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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.15706698 [View]
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15706698

Wait a second... there's actually stuff (gonadotropin) which gives you a bigger dick? Is this missed because it's listed as "side effects" to fertility treatments instead of anyone actually researching how to achieve this? Are there any /sci/entists that know more?

https://scholar.google.com/scholar?as_ylo=2019&q=human+chorionic+gonadotropin+in+men

>> No.14983504 [View]
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14983504

Hey /sci/entists.
Post IQ test.
I want to troll my superiors at work.

>> No.12367689 [View]
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12367689

Are you autistic enough to make in science?

>> No.12095516 [DELETED]  [View]
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12095516

Can /sci/ solve it?

>> No.11932934 [View]
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Why is pic related only possible in 3 or more dimensions? Is there any more theoretical formulation of this problem that might help me understand what's going on? Is there a 3D version of this problem? If not, why is the jump to 3 dimensions special?

Am I schizo, or is this somehow related to the way the jump from the 2nd hyperoperation (multiplication) to the 3rd (exponentiation) is special? (It's special because 1) the commutative property suddenly disappears and 2) the larger set of numbers we have to define to accommodate its inverse, as we did with naturals -> integers -> rationals, is suddenly uncountably infinite.)

Feel free to post your hilarious and original solutions to le ebin autism test, as any bumps will likely help me get a serious answer.

>> No.10277828 [View]
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10277828

what kind of math is required to proof a solution exists?

>> No.9749372 [View]
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>> No.9363351 [View]
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>>9362917

>> No.9023941 [View]
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>>9023450
Is this supposed to be one of those le epic topology puzzles?

>> No.8703120 [View]
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Hey /sci/, I'm having some trouble understanding electric shock and how isolation transformers protect you from it. Can someone please explain. Here's what I do understand so far

In an undergrounded system, lets say connected to a metal toaster, if there's a faulty hot wire that connects to the metal frame, the will become charged and part of the system. So if you touch it, your body will become part of the circuit and the current will run through you causing an electric shock.

If the there's a ground wire attached to the metal frame and the hot wire has a defect connecting it to the metal frame, the electricity will run through it, to the neutral part of the system and trip the breaker turning off the power.

So I'm confused why an isolation transformer protects against shock. It's not connected to the ground. If a faulty wire touches a metal piece of equipment and I touch the equipment, wouldn't I get a shock just like in an undergrounded system?

Please help.

>> No.8684784 [View]
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8684784

Fight my campion

>> No.8523526 [View]
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>> No.8458475 [View]
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>> No.8254175 [View]
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8254175

have you considered looking at the syllabus and prerequisites? or opening a graph theory book and reading about it?

graphs are very fundamental on their own and so you probably don't need much depending on the focus of the class

you'll need to be comfortable with induction for basic proofs

you'll need some linear algebra to study adjacency matrices of graphs

go learn the handshaking lemma and read about how euler solved the seven bridges of konigsberg problem

>> No.7929046 [DELETED]  [View]
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7929046

Well, /sci/, are you autistic?

>> No.7703168 [View]
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7703168

Protip: You can't

>> No.7559319 [View]
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>>7558884
Transbians are some of the coolest bitches I know tbh.

>> No.7333721 [View]
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>> No.7031364 [View]
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>>7031344
well im talking about the unruliness of the technicality.

>> No.6984582 [View]
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whatisnuclear.com/articles/thorium_myths.html

And you faggot keep saying that thorium is the best thing ever

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