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>> No.8439229 [View]
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8439229

They very first thing you do when you find 'something' is ask yourself, is the world ready for this? Then you ask yourself if the government would kill you for it, or if someone else would kill you. Then you ask yourself why hasn't anybody thought of that? Then it occurs you that the government has destroyed human progress and that world has already lost the game because of it, and then you just wait for the cleansing fire.

>> No.6807585 [View]
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6807585

>>6807575
Thanks for the answers. I'm outta questions for the time being
Heres a semi-related picture for your hard work

>> No.6795709 [View]
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6795709

Second year B. of Science majoring in Chem/Bio struggling with physical chemistry, due to a personal difficulty with mathematics (but if I could do it, I'd probably switch to physics...)

Content is mainly kinetics (rate laws, SSA), thermodynamics (Gibbs energies, phase diagrams, equilibria), molecular interactions etc.

Does anyone know any easy, walkthrouh explanations of physical chem concepts online? Looking for stuff with definitions, complete derivations etc.

Thanks in advance !

>> No.6737478 [View]
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6737478

>>6736663

>> No.6363053 [View]
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6363053

>>6363002

>> No.6324378 [View]
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6324378

>>6324369

>> No.6094944 [View]
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6094944

I've recently (within the last 2-3 years) gained a high interest/love for science. I'd like to do something for a living that involves science.
Although I loved science throughout school, I had little interest in the mathematical side but loved the theoretical side. Now I'm older and understand how crucial the mathematical portion is and I wish to learn it as well.
I come here asking a question that can change the course of my life.
Do you think that someone such as myself (22 years old with only high school physics and math) would have a chance of becoming an astrophysicist or something along those lines?

I'd ask other boards but this one seems to be the most enlightened.

>> No.5756264 [View]
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5756264

>>5756247

>We now present a document which unequivocally proves that on February 2, 1961, nine weeks before Gagarin, another Russian cosmonaut flew into space. His mission was not successful and this hero perished during the flight. His sacrifice was kept secret from the world for reasons of political propaganda.

>The attached 'RealAudio' files are actual recordings of the last moments of this hero's life. His failing heartbeat can be heard, as it was recorded by the Judica-Cordiglia brothers. A leading cardiologist of the time, Prof. Dogliotti, confirmed that the heartbeats are those of a dying person. The breathing sounds are, literally, the last gasps of the cosmonaut, already unconscious.

http://web.archive.org/web/20030407234038/http://www.lostcosmonauts.com/man.htm

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