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  2. The exact time lenth of one day? - Science Forums

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/1235-the-exact-time-lenth-of-one-day

    The exact time lenth of one day? The exact time lenth of one day? By Aki January 22, 2005 in ...

  3. EXACTLY how many seconds are there in a year - Science Forums

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/360-exactly-how-many-seconds-are-there-in-a-year

    It is the correct value to the nearest second. It's not exact. There is precision involved. Here is a link so that you can verify the time interval: Columbia Encyclopedia: tropical year Here is a link that shows four of the five names that I gave as being the same thing (the other one also refers to the same thing): Definition of a year

  4. Is 'time' a measurable variable? - Science Forums

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/6313-is-time-a-measurable-variable

    This therefore would extend to a clock at the exact same station measuring time day to day. Gravity fluctuations at the station will cause the passage of time to speed up and slow down day in and day out compared to another clock at another time station (who of course is undergoing the same type of fluctuations due to gravitational fluctuations ...

  5. Time Travel : Space Time Pin Pointing - Astronomy and Space -...

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/30576-time-travel-space-time-pin-pointing

    Space is alone confusing. Calculating physics in a 5 dimensional simulation requires 5 variables per dimension. That's 25 different variables. Now imagine, those variables multiplying per every instance of time since the Big Bang to whatever future our race may hold. Lot to take in at once so we ...

  6. Is Meteorology An Exact Science? - Science Forums

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/27689-is-meteorology-an-exact-science

    Is Meteorology An Exact Science? By Abe40 April 12, 2014 in Earth and Climate Science. Share

  7. Time dilation and Hawkins radiation. - Science Forums

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/41070-time-dilation-and-hawkins-radiation

    However, due to the finite amount of time it takes for the black hole to decay via Hawking radiation, the object would never actually cross the event horizon and reach the singularity. In fact, it would take an infinite amount of time for the object to reach the singularity, as time dilation becomes infinite at the singularity.

  8. Ideal Wind Turbine Power Analysis from the Reference Frame of the...

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/41148-ideal-wind-turbine-power-analysis-from-the...

    But at the exact same time, an observer on the ground witnessing the same cart roll by will observe that the air behind the propeller is moving slower than the surrounding wind and the propeller is thus slowing down the air in this reference frame. Strange but true! See if you can spot the difference between what you wrote then and now.

  9. Maslow re-visited - Psychology - Science Forums

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/78069-maslow-re-visited

    If Maslow's hypothesis is broadly correct, then we logically dedicate time each day meeting these needs. For example: Level 1 - shopping and eating Level 2 - going to work and generally earning an income Level 3 - sleeping and looking after our health, including socialising with friends

  10. Get Real With Mike Murphy - Political Sciences - Science Forums

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/37114-get-real-with-mike-murphy

    Mike Murphy's exact words were as follows: "We are going to have an interview with Dane Whittington with Geoengineering Watch.org. and he is really about Chemtrails and what they spray out of airplanes all over us all day long. And how it all ties in to Covid19, BLM and Antifa. And he is a very smart guy and has been doing this for a long time".

  11. At What Altitude Can Stars Be Seen In Daylight?

    www.scienceforums.com/topic/30778-at-what-altitude-can-stars-be-seen-in-daylight

    To anyone interested in true story space adventure, I recommend ‘Secret space escapes’ (2015).The part of this series relevant to this post is ‘shipwrecked P2’at 12m26s through to 13m where astronaut Mike Foale mentions ‘you can’t see the stars during the day’ when describing how the stars were used as reference points for stabilizing the Mir space station’s tumbling spin.