http://www.ponderwall.com/index.php/2016/07/21/the-moon-mining-race-is-getting-serious-laws-economics-and-technology/
In December 2015, President Obama signed into law the Commercial Space Competitiveness Act. One of its most important terms is that it allows private entrepreneurs to own and use whatever resources they obtain from the outer space.
But google lunar X-Prize is probably kill.
>>9105544
Ha, these faggots can dream on.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPACE_Act_of_2015
What does /sci/ thinks about this one? Any more recent documentaries and research in favor of this argument?
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqULEE7eY8M&
>>9105452
It's not scientific to claim such things with nothing to back up with or without filling all the logical gaps.
>>9105473
I agree. That is why I am asking if any other experiments were conducted to prove or debunk this theory. And what are the counter-theories?
In the ISS, surely they all use an agreed upon system. Which is it?
Kelvin.
>>9105295
For the inside of the station? But that would be such an unnecessarily long number to read aloud.
>>9105303
well it's 273+x°C so Celsius it is if that's what you wanted
Looks like global warming is long overdue anyway.
>>9105256
DELET THIS
>>9105256
norway =/= global
Question for the physics majors here - what are/were your favorite electives? Need to pick some for this semester and can't really make up my mind, would love to learn from your experience.
Don't give a fuck about easy/useful, looking for something interesting.
What can you choose from?
Lagrangian Dynamics has been my favourite so far, but I'm taking QFT this semester and I'm fucking excite
>>9105121
My favourites were analytical mechanics, quantum mechanics and statistical mechanics
But I assume all of these are mandatory given how fundamental they are
>>9105147
There are plenty of options (that's the problem haha). The main ones I've been considering are:
>intro to general relativity
>quantum information theory
>hamiltonian chaos
>classical field theory
>group theory in physics
We actually do have courses on QFT, but I think it would be cooler to study classical fields. What do you think?
>>9105178
yeah, they're all mandatory...
what is the healthiest diet according to /sci/ ?
>>9104955
All salts on the market for the soul and mind.
Semen
>>9104955
I wrote this the other day on /ck/ when someone asked, how's that the inuit people can live off on meat only.
>What's the most nutritious meal imaginable, that contains *every* necessary compounds in the *perfect* proportions that a healthy human body needs? Well, actually a whole healthy human body minced, eaten raw. The next best thing to eat is something that resembles best in its composition to the human body: a fucking animal, not "veggies".
t. MSc. in Food Engineering
Hello sci, I have a rather unusual request for you.
There is a lot of talk about IQ differences between races. I work in a mental health institute as a psychotherapist (in germany, therefore sorry if my english isnt perfect) and I seem to have noticed that there are differences between races when it comes to mental health issues. For example, people of eastern european descent, especially russians, seem to be very prone to developing paranoid shizophrenia. While northern europeans seem to be more prone for Autism,
etc. Of course I only have the small sample size of my own institution as well as the anecdotes i exchange with collegues every now and then. So I was searching for a proper study about different mental health issues and their correlation to different ethnicities/races. But I couldnt find any. So my question is, does anybody here know anything about the topic, or knows a study like the one i am searching? Thanks in advance.
>>>/pol/ is the board to ask.
What is the best site for downloading journals?
http://sci-hub.bz/
You know how in the 20th century physicists revolutionised every thing and allowed great geniuses to achieve great things while biologists just labeled things like dumb beta faggot brainlets?
>physicists lost in string theory and dark matter memes and saying that wobbly equipment measures gravity
>biologists create CRISPR, the genomic revolution, brain understanding and augmentation
In the 21st century tables will turn
>>9104778
are there any biologists with P H E N O T Y P E ?
>>9104778
>allowed great geniuses to achieve great things
That's not how science works. Any discovery made by a great 'genius' is the product of countless work in the background by contemporary or historical scientists.
Back to plebbit.
>will
already has with genetics alone Tbh
How long until genetic (re)engineering and the use of nanobots are able to replicate scenarios like the one shown in the following video
facial reconstruction etc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1sL_2nhV0c
also fuck everyone and anyone that stands in the way of advancements because of "muh morals much ethics much man in the sky muh chillren in africa"
>>9104664
Fucking gore warning dude.
Genetic engineering is incapable of soing such things. Nanobots capable of doing that are far off.
>>9104664
Let me guess. Undergrad? Second rate college? Both?
Nobody with a detailed and well-rounded knowledge of medicine and biology talks about "nanobots."
>>9104664
this screams underage or troll, not sure which
>nanobots
meme
>genetic engineering
is a technique which can be used for many things, mainly in altering genes in cell cultures or tissues to get them to express certain proteins or knock them out. Has nothing to do with getting cells to grow different tissues instantaneously at exactly the same place where the facial damage was as shown in that film.
If such a thing is ever possible (not within our lifetimes if we're talking about brain printing), it will utilise a combination of scientific tools. This field is called tissue engineering as of now, and in its human application doesn't involve magical in vivo printing of compex facial tissue structures, but organ printing for surgical transplantation/grafts.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tissue_engineering
Hi /sci/
So I'm trying to work out the significance of some data.
To simplify it for myself I thought about it in terms of two house holds eating eggs.
Household A has 10 people, they eat 5 eggs a week; B has 4 people they eat 3 eggs a week.
On average A eats 0.5 eggs per person; B eats 0.75 per person. (I am right in saying B eats 0.25 eggs more than A per person?)
Going further, A eats 62.5% of the eggs, B eats 37.5%
A comprises 71.43% of the total people (A and B combined); B is 28.57%.
I am just stuck here. I want to show who is more likely to eat eggs based on these percentages. Is there a way to do that?
I know I have already shown that B eats 0.25 eggs more than A per person. But I am looking to show how much more likely B is to eat eggs than A.
Thanks for your help /sci/
First of all, this is a probability question. Second of all, this response assume a basic understanding of Venn diagrams. The numbers in the red and blue spaces are straight forward, as they represent the proportion of people in each household. The third circle represents the event that a random person eats at least one egg in a week.
Thus, we are looking for the probability that a person eats an egg given they are in household A and the probability that a person eats an egg given they are in household B. These probabilities are found by dividing the number of ways in which the eggs could be eaten in a week excluding one person by the total number of ways in which the eggs could be eaten in a week. Basic mathematics is then used to fill in the remainder of the Venn diagram.
I want to start from the book of Cramer, Essentials of Computational Chemistry. Is it a good choice?
>Is it a good choice?
Why don't you read it and find out?
Why does my Cum smell like flinstones vitamins?
Remember when you took 2 instead of one of those vitamines once when you were a child? Yep, fucks you for life.
>>9104505
>Why does my Cum smell like flinstones vitamins?
I have a question, how did you determine that your cum smells exactly like that?
>>9105547
i smelled it
*blocks your worldline*
In fourth grade I had a geography teacher who looked a lot like mitten. Just thought I'd share that
>tfw the m in m-theory is just an inverted w
>tfw patiently awaiting 2014 MU69 flyby
>tfw Pluto is still a planet
>tfw Europe is still wrong but they put a probe on a comet so gj Europe
>tfw Alan Stern is always right
http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/
Will New Horizons finish its mission in the interstellar cosmos like Voyagers and Pioneers? Why do they do that? Why not just make it crash in Kuiper's Belt?
>>9104381
Them niggaz was good niggaz and great niggaz bu we NEW HORIZONZ now straight outta Patagonia we investigate the path and truncate the length one tenth to help our probe, Johannesburg, Salzburg couldn't see these crack rocks.
>>9104386
OK Tyrone.