Unstoppable Force colides with a Unmovable/Unbreakable Force. Disscus.
well there are like 7 billion people in the world, chances are someones laughing...TheBXRabbit said:The official version is: "What happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object?". The answer stays the same though:Supreme Unleaded said:One Question that will get you guys going is what happens when an Unstoppable Force colides with a Unmovable/Unbreakable Force. Disscus.
The unstoppable force bounces off and heads in a new direction, without stopping.
My question:
If a tree falls on a clown alone in a forest, does anybody still laugh?
To many people like to have power, so the odds are greatly tipped against communismAkai Shizuku said:First statement is true, second is not.coldshadow said:it hasnt been properly practiced yet, nor will it ever be.Akai Shizuku said:"Didn't Communism fail?"
Yuriatayde said:Or in short, it's like a magnet, and blah blah blah (he asked for how it works, not math stating how well it works, no points for over-complicating in an effort to make yourself seem smarter)effilctar said:if you mean what is responsible for gravity: gravitonsHyperactiveman said:How does gravity work? (NOT meaning "what does it do?")
if you mean how are we pulled towards something by gravity: it's like being magnetically attracted except instead of having a greater magnetic field strength, the object has a greater mass which gives it a greater gravitational field strength. g=GM/(r^2) where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the object and r^2 is the mean radius of the object squared.
It's currently unexplainable, all we know is that it DOES, and it does at a rate of blah blah blah. What he's asking for, (and me for that matter) is an explanation of how object X can pull on object Y with absolutely nothing connecting them in any way.
[edit] Disregard; I overlooked the "Gravitons", although that's hardly an explanation and I still discard your answer.
OT: If you have a gun that shoots bullets at exactly 2000km/h, and you were on a platform moving you exactly 2000km/h, and you fired the gun backwards... What would happen?
He fire it in the opposite direction the platform was moving.effilctar said:Yuriatayde said:Or in short, it's like a magnet, and blah blah blah (he asked for how it works, not math stating how well it works, no points for over-complicating in an effort to make yourself seem smarter)effilctar said:if you mean what is responsible for gravity: gravitonsHyperactiveman said:How does gravity work? (NOT meaning "what does it do?")
if you mean how are we pulled towards something by gravity: it's like being magnetically attracted except instead of having a greater magnetic field strength, the object has a greater mass which gives it a greater gravitational field strength. g=GM/(r^2) where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the object and r^2 is the mean radius of the object squared.
It's currently unexplainable, all we know is that it DOES, and it does at a rate of blah blah blah. What he's asking for, (and me for that matter) is an explanation of how object X can pull on object Y with absolutely nothing connecting them in any way.
[edit] Disregard; I overlooked the "Gravitons", although that's hardly an explanation and I still discard your answer.
OT: If you have a gun that shoots bullets at exactly 2000km/h, and you were on a platform moving you exactly 2000km/h, and you fired the gun backwards... What would happen?
It is literally an attractive force, like magnetism as I said, except mass is a lmiting factor rather than the flux density of the object. I said this. It pulls without beiung attached in the same way a magnet pulls without being attached: attractive forces. the unexplained part is where are the gravitons?
Second part: 4000km/h, that is more simple mechanics than impossible, but I won't confuse you by "overcomplicating" it
Untrue, photons do have mass. That's where the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle comes in, you cannot know the location and velocity of a sub-atomic particle at the same time. That's because one or the other changes when hit by a photon.traski999 said:Nothing only light can move at the speed of light (ironic no?) and light has no mass... it'd pass right through.GHMonkey said:What happens when two object going light speed collide?