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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.4398952 [View]

>>4398951
You're full of shit.

>> No.4398948 [View]

>>4398946
English major, eh?

>> No.3790485 [View]

>>3789855
Fuck you. I know how that shit works. I'm taking the shuttle craft.

>> No.3771283 [View]

So long and thanks for all the snatch.

>> No.3769110 [View]

>>3769060
Even the nicest pool has to be skimmed on a regular basis.

Parasites don't have personal liberty because they're infringing on everyone else.

>> No.3353027 [View]

I'm a doctor, and I'm going to need you to post pictures of the area in question so I can give you a diagnosis.

>> No.3336805 [View]
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3336805

>>3336796

>> No.3336770 [View]
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3336770

>>3336746

>> No.3336727 [View]
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3336727

>>3336710
Sounds like it can't be that useful if its applications are that limited.

How does one equation turn into a wave on a graph?

>> No.3336703 [View]

Define civil rights.

>> No.3336700 [View]
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3336700

Explain calculus, why it matters, and what it's actually useful for.

>> No.3330857 [View]

Anyone?

>> No.3330579 [View]

My plan would be to ship in a fuckton of comets from the oort cloud and asteroids from the belt and bombard the shit out of Venus.

And by shit, I mean the majority of the atmosphere.

Comets would bring water, hydrogen, and oxygen to the planet, and the asteroids would do a good job of taking out some of the atmosphere and initiating a nuclear winter.

After enough bombardment and time, the planet would probably cool sufficiently to allow colonization and terraforming.

>> No.3330565 [View]

>>3330561
Assume optimal distance for transit.

>> No.3330552 [View]
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3330552

Assuming you have a spacecraft equipped with a VASIMR drive powerful enough to make a trip to Mars in 39 days or less, how long would it take to make a trip from Earth orbit to the moon or L2?

>> No.3107225 [View]

>>3107219
It bothers me that it took nineteen posts for someone to suggest that.

Though just Schrodinger would be better than Schrodinger's.

>> No.2967281 [View]
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2967281

>>2967170
>>2967269

>> No.2150842 [View]
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>>2150839

>> No.2150825 [View]
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2150825

>>2150784

>> No.2047089 [View]
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2047089

This ended badly.

>> No.2047060 [View]
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2047060

What has science done!?

>> No.2047049 [View]

>>2047020
>trillions
You don't actually believe that, do you?

If I had the cash on hand, I could probably get a man on Mars and back for less than fifty million dollars and do it within four years.

>> No.2046973 [View]

Keep in mind that atmospheric oxygen levels were higher back then as well.

Hence 40' dragonflies.

>> No.2046957 [View]

>>2046525
A hull breech is far less serious in space than several hundred feet below the ocean.

Plus mobility and power generation are easier.

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