(Part 2) Top products from r/shittyaskscience

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We found 20 product mentions on r/shittyaskscience. We ranked the 93 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/shittyaskscience:

u/exodus2219 · 1 pointr/shittyaskscience

Ah HA! you have fallen into my logical trap, this universal consciousness is clearly just another name for Yahweh Intelligent Designer! I urge you to see the light and convert rationale and accept the scientific truth, you heathen science denier!

P.S.: fixed the sir to ma'am, but i can still keep the bitch where it is right?

P.S.S.: I had a colleague back in my PhD days that later became the dean of Naturopathy, and he definitely recommend this book ! He's been using this textbook for his undergrad lecture and only 60% of his students have died from easily preventable diseases because they only use herb instead of medicine to treat themselves. GREAT READ!

u/ravageritual · 4 pointsr/shittyaskscience

Not a shitty answer to a shitty question, but this was a pretty interesting book that dealt with that subject. His previous book, The Descent (which the movie was not based upon) is much, much better.

u/TheoHooke · 3 pointsr/shittyaskscience

No use. Recommend gender change operation. I'll link some useful resources here, here and here. Good luck!

u/paddyl888 · 5 pointsr/shittyaskscience

Also try the forever war by Joe Haldeman (you can also get the whole trilogy as an omnibus edition here - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Peace-And-War-Omnibus-GOLLANCZ/dp/0575079193) Really good sci-fi which won the hugo award and is in the same theme as enders game, i feel!

u/MOSTLY_EMPTY_SPACE · 1 pointr/shittyaskscience

The speed of sound in a medium is equal to the square root of the bulk modulus K divided by the density ϱ. Since the temperature of space is a constant 2.73 Kelvin, we can use the isothermal bulk modulus relation, which is just equal to the pressure P. Since atoms in space are vastly outnumbered by CMB photons, we can just use the radiation pressure of isotropic radiation which is P=u/3 where u is the energy density. The effective mass density ϱ (again ignoring the negligible number of atoms) can be derived from the energy density u with a rearrangement of E=mc^2 giving u/c^2 . Plugging back into the speed of sound equation we get: [ (u/3) /( u/c^2 ) ]^1/2 = [ 1/3 c^2 u/u ]^1/2 = [ 1/3 c^2 ]^1/2 = [1/3]^1/2 c. So the speed of sound in space is 107,550 miles/s.

The fastest spacecraft ever were the Helios probes which reached 43.63 miles/s while falling towards the Sun, or about Mach 1/2465. So: no, not quite.

We will break it someday, though! The governments of Earth will gather a group of hot young space-fighter jocks, True Brothers who are willing to go up in a hurtling piece of machinery and put their hides on the line and then have the moxie, the reflexes, the experience, the coolness, to pull it back in the las yawning moment! (Starring Dennis Quaid and Ed Harris, based on the novel by Tom Wolfe.)

u/ontopic · 3 pointsr/shittyaskscience

The literature indicates tuna sandwiches and smooching, mostly.

u/elysianfields14 · 1 pointr/shittyaskscience

Here's a textbook detailing their colonization of the moon if you're not familiar with that part of rodent history.

u/joope125 · 1 pointr/shittyaskscience

Read a book (The one I got my SPhD on)

This will scientifically upgrade your greyware.

u/Undercover_Dinosaur · 1 pointr/shittyaskscience

Ask Mitchell, he moved two weeks away. Nobody has heard from him since

u/tuctrohs · 2 pointsr/shittyaskscience

It's actually called the "Chair of Chemistry." We've had those since at least 1702.

u/Jolator · 1 pointr/shittyaskscience

That's a brown "very hungry caterpillar."

Source: I read a book about it

u/Foxpope · 11 pointsr/shittyaskscience

At a rate of 25,000 per day, that's 9,125,000 a year, which is 3% of America's population yearly (assuming we don't change population from 300,000,000). Since the company was founded in 1995, we should be at roughly 66% of the US population being on Match.com. If we can continue this trend, it will take no less than 11 more years before Match controls all relationships in America. This date of 2028 seems to be in line with this text i found, indicating the end of days for the US.

u/Freducated · 3 pointsr/shittyaskscience

101 Uses for a Dead Cat


This is just for cats, but the sound principles apply to a variety of other pets.