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It doesn't. You can interpret the same binary data multiple ways. It's up to the program that's running what it does with the data, which is why you can open binary files in Notepad.
However, if the program is expecting data of a certain structure, it may fail if it sees data that doesn't fit that structure. A BMP file, for example, should begin with a header that specifies the width and height of the image and then the image data. If there isn't enough image data for the image size given in the header, a BMP loader will fail and report that the file isn't valid.
Many file types begin with a "magic number" that serves to identify the file format. An ELF executable file, for example, begins with the bytes 0x7F454c46. |
Blunt noses are fine if not preferable at low speeds because the airflow can start to move out of the way before it hits the aircraft. The air in front of the craft pushes on the air further ahead to allow for a smooth transition.
Supersonic travel does not have this. The air is 'notified' of the oncoming plane right as the plane comes up on it because pressure waves cannot travel out ahead of the plane. This makes pointier designs better in this region.
At very *very* high speed, a blunted nose forces the shockwave to form farther in front of the vehicle, protecting it from the heating of the air that forms at the shock. |
The Reapers do not travel outside the Milky Way (except for their hiding spot), because it would probably take them more than one cycle to arrive. There will be a few stable civilisations in the other galaxies, which will be old enough to wipe the void with the Reapers.
However, nearby galaxies like the Magellanic clouds probably get harvested too. |
You might be interested in *moral particularism* \-- the view that there are no authoritative ethical principles, and that moral judgment consists of nothing more than deliberation about particular cases. |
Static electricity on clothes comes from electrons separated (by friction of putting it on for example) from their original molecules. The separated electron acts as a negative charge, while the left behind molecule now has net positive charge. This local charge surplusses and deficits are what makes up "static electrity".
As fleece sweaters are typically made of synthetic materials that are bad conductors of electricity, these separated electrons can not move on the surface of the sweater to reunite with their molecules and thus are kept separated. This makes the static electricity stay on the sweater.
If you now introduce very humid air around the sweater, some of the water will condense into the sweater, improving the conductivity of its surface (if even by the smallest amount). Now the separated electrons can move around the surface and reunite with a molecule that is missing and electron, evening out the electric field at that point. This makes the static electricity disappear from your sweater. |
It is all about the chords.
Two notes played together sound pleasing when their waveforms line up nicely. Frequency ratios of 2:1 and 3:2 sound better than 13:9 or 23:17. 12, being divisible by 2, 3, 4, and 6, gives a lot of ways to hit these good ratios, in a way that 10 or 13 would not.
Also, there are some musical traditions that divide the octave differently, with 18 and 24 being a common alternatives. |
In today’s money, FBI agents make 50k or so starting. This is about 25k 30 years ago. It’s a government job, so good benefits including a pension are part of the package.
Mulder was top of his class at quantico iirc. Scully was recruited as an MD. So I’m guessing they got something like too starting pay, so maybe more like 30k in 1991, or 60k today. As seasoned/senior agents, they could make more, like twice as much. I’d guess Mulder probably didn’t get too many raises, but Scully might have.
Realistically, they have comfortable middle class retirements, but aren’t wealthy.
Mulder lived in a tiny apartment, so maybe he saved up, but he also just as likely spent his money trying to find the truth. |
It is thermal radiation. The thermal radiation that everything emits depending on temperature.
Glowing orange red is the lowest temperature that emit visible light. The hotter it gets the whiter it gets and even hotter it will look blue.
The light from a incandescent light bulb and the sun is black-body radiation but it is whiter at the temperature is hotter.
Thermal radiation it emitted at all temperatures but it has to be over approximate 798 K (525˚ C, 977˚ F) to be visible. At lower temperature it is only infrared light and not visible.
The heat you feel radiate from hot object at lower temperature is thermal radiation but in infrared. But with special camera often called Forward looking infrared (FLIR) in militery application you can see the thermal radiation from a human. |
There are two primary methods for detecting planets, the transit technique and the radial velocity technique. The transit technique looks for dimming of the parent star as the planet crosses in front of it. This technique works very well for large planets (e.g. Jupiter) but is sensitive enough to detect even Earth-size planets. However, it requires continuous monitoring of the star (otherwise you'll miss the short-lived transit event), it requires detecting at least 3 transits to be certain that you're seeing the same planet in orbit, and it requires that the alignment between the orbit and the line of sight to the star be within a narrow range. This last requirement is a big problem as it means that only a fraction of a percent of planets in Earth-like orbits would be detectable, all of the others would have orbits which don't pass in front of their parent star relative to our view. On the other hand, the technique works just fine if all you want to do is get a better handle on the statistical probability of planets of various types.
So if we were looking at a clone of our own Solar System out in the galaxy we might be able to detect Venus and Earth but the chances of that would be about 1 in 300 or so.
The radial velocity technique is a bit different, it looks at the "forward" and "backward" motion of the parent star relative to us over time. If a planet is orbiting the star it will tug on the star a slight amount and force it to move back and forth as the planet orbits around the star. The bigger and closer the planet the larger the amount of movement in the star. Right now we could detect Jupiter around a star, but we'd have to observe the star (not continuously fortunately, just intermittently) for at least an entire orbit: 12 years. Also, if the relative angle of the orbit is nearly perpendicular to our line of sight then the motions of the star will be up/down and left/right instead of back/forward so we won't be able to see them with the radial velocity technique, and with the current level of sensitivity of such instruments that translates into roughly 10-20% of the potential orbital inclinations.
**tl;dr** There's about a 90% chance we'd be able to detect Jupiter, though it would take at least a decade of observations, and there's about a 0.3% chance we'd be able to detect Venus or Earth.
Although the technology is improving fairly rapidly so what we'll be able to detect in another decade will likely be different. |
This happens in 28 Days/Weeks Later. Humanity still ends up ruined, but the zombies do starve given enough time. Humans take weeks to starve, records are pretty sketchy here as most of the "longest without eating" claims are religious figures claiming supernatural assistance.
Lets say 45 days is the limit with no food. Zombies don't sleep, so lets assume the disperse radially from the center of the outbreak. 5 kph is the average walking speed, 24 hr per day times 5 kph times 45 days gives us 5400 km. Lets round down to 5000km for meandering. That's how far a zombie could travel with no food. For reference, NYC to LA is ~4400km, well within that range.
So draw a 5000 km circle around a city you want to say is infected and the draw 5000 km circles around every circle population center in that circle. You'll quickly see that the barrier to zombies isn't starvation, it's just oceans and us killing them.
You could hide. Find a bunker, wait 6-8 months. Keep in mind though, that every new infection basically resets your timer for when all zombies will have starved by 45 days. You could be in that bunker a very long time. |
Because he is a master magician and expert on demonic magic that is an invaluable ally. Keep in mind, that doesn't mean he's completely tolerated - his ex Zatarra can barely tolerate his presence >!due to his involvement in her father's death!< and he's been kicked off Justice League Dark at least once because of his obsession towards her; >!one case was himself doing so since it put the others in danger.!<
Edit: Also, he's treated as untrustworthy who betrays people to their doom, but often it's because they're already damned beyond saving which he kicks himself over. |
The hat doesn't put you in the house you personally want to be in, after all, Hermione had more of a preference for Ravenclaw before she was sorted. What it does do is look into your heart to see what kind of a person you are. Harry's desire to not be in Slytherin showed the hat that despite Harry's great potential to use the traits associated with Slytherin, he didn't want to be that kind of person. It was that selflessness of preferring to be a good person than a successful one that told the hat that he deserved to be part of Gryffindor.
As for how the hat started talking, the legend goes that when the founding wizards of Hogwarts decided to split the school into the houses, Godric Gryffindor enchanted his hat to do the sorting based on the criteria the founders set, and it sorted new students ever since. |
Earth has a population of 30 billion, however most of the population lives on "basic" assistance, essentially struggling below the poverty line.
Mars has a population of 9 billion and their entire culture is near militarized towards their goal of terraforming the planet - they look upon the people of Earth as weak, suckling off of basic and living weak and papered lives compared to the struggle they endure.
Earth actually lags behind Mars technologically, in the early days all the best scientists, industrialists and entrepreneurs went to Mars. Earth has more ships, but they're older and far less advanced, case in point, a state of the art Martian Corvette was able to cripple an Earth Battleship.
But dem dusters and dirters down da well got noting on Beltalowda. |
In Plato's *Apology*, Socrates argues that we have nothing to fear from death because both an afterlife and oblivion are desirable states.
Schopenhauer, taking a cue from Indian philosophy and religion, believes both in a cycle of endless reincarnation and that this process of reincarnation is a bad thing; he sometimes explicitly describes the end result of the process of escaping this cycle, which he holds as the highest ethical and philosophical goal, as if it were the literal cessation of all existence. But he's very ambiguous about this, and eventually goes on to say that we can only really be sure that this cessation would be "nothingness" relative to the perspective we have while we are here trapped in the cycle. |
It allows them to rotate axially, for example turning your hands from palm down to palm up. Imagine you had one big bone in your forearm - how the heck would that work? You would have to twist the bone itself, and spiral fractures are no fun. Instead, the two bones just shift around each other. |
By being the apprentice Luke loved best.
Ben Solo was Luke's nephew. Luke would have known him from the day he was born. With no family of his own, Luke would have loved him like his own son.
When Ben turned on Luke, it would have been shattering. Heart-breaking. Luke would have hesitated. He would have tried to talk. He would have tried to beg. He would have done anything he could think of to stave off the moment when he would have to kill his own nephew.
And then, by the time he realised he was out of options, it was too late. |
No, the Imperium can't afford even minute interruption in the work of Astronomicon beacon, let alone millenia, and God-Emperor and his Golden Throne are integral parts of the beacon. Without it, Astronomicon would go out and ships won't be able to safely navigate the Warp, basically starting another dark age and needing to reconquer everything all over again. There's nothing short of Plot Induced Stupidity that can convince High Lords of Terra to take God Emperor off life support, and Lord Guilliman would probably slap your head off if you suggest it in his presence. |
On the issue of the USSR "not being communism" because they called themselves socialist... you have to be very careful about taking a country at its own word about what it says it is, versus how it actually functions in practise. For example; North Korea calls itself "The People's Republic of Korea". So, taken at face value we must assume that N.Korea is a wonderfully democratic republic system, yes? Well, obviously not, it's an authoritarian hereditary dictatorship. Another example; Germany in the 1940's was run by the "National Socialist Party", but was far from truly socialist and in fact persecuted and hated socialists particularly Marxists and Leninists, they hated and rejected the idea of social welfare instead believing in social darwinism (e.g. life unworthy of life), banned trade unions...; so in reality Nazi Germany was just another form of Fascist Dictatorship.
Examining the USSR under Stalin in particular, it was certainly a corrupt communist dictatorship. Wealth and property was owned and dictated by the State not the People, wealth was seized and redistributed (often in a corrupt manner), and the the economy (particularly manufacturing sectors) were nationalised in pushes for industrial revolution to compete with the West during the Cold War.
*Also, if we are going to take them at face value- the ruling political party of Russia from the early 1900's through to the dissolution of the USSR in the 90's was the CPSU (Communist Party of the Soviet Union).* |
Bananas do not ripe due to nutrients they get from the tree ....instead bananas release a gas called ethylene from their stems which make them ripen ....
not only bananas ...ethylene can ripen other fruits too if you keep them close to the bananas . |
I imagine that most people who want student debt cancellation also want the increased price of education to go away, either via free college or something else.
Also, "I suffered so other people should suffer too' is the worst reason to write laws. |
He was 39 when he went back in time, if we assume he went back to that point at the end of WWII (1945) and lived till Endgame in (assuming 2019), he'd be 113. It's not an impossible age for a normal human, he was just very healthy for his age due to the super soldier serum, probably a couple decades younger physically compared to his real age. |
It can, it would just need to be thrusting the whole time. Escape velocity is the speed you need to escape without adding any more energy - just coasting. That is why escape velocity depends on altitude - the higher up you are, the less speed you need to go the rest of the way. |
Jessica is strong but she's entirely untrained. That's why she struggles sometimes fighting multiple people, she punches badly and throws people. She has no idea how to really fight properly. Someone like Cap would utterly destroy her in a brawl (Cap with his shield could more than likely beat Luke Cage even though).
She's probably a 1-2 tonner at her max. She only lifts up the back of the car which some very strong people can do. She's still very durable and can likely fly if she learns how. If she was trained how to fight and use her powers more effectively she'd be a force to be reckoned with for sure. But right now she's low street tier. |
It's not just that she learned the language, but that she became so deeply involved in it that it changed the way her brain processed the world around her.
The short story goes into this phenomenon more, setting it up with examples like a culture that doesn't use relative directions (left, right, etc), only absolute (North, South, East, West), and as a result, seem to have an innate awareness of those cardinal directions. But it's not from simply learning the words of the language, but from the way the language requires you to think. |
The answer by those Wharton kids has more to do with the fact that UPenn has more people from the top 1% than the bottom 20% and rich kids don't understand the privilege. Plus the median income of the family of someone who goes to UPenn happens to be above 100k, so the answer reflects the students' immediate bubble. It is out of touch with reality, but for reasons of rich privilege rather than academic ivory tower. |
Droids that work together on a regular basis can, over time, become so accustomed to each other that they are considered counterparts. They essentially both develop code that forms a kind of "shortcut" when they're interacting, letting them function together much faster than normal droids can. They can also use that code to develop complex encryption codes that are virtually impossible to break for anyone but their counterpart. |
Morgoth *did* in a sense create a Ring of Power. Tolkien says that because Morgoth invested so much of himself into corrupting the material world, *the world itself was his ring*. Hence the name of Morgoth's Ring, one of the books of the History of Middle Earth. Because of this investiture, his power over the physical world was greatest than all beings, though eventually he squandered so much of his influence he was severely diminished. Still, it was this Morgoth-element that polluted everything which allowed foulness like necromancy to work.
In more prosaic terms though, the Rings of Power were a plot by Sauron to make the Elves enslave themselves to him. He would teach them to make these amazing rings with the power to slow down decay (the thing the Elves were most interested in, as they wanted to preserve the fading primeval beauty of the world), but secretly there would be a backdoor that would allow him to control all Ringbearers through the One Ring.
It wouldn't really make sense for Morgoth to attempt something like this. He was at open war with the Elves from the start and couldn't take a fair form like Sauron did, so he could scarcely trick them the same way. He also didn't care to dominate, he wanted to destroy: when he took over an elven kingdom he had it sacked and burned, its prisoners taken for slaves to toil in Angband; he didn't want to govern anything, just ruin it. |
They're dangerous because they have an overriding directive to assimilate other species' technology and biology into the collective. If you resist being assimilated, you're an enemy. Also, they are hard to fight because they can alter their technology on the fly to counter nearly any kind of weapons, armor, or shields they encounter. |
So the actual origin of the term goes back to the French Revolution where people who supported the revolution literally hung out on the left side of the room while supporters of the king hung out on the right side of the room.
So the left wing was the more liberal side of the group as a whole so now any group that really does want to do something "new" is probably going to be called "left wing". Meanwhile a more conservative group that either doesn't want to change or maybe wants to change back to the old way of doing things is going to be called right wing. |
The standards are different.
In the overwhelming majority of cases, an employee is "at will." This means that the employer can fire them for any reason or for no reason at all. In the present day there are some restrictions on this---you can't fire someone because of their religion, for instance---but very few.
Thus, posting something on facebook can get you fired, but so can not posting something, or posting the wrong thing, or any other thing that the employer doesn't like.
A lawsuit for defamation is very different. Here, you're not dealing with the employer's decision to keep someone on the business's payroll, but with the employer's desire to use the courts to get something. In the U.S. at least, the standards for defamation are very, very hard to meet. As such, very few of these cases are filed.
As a note, though, this is not any different than suing an employee. You can fire the employee for their facebook post, but unless you met that same high burden, it would not be any easier to sue the employee for defamation than it would be to sue the third party. |
Not in the sense you have in mind. Even atomically smooth surfaces are bumpy at the atomic scale. Straight lines (and smooth surfaces) are mathematical constructs that provide useful approximations to reality in many situations. |
The ultraviolet spectrum is pretty broad (400 nm – 10 nm) and is divided into three sub-bands. Ozone is really good at absorbing the short UV-C wavelengths and moderately good at absorbing the medium UV-B wavelengths. UV-A and UV-B (which are responsible for sunburns and skin cancer) are mostly absorbed by water vapor and other atmospheric gases, which is why being at sealevel offers more protection than on a mountain. |
#Slow and steady vs. Fast and furious
The main difference is how each handles reproductive events. Reproduction is the most energy and resource consuming event any organism can live.
Herbs (what you would call "plants") have chosen the strategy of tanking stressful environment as a seed or tubercule, gather resources during the favourable weather and use all their resources in a single reproductive event, this killing then because they don't have any more resources to keep themselves alive.
On the other hand, trees have chosen the strategy to slowly gather resources, even during stressful conditions (like bad weather) and use only a fraction of their resources in each reproductive event, meaning they keep some resources to themselves, letting them stay alive.
Neither strategy is inherently better than the other, they're just different ways of solving the same problem.
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#How to live forever
You might have seen that after cutting the main trunk of a tree, little branches grow back, ultimately making a new tree again. This is due a "stem cell like" property of trees, where they always retain their merismatic cells (the equivalent to stem cells in plants) after each growing event which grants trees with the ability to regrow or repair any organ.
If met with theoretical ideal conditions (always good season, no predation, no competetition), you can argue that a tree can live forever.
The next challenge comes from within the cells of the tree. Just like humans, trees have chromosomes (which are may bundles is compacted DNA), at their end they have a strand of DNA known as telomer. Each replication event of the cell shortens the telomer. When there's no more telomer left, the cell dies. So, unless you have a way to repair that telomer loss, your days as a tree are counted.
Some trees, like some types of pines, have the ability to repair that loss with an enzyme that "rebuilds" the telomer after some replication events, thus, granting the tree with eternal life.
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#Could this actually happen?
The dynamic nature of Earth and its ecosystems represents a huge challenge to any organism that aims for eternal life.
You have catastrophic events that are cyclic, some unpredictable bad seasons, constant competition with other organisms like you, constant predation and parasitation, internal mistakes (trees can get cancer too!) and such.
The oldest trees we know are around 5000 years old, although a whole lot of time, it's just a moment in the history of Earth. |
A cavity is decay-it is dead and dying areas with bacteria, and can spread if not taken care of. A cracked broken piece of tooth, depending on how deep the break is, won't cause increasing problems over time. |
I mean, "collectively" orks are already as smart as any other space faring race. They've collectively got the knowledge to build spaceships and other technology on par with anyone else.
Besides, most orks can't read, so not like books are gonna do much besides get thrown around or lit on fire. |
Quantitative easing is a tactic used by a country’s central bank (eg. The federal reserve) to add money to the country’s economy, primarily in times when the economy is slow or have collapsed. Because the central bank cannot give away money for free, it makes large purchases of government bonds or financial assets(Billions of dollars worth of assets). Once the bonds are purchased, the money is then used to fulfill the purpose of the bond (build roads, develop systems etc). This now means that people will be hired to build the roads, materials will be bought and so forth, so that money will now be circulated in the economy thanks to quantitative easing. |
In general, it doesn't.
If your hard drive is almost completely full then it can have an impact. Your operating system may temporarily dump some of the values it's tracking in RAM to your hard drive to make use of RAM for something else to speed things up. If there's not enough space on the drive to do that, it could affect performance.
If you have 1 tb drive and go from using 700 gb to 500 gb it won't make a difference with respect to performance, though. |
Nothing happens to them. When a baby girl is born, she already has all the eggs she will have for her whole life in her ovaries. If she doesn't menstruate on any given month, it just means no egg(s) exited her ovaries. |
The general idea is that right now, merchants pay money on every credit card transaction in their store. With this new act, the government wants to try to drive the cost of that fee down. But if they do that, then credit card companies might reduce or even cut out some reward benefits because they themselves would be earning less money.
So the act does not say or do anything about rewards programs specifically. But if the credit card company ends up making less money, then they are less likely to keep giving money back to customers in the form of rewards. |
They're made of strings.
In string theory, the strings are the most fundamental object in the universe, so they can't consist of anything else. It's like asking what an electron is made of, it's nonsense because (as far as we know) electrons are just electrons. |
There would be infinite travelers, so there would be universes full of them. There would also be infinite universes that had none. And infinite universes that never spawned them. By definition, one possible outcome is a universe with just one traveler. And another with just two. And another with just two but they're slightly to the left. And one where you are the first to go there, or others leave exactly as you arrive. Or one where an infinite number of travelers arrive at exactly the same time, instantly filling all space and collapsing that entire universe into a black hole. |
The magic of the sea is old and strong, and of all magics the binding power of a contract is one of the oldest and strongest, especially a contact agreed to by royalty.
King Triton is strong, but even he cannot breach the foundations of the magic of the sea |
The flip side is that lawsuits can be very expensive & potentially a PR nightmare, so HR is the price companies pay to try and make sure they can prove in court they crossed all the t’s and dotted all the i’s. |
What makes you think they are less efficient? Computers are vastly more efficient than brains, at some tasks. Running a modern game requires billions of floating point calculations per second. Even if you drafted the entire population of the planet you couldn't get that kind of throughput. We win at other tasks like path finding, but not by much any more. |
Let's view this from a game theory perspective. If your group does this, and the other group does not, you could run the risk of the other group abusing this by driving a wedge between the sub-group, making your group splinters, and weaker.
A temporary example would be Russia, China, and Iran, using online trolls to exacerbate the current situation. Or in a 2 party system, if one party is more united than the other, the more united party could take a more moderate stance, to absorb more moderate voters from the opposing party, without risking losing their fringe voters.
This is most successful in divide and conquer, divide the opposing group into sub-groups and make the sub-groups fight one another, just like in in colonialism. |
The sun is expected to last another 5.4 billion years before the hydrogen in the core runs out.
When that happens, the core will start to collapse in on itself due to its own gravity, and will increase in temperature. This allows for hydrogen fusion outside the core to happen (the strong temperature gradient doesn’t allow the layers outside the core to mix with the core and supply more hydrogen to maintain it; the core needs to grow in size for the next step) This is when the sun enters the subgiant phase.
In the subgiant phase, the core is having a battle with itself. On one hand, it’s so dense and heavy that it wants to collapse in on itself. But at the same time, it’s way too hot to make that possible (heat makes atoms move faster, so it’s harder to get them to collect at a single point). At this point, the core gets so hot, that even outside the core it gets hot enough for hydrogen to fuse. Hydrogen that fuses turns into heavier helium which then grows the core a little again (the boundary of the core isn’t very exact). The energy that’s produced in this process pushes the outer shells of the sun farther out. The sun grows to roughly three times it size, becomes a little dimmer as the same amount of energy is spread out over a larger outer surface to radiate off. This is called the subgiant state and this state lasts for about 2 billion years for our sun.
After the sun has been a subgiant for a good long while, suddenly an event happens: the core does no longer contract. This is called core degeneracy. At this point, the repulsive force of the electrons around the helium nuclei give enough backpressure that gravity can no longer collapse the core any further. So now all the energy being fused around the edge of the core can’t go anywhere, what now? The sun starts to grow in size tremendously, growing to 100x it’s current size. Lots of hydrogen is fused into helium at the edge of the core and a lot of energy is convected to the outer layers of the sun. The sun becomes a lot more luminous, too. This is the first red giant phase, and lasts about 100 million years.
As the core continues to gain more mass, slowly but surely it eventually reaches a point where the core reaches 100 million Kelvin, at which the core finally can start back up again, fusing helium into carbon. This happens in an impressive explosive called the helium flash. In a matter of minutes, most helium in the core is converted into carbon, releasing a tremendous amount of energy. Because of this energy, gravity is overcome and the core expands again. The star decreases in size to around 10 times the size it is today in a very short period and it stays this way for about 50 million more years, while it fuses helium into carbon in the core.
When the helium is all used up and the entire core is made of carbon, the core once again goes into hibernation and something like the earlier red giant phase happens again. The core starts to collapse again and becomes hotter. Now there are two layers around the core, the inner layer is so hot that helium is fused into carbon, and the outer layer is fusing hydrogen into helium again. As this happens, a lot of energy is produced that’s not going in the core, but is used to expand the sun again.
The sun now finally enters the real red giant phase, in which it grows to about 250x it’s size today. This is the point where the Earth may very well be taken up by our sun. This phase lasts about 20 million more years, in which the instability of the sun will make the sun pulsate, throwing off enormous amounts of its outer shell material until finally, the hot carbon core becomes visible, at which point we consider the sun to no longer be a red giant, but a white dwarf. The white dwarf is still tremendously hot and it radiates a lot of high energy UV light. This UV light pushes and illuminates the old outer shell that’s veered off into space, and that creates a planetary nebula.
So, when and how fast will the planets be consumed? Mercury should be seriously concerned in the first growth. That’s in about 7.4 billion years. We have another 150 million years roughly until we’re finally taken into the outer edges of our sun. Which is really no time at all in astronomic terms.
Better enjoy the sun the way it is today while it lasts. |
It’s not a random rush at all. Many times during the day your autonomous nervous system reacts without you consciously having to think about it - you breathe autonomously, you get hiccups autonomously, your intestines are told to move autonomously etc. Similarly, a stimulus you’re not even aware of might trigger the reaction. Or a “system check” happens - nerves that lead to you pelvic area are active and relax muscles that among other things control blood flow in your penis |
Get out. Find somewhere else. Not necessarily in that order.
You're not going to learn anything from this professor that will make you a better researcher, and they are not giving you the opportunities you should be getting. |
In all seriousness, because people are fatter now.
Children moved more in school, and we're much less likely to be driven to school, more likely to walk or ride a bicycle to school. Play was much more likely to be outside - no video games, no computers, no mobile devices. Oh, yeah, talking with friends? You gotta walk or bike over to their house. Children don't use the phone much in the 50's and 60's.
Adults got much more exercise, too. Many more professions were physical, like manufacturing and such. But even daily life was much more physically demanding. No dishwashers, most food preparation was done by actual cooking, less by take-out, or pre-made stuff like Hot Pockets, or frozen pizza. Even activities like typing were more calorie-burning - modern keyboards require much less human energy than manual typewriters, especially if you had to punch each keystroke through three or four layers of carbon paper. No remote control for the TV set.
And perhaps a little more somberly, we don't really realize how much easier it is to be in poverty today, in 2015, compared to the 1950's and 1960's. The biggest nutritional problem for the bottom 20% in the USA was finding enough food. Period. People were medically underweight because of malnutrition. They literally were so poor, that the couldn't buy enough *rice and beans* to get to a healthy weight. Today's main nutritional problem for the poor is obesity. That's how great our society has been the last 60 years. |
Allow me to challenge you: How can you know if a student is proficient or they need additional practice in an area, if not for an exam? How can you compare students' performance for merit-based scholarships, if not for exams? How can you compare students from different classes, different schools, or different states in college applications if not for a standardized exam? |
Naturally occurring iron ores are generally bonded with other stuff in the form of magnetite, hematite, etc. This is different than refined irons and steels which are not naturally occurring and instead a product of civilization. So, the way I've generally understood it is it's only the processed/pure stuff which is harmful to them. |
Really really simple explanation. The energy in bread and flour is contained in little batteries (sugar molecules). But, the batteries in flour have a coating over the plus and minus terminals that slows the electricity that can flow out of the battery. If you cook the flour (bread), the heat removes the coating on the terminals and the batteries in bread can deliver a lot more energy. |
In the US you can make a citizens arrest if someone has committed a crime in front of you, or you have reasonable suspicion that they've committed a felony. It's important to remember that this only extends to the point where you can hold onto the person but you must notify the police immediately, and you can't do any sort of investigative action. You are only serving as an anchor so the person can't get away until the police can take over the situation.
You still hold liability though, so don't be too rough with them, and you better be able to back up your suspicion of why you believe they committed a crime. |
Movies have lied to you about the effects and duration of radiation. Most of what movies show about how radiation works are distorted and exaggerated.
This will also blow your mind: over 500 nuclear bombs have been set off in the US back when we still tested nuclear bombs, some as close as 65 miles away from las vegas or other cities. |
The very strongest Hulk has ever been (World Breaker Hulk) is much much weaker than normal Superman. Superman is approximately 6.5x10^19 times stronger than base Hulk (Hulk is a 100 tonner while Supes benches the weight of the Earth). |
It was less about ideology and more about rivalry.
The US and the USSR were struggling for global dominance. Since communism and capitalism were largely incompatible, they were useful tools to force countries to pick one side or the other, and to stay on that side once it was picked.
If instead of Russia, communism had taken hold in say, Greece or Argentina, the US probably wouldn't have cared nearly as much. |
Academic snobbery and elitism. I've encountered a lot of PIs, usually the stodgy older ones, who look down on alternate career pathways, industry positions, pre-medical undergrads, etc. simply because they're not interested in an academic research career. I've known many people who have hidden their true career goals from their PIs and secretly sought out mentoring elsewhere in the department for biotech/industry related career trajectories for these reasons.
I'd suggest not talking too much about it too much with those who clearly aren't interested in supporting your career goals, seeking out the best training resources available to you, and looking for mentors within teaching and faculty development programs who you can follow up with for support and input on your career trajectory. |
Firstly these drones sound an awful lot like AI which is a big no no.
Your enemies also have spaceships so you cant really just perch and fire unabated.
You might not want to destroy everything in that area. Retrieving a relic or securing a position doesnt always necessitate orbital bombardment.
Its also about resources. The Imperiums greatest resource is the sheer number of people they can throw at a problem.
They also do use orbital bombardment and Exterminatus... frequently. Shockingly frequently. Its just we dont hear about the heroic battle of Feral World C3498-Alpha because a ship pulled into orbit evaluated the situation, dropped a bomb that destroyed all life and called for a new settlement to be sent because the last colony started growing dicks on their heads from worshiping chaos. |
It's not just right wingers. It's liberals as well. Republicans typically support because of the necessity for a strategic ally in the Middle East. Democrats typically support because the Jewish traditionally have a high voter turnout and not backing Israel will probably lose them enough votes and enough campaign contributions from wealthy and connected groups to lose an election. |
All of these are examples of Ceramics, which covers the entire set of the other items you are asking about. Ceramics are typically any sort of hard shaped material formed at least partly out of Kaolinite Clay.
The main differences between the types of ceramics are:
* Earthenware, fired at lower temperatures than other types. It is not shiny, and is permeable to water.
* Stoneware, shiny types of pottery like toilet bowls, not permeable to water.
* Porcelain, which contains a high content of kaolinite. It's heated to the highest temperature resulting in a very hard shiny non-permeable surface.
* China, which is a type of soft-paste porcelain that is composed of bone ash, feldspathic material, and kaolinite. These extra ingredients give it a high strength relative to other types of ceramics, allowing for thinner products (dishes etc...) Other than that it is prepared the same way as Porcelain, and in fact many items referred to as "China" are actually "Porcelain" instead. |
Drug use have a lot of externalities that go beyond a single individual "voluntarily using a substance". Addiction is a chronic health problem that society pays for in many ways. They are less productive and often can't hold a job. They require a lot of public health services that society has to pay for. Addicts are more likely to harm themselves and others while under the influence. Finally, addicts will commit crimes to fund their habit if need be. |
It takes practice and concentration. Something like a starship or large vehicle is usually beyond the capabilities of your average force users. In the middle of a battle there's too much going on to try and create a force crush unless you're a powerful force user and not busy trying to not get hit. |
All of your points work on the assumption that the leader of your country is going to be (for want of a better phrase) a 'good person' responsive to the views and interests of their citizens. Sometimes that'll be the case, sometimes it won't be; in an absolute monarchy, there's no guarantee that a good king will follow a good king. At least in a democracy, you're not stuck with some guy ineptly ruling over you for fifty years and no means to challenge his authority.
Your points seem to touch on a deeper issue: that democracy is inherently flawed. In that sense you're probably correct but that means we have to work on improving democracy rather than switching to a system that completes removes the already fragile political agency of citizens.
In this light, we can offer a non-authoritarian answer to each of your points. For point 1, we should make sure citizens are better educated about politics and government. For point 2, we should make sure our leaders are truly accountable to the general wishes of the people. For point 3, we should again make sure that governments do not possess absolute power in between elections. |
It's to keep down civilian casualties. If you manage to distract the monster by flying close to it (like that mosquito that annoyed you while you were trying to work), you give the civilians in the city time to evacuate. Of course you're taking a huge risk on your own life - but so do firemen when they go into burning buildings to save people trapped in them. |
Here are a few things i can think of
- vibrato hides some pitch problems. With a straight pitch, intonation is more obvious
- it gives the music more "texture", so theres more to listen for
- vibrato is variable (in speed, pitch distance, etc), which allows more expression without changing the notes of a piece.
- this is more theoretical, but i believe that music ultimately derives from the human voice/language, so adding vibrato may sound more natural/emotional than the "perfection" of straight tones.
Source: about to graduate with a music degree. |
Honestly, this feels like a scenario that could be best metaphoricalized by asking "A slightly brain-damaged pygmy lemur happens upon a smart-phone with no charger. How long until it becomes the CEO of Facebook?"
Q and the Borg are so unutterably distant in terms of development that an assimilation attempt, even on a fantastically weak and injured Q, would seem a lot like a moth attempting to have sex with a blue whale. |
Reality, power and space stone could easily deal with the issue - time stone could rewind on the off chance that Scott managed to get large enough to actually start doing damage.
Of course that's not taking into account the fact that vanilla Thanos is so fucking durable that he can tank punches from Hulk - so no, regardless of the situation, best case scenario Thanos would use the gauntlet, worst case scenario Scott would be **crushed between those mighty purple buttocks** |
They expand upward when land is scarce or expensive, and they expand outward when the opposite is true.
In most cases, it is the later. The US is _huge_ and available land is not a problem that we have to deal with. Most major cities have more than enough surrounding land to expand on to at a fraction of the cost of a skyscraper.
There are a few exceptions, like New York where the value of being on Manhattan Island warrants the cost of upward expansion, but it just doesn't make financial sense for most cities. |
The idea behind MOND is that at very long ranges, the strength of gravity falls off at a lower rate than the one predicted by newtonian gravity (and general relativity). This would mean that the higher velocities of stars around the edges of galaxies could potentially be explained without the need for (a lot) of invisible mass, which is the first observation tl hint at dark matter.
However, this is not the only reason we have for believing in the existence of dark matter, and MOND has a much harder time explaining the other ones; chiefly that dark matter seems to be necessary for the early clustering of mass we observe. Also, it's hard to introduce a new theory that does not mess with all the other predictions of general relativity. |
The symmetries of a molecule affect its chemical and physical properties. For example water, H2O, is slightly asymmetric (looks like ^H O ^H ), which leads to it freezing in a crystal lattice instead of staying a fluid, and it happens in way higher temperatures than it otherwise would. Contrast CO2, which is symmetric (Looks like O C O ), leading to the fact that it's a gas in room temperature and is very hard to turn into a solid or liquid. |
I would agree with this is a world where anti-trust laws were enforced. The problem with companies like Walmart or Amazon is that their size begets size. Walmart is so large, that if it chooses to it can put pretty much any style of local business out of business if they choose to.
Even if the Walmart product is shittier, which is almost always is, they will still win because they can use the entire weight of their business to subsidize the products from the industry they are trying to stamp out. You see this with Amazon. Amazon is thought of an online retailer, but they are so much more. They're a software manufacturer, a phone and tablet producer, a cloud infrastructure company, etc. If they want to sell products cheaper than Walmart, all they need to do (and what they actually do) is subsidize their products from another part of their business.
This can mean that a company like Walmart, if they choose to, can come into a town and drive out all local business because they are using the weight of all of their 7000 stores. This is what happens in a large portion of a small town in America. It's 100% bad for the consumer. |
Hep A is transmitted through fecal particulates from an infected individual either directly or through contaminated sewage. You can contract Hep A by eating food that has been prepared by an individual with Hep A or had direct contact. Unfortunately studies have shown washing produce does not fully disinfect from Hep A contamination. The current strawberry outbreak was most likely due to direct contact from a positive individual and unfortunately many farm settings do not provide employees access to proper restrooms and hand washing stations. |
Two ways: 1 finding cases where it's translated into another language, that's why the rosetta stone was such a big deal, it had several languages all saying the same thing on it, one of which was ancient greek, which we already knew so they could use that translation to work backwards.
The other way, is what another commenter said, you look at where words pop up, if you keep seeing a word show up on things at greengrocers and farms, it's probably a plant of some kind.
And once you know a few words it starts to become possible to work out the others through context. |
Its all about edge alignment. If the edge is oriented such the it strikes on the surface of the shield's 'dome' then it bounces elastically. If it strikes on the edge in a scooping motion it cuts. Cap is just so proficient with it that he can control which alignment will strike the desired target. |
Sometimes there's a tiny bit of grease on your paper, in an invisible layer. This grease (finger oil; french fry grease; maybe some dripped from a roller at the paper factory) stops your ball-point pen's ball from rolling, which stops the flow of ink. |
An electric guitar, as you probably know, uses a magnetic pickup to transform the vibrations of the strings into an electrical signal. This signal is then carried to an amplifier and in turn a speaker (of course there can be PA systems and such but let's keep it simple.)
An effects pedal will take this electric signal and manipulate it in some way. Exactly what the manipulation is will depend on the effect itself. So the pedal could modulate the signal, duplicate it, repeat it, alter the phase, distort it, boost it... basically whatever you want really. |
At that point, yes. Absolutely. He was *inches* away from falling by the mere threat to Leia. If his friends die, there's no way he doesn't succumb. At that point, he wasn't even near to becoming the wise Grand Jedi Master he would be destined to become (talking Legends here, of course. In canon... well, you know). It's interesting to note that in the Legends continuity **[SPOILERS]**, he became so resilient that his wife was murdered by his nephew and he *still* didn't fall. |
Hi, Rh positive mothers will not have antibodies to the RH protein. If they produced antibodies, they would attack their own cells.
The issue with Rh occurs when Rh negative mothers produce antibodies against the Rh antigen in their baby’s blood. The Rh antigen in this case will be recognised as foreign by the Rh negative mother.
Does that make sense? |
Studies show that meditation builds executive function. The most useful part of executive function is that it controls impulsivity, and that is something that meditation helps with. The less executive function you have, the more you are on autopilot when it comes to your emotional control and decision making. Meditation helps you recognize the physical signs of emotion, which allows you to head them off, or put a gap between feeling and action in order to make a conscious choice. "Thinking, Fast and Slow" by Kahneman covers a lot of this, definitely worth a read. Essentially, your brain is lazy and wants expediency and efficiency, so it tries to spend as much time on autopilot as possible. That time on autopilot does nothing to build executive function, so being conscious of, and questioning your automatic reactions to things and automatic thoughts and beliefs are also ways to build executive function (in addition to meditation).
Gallant, S. N. (2016). Mindfulness meditation practice and executive functioning: Breaking down the benefit. Consciousness and cognition, 40, 116-130.
Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, fast and slow. Macmillan.
Luu, K., & Hall, P. A. (2017). Examining the acute effects of hatha yoga and mindfulness meditation on executive function and mood. Mindfulness, 8(4), 873-880.
Short, M. M., Mazmanian, D., Ozen, L. J., & Bédard, M. (2015). Four days of mindfulness meditation training for graduate students: A pilot study examining effects on mindfulness, self-regulation, and executive function. The Journal of Contemplative Inquiry, 2(1).
Tang, Y. Y., Yang, L., Leve, L. D., & Harold, G. T. (2012). Improving executive function and its neurobiological mechanisms through a mindfulness‐based intervention: Advances within the field of developmental neuroscience. Child development perspectives, 6(4), 361-366.
Taren, A. A., Gianaros, P. J., Greco, C. M., Lindsay, E. K., Fairgrieve, A., Brown, K. W., ... & Creswell, J. D. (2017). Mindfulness meditation training and executive control network resting state functional connectivity: a randomized controlled trial. Psychosomatic medicine, 79(6), 674. |
It's been the model of structure creates function in brain medicine and neurosciences for a good long time. This was the "Astonishing Hypothesis" by Sir Francis Crick.
There is not any function of neuronal brain without structure to create it. |
Firstly, in the real world Morpheus is seen as a bit of a crackpot, he just has a bit of a following.
Yes, in the Matrix there are "news" reports that label them as terrorists. Sure the police might investigate stuff (we see them break in on Trinity) but once it's clear to the Agents that there's RedPills involved they take over, similar to how the FBI takes over. |
It is just basic electrophysiology. When you have an open wound, the solution around nerve fibers is directly accessible. Nerve fibers work via gradients of sodium and potassium inside vs outside the cell. If you really boost the sodium concentration outside the cell, it becomes hyperexcitable. Now, it is a wound, so C fibers (nociceptors) are going to be active anyway. The salt is going to act like an amplifier.
It is different from the case of lemon juice, which alters the local pH. The C fibers are directly sensing the pH and sending a signal that your brain interprets as pain. |
Yes, mostly. Gas will naturally settle, like liquids, with the most dense at the bottom. Look up "gas stratification" to read details. This can be very dangerous in certain situations. For instance, a closed off industrial space such as a bridge compartment can have rusting metal. This uses up the oxygen. Or a closed off space that has bacteria at work using up the oxygen. The heavier air molecules left (other gases) such as carbon dioxide will fall to the lower portion of the room. This can asphyxiate someone who walks into that room. However, this does NOT mean that something like carbon dioxide (C02) will break up into carbon falling lower and oxygen settling higher. You have to take the density of the molecules into account, not the separate elements.
Stratification can also happen with different temperatures. Look up thermal stratification. |
Diarrhea usually is caused by irritation to the intestinal lining. Your intestinal lining has pain receptors but your brain has difficulty localizing it specifically. The casing around the intestines (peritoneum) has pain receptors that your brain can localize. Irritation causes inflammation, which involves the release of chemical messengers that tend to have a spill-over effect. Inflammed intestines lead to irritated peritoneum. Intestinal lumen pain is a deep dull pain that is difficult to specifically point to as coming from "here." Instead, the answer will be more like "all up in this general area."
Interesting corollary: Pain from appendicitis develops as the appendix becomes more and more inflammed. The appendix itself does not have awesome pain receptors, but its inflammation irritates the peritoneum. This causes a dull diffuse pain, mainly around the umbilicus. As the appendix gets worse, the pain will actually localize to a place called McBurney's point, the point where the appendix physically comes in contact with the peritoneum. This is usually in the right lower abdominal quadrant for most people, 1/3 of the distance from the anterior superior illiac spine to the navel. |
In your defense, you said that its "outrageous PDA" that makes you uncomfortable, not the gay or straight angle.
But your statement wasn't that public displays of affection makes you uncomfortable, it was that gay people engaging in such behavior do. Why did you specifically single out gay people in your statement, if it was irrelevant to your opinion?
If you had said, "It makes me uncomfortable when mixed race couples make out". Or, "It makes me uncomfortable to see old people making out", can you see how people would interpret those statements.
The implication of your statement is that it is something about the specific group that makes you more uncomfortable than usual. |
Cost. Making them solid doesn't make them very much stronger but adds significant cost. Also n some construction, rebar is embedded into concrete poured into the stacked blocks to add strength, which would not be possible if they were solid. Being able to add strength only where necessary minimizes cost. |
Because nobody's tried to breed them for that.
Dogs were purpose-bred for specific tasks. None of them were specifically bred to be large or small, it's just that the slightly larger or smaller ones were better at some job, so those were the ones that were used for breeding. Repeat for a couple dozen generations, and you've got a larger or smaller dog.
Cats were not bred for a job. They were already doing the job (catching pests in barns and granaries) pretty well. Early farmers noticed this and let them stay. The only selection going on was for cats that were not afraid of people. |
I think debates, for most viewers, are less about policy and more about how candidates present that policy, along with themselves. Many voters who have a specific issue that they really care about will just look up information on different candidate's ideas, but the debates serve a different purpose.
A future president needs to be able to think on their feet, take questions under pressure, and come out sounding like they know what they're talking about in a crunch. If the future president is negotiating a deal with Putin, President X will have done preparation before hand, but they won't be sitting in the conference googling the validity of everything Putin says. A debate is the same format: the candidates rigorously prepare beforehand, but the goal is to make them apply that knowledge on the run. |
Probably. [Black Panther film spoilers](#s "The gardener told Erik Stevens that the herb was needed for the *next* Panther, and clearly didn't want to burn it. Telling him that he'd need it himself in a few years would have been a good way to save the crop, but she didn't try that.") |
If you’re talking about aquarium fish, it isn’t because they’re saltwater. Plenty of saltwater fish are boring. It’s because they’re tropical. Animals throughout the tropics are more colorful and if you were going through the trouble of having a saltwater tank (which is very difficult to take care of), then you might as well select the most colorful and interesting looking ones. And in the ocean, there are way more to choose from.
People think the reason tropical animals are more colorful is that given the biodiversity and density it’s more important for species to find each other for mating than to avoid predators. |
It's easier and cheaper to domesticate and farm herbivores. The higher you move up the food chain, the more energy you need to sustain life because of the energy loss between levels. In order to feed a pack of wolves, you have to first raise some sort of food source for wolves. You also don't have to worry about cows eating farmers. |
IANAL so pinches of salt.
It's basically a matter of severity, intent, and the individual circumstances.
Consider 2 hypothetical incidents involving a minor (Lets say about 7-9 years old).
In the first, a kid somehow gets hold of a gun, and shoots someone they don't like - killing them in the process, but makes no effort to hide or destroy any evidence. When interviewed and asked why they did it, they either don't really know why they did it or didn't think it'd kill them (they'd go to hospital and get better).
In the second, the kid keeps a diary where they detail and plan killing someone they don't like. How to get the weapon, where the target goes, how to cover up their tracks - the entire thing is pre-meditated and planned to deliver the result. They know they're doing something wrong and plan to evade getting in trouble for it.
The reason we separate trials for minors and trials for adults is because it's generally accepted that children have less understanding of the consequences and severity of their actions, and as such need to be handled differently. In the second example, they've demonstrated through their actions that they understood the consequences of their actions - and as such it may no longer be appropriate to try them as if they didn't.
There are also a few caveats that would apply more to children. If in the second example the person killed was an abusive family member, then despite the pre-meditation and understanding of consequences they'd be more likely not to be tried as an adult since it's difficult for a child to escape abuse from a family member.
However an adult doing the same may be more likely to charged with manslaughter rather than self-defense (assuming they were not in immediate danger, and were reacting to a history of abuse by someone) as they are assumed to be better equipped to deal with the problem through legal means.
So that's for the why. The 'how' is basically a case of 'if it's necessary, then do so' - but a judge can't just turn around and decide to try a minor as an adult. There are a lot of checks in place that have to be satisfied before it can happen. |
**Why do they sound better than most of the other music at that time?**
Jazz music, including its crooner singers and big bands, was some of the most popular mainstream music at the time. As a result, they had more budget and resources for good recordings.
**Why do old jazz recordings still sound better than newer music?**
From a music perspective, many of the musicians who were playing on the jazz records of the 50s and 60s were seasoned live performers and session musicians. The way records were recorded back then involved the whole band to be in the same space performing the music.
As a result, a lot of these musicians had lots of experience and good chemistry with each other, which meant they could groove better and bounce off each other musically.
In later times, as studio technology evolved there was less of an emphasis of capturing the perfect recording of the performance in the room, as session musicians could be swapped in and out and record on completely different days, multiple performances could be cut together and edited to fix mistakes, etc.
Some people would regard say that as a result, some of the soul and imperfection was removed in favour of higher fidelity and perfect performances.
Speaking of music technology, the actual equipment was very different in the 50s and 60s.
Because they couldn't record lots of microphones at once, often bands would have to perform around one or two microphones and members would have to physically move back and forth in the room to adjust their volume. This made the sound of the room a very important basis of the sound.
Modern recording methods favour multiple microphones allowing for the complete isolation of each member of the band, meaning that only the pure instrument is captured, allowing for greater fidelity, but without the character of the shared sonic space being in the record. |
Here's the thing that gets me: it's not even enough to have a particular sperm and egg combination to determine a self. Identical twins come from the exact same sperm and egg, but are different selves.
Even after the enormous improbability of your particular sperm and egg meeting up, your parents could still have ended up with someone who wasn't you. We really don't understand what makes a self. |
If you're asking how the player character got there, in their world anthropomorphic animals are simply normal. It's pretty consistently implied that they moved there.
If you're asking how to get into such a world, you need some kind of interdimensional portal or something. |
I think you're not seeing the gender barrier because you're focused on the class barrier, that is much more apparent from your vantage point. Once you have a certain status or class, all barriers are weaker compared to those experienced by those in lower classes. |
The Separatist Movement was thousands of worlds which aligned with Dooku, but the majority of the "senate" were leaders of guilds and corporations, not government. And their main motivation was money - the Banking Clan loaned to both sides of the conflict, and the Trade Federation sold droids to their side.
But there were standing armies that weren't droid based, and these were the most difficult battles for the Republic to fight (Geonosis, Umbara). And there were independant groups who were allied with the Separatists, most notably the terrorist group Deathwatch from Mandalore. |
It wouldn't be that accurate. The replicator is a combination of a bunch of technologies. One of those is the protein synthesizers that used to be the only option in the past. In short it doesn't just blindly reproduce a single pattern like a transporter, going full matter replication is the last resort. There's no need to capture DNA. |
The friction of the glass means there is a tiny layer of air that is almost stationary called the boundary layer. The insect is small enough to be within that layer.
Imagine a three lane road where you have loads of cars using the road sensibly and pulling into the slow lane when there's no other traffic.
Now imagine there's a series of slow moving trucks in the slow lane. These are what cause the friction. Other cars in the slow lane get slowed down to the speed of the trucks until they can get room to overtake.
Now imagine the insect is a learner driver who is scared to go in the fast lane, so they sit behind a big truck and go at the same speed as them, without fear of the fast cars. |
What biking infrastructure? Bike lanes? It's just some extra paint and a law not to drive in it.
Raised bike paths? Can be walked too. Any biking path can be walked except the painted ones on the road.
Bike racks? Every single one I've ever seen got a lot of use out of it. |