|
All posts in this thread MUST include at least one picture (funny/entertaining and must be SAFE FOR WORK). No arguing about anything. |
On November 19 2010 12:03 555 wrote:Show nested quote +On November 19 2010 12:00 happyness wrote:On November 19 2010 11:40 Tsagacity wrote:On November 19 2010 11:33 happyness wrote:The others don't work and aren't very clever, but I don't know how to argue with this one. You could have instantaneous morse code with it. I'm not going to tackle the actual moving back and forth at the moment, but morse code vibrations wouldn't be instant. I know vibrations wouldn't be instant. I meant like if the stick is rigid you could do back and forth communication. And I know there must be something wrong with that but I take it it's hard to explain. When you push the stick, you are pushing the atoms which pushes atoms further down the pole. Each atom is connected to another atom by something like rigid springs. On a small scale, the springs propagate the movement really fast, but there is a finite speed. Tapping on the pole to produce a sound should be bounded by the same principal, therefore the signal should propagate at exactly the speed of sound in the solid object. Also another cute zerg pic:
Ok that makes sense. It would be faster than sound, but not all that fast.
Obligatory pic:
|
Osaka27097 Posts
SHUT UP about fucking space sticks. How can the concept of this thread be confusing.
|
|
Korea (South)3086 Posts
omfg. Those Spiderman comics is the greatest thing to hit this thread in a while. Holy shit.
|
i just made this one... figured i would contribute to the epic sfw thread!
|
LOL!! PHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
|
France1919 Posts
|
|
On November 19 2010 11:57 vica wrote:
Reason why it isn't done that way: Colourblind people. Obligatory pic:
|
On November 19 2010 11:33 happyness wrote:The others don't work and aren't very clever, but I don't know how to argue with this one. You could have instantaneous morse code with it. Any sort of physical wave that propagates through the stick's material will travel at the speed of sound in that solid (which is faster than the speed of sound in air though). Thats what the speed of sound IS - how fast compressional waves travel through a medium. Moving the stick is equivalent to creating a wave.
Look at it this way - the force that holds the stick together is the electromagnetic attraction between atoms. The force carrier for EM is the photon, which travels at the speed of light. So anything that moves the stick can, at the greatest, travel at the speed of light.
Imagine laying a slinky flat on the ground and pushing on one end. You see a wave, and the whole thing ends up moved in the direction you pushed it in. This is the same way pushing a stick works, with REALLY small atomic "springs" created by EM repulsion between electron clouds, instead of the physical slinky spring.
|
Which part of stop being a nerd in a funny pics thread didn't u get people ? :| We're here to see some funny pics, not some nerds arguing about who has the bigest pimple..
|
On November 19 2010 21:37 susySquark wrote:Show nested quote +On November 19 2010 11:33 happyness wrote:The others don't work and aren't very clever, but I don't know how to argue with this one. You could have instantaneous morse code with it. Any sort of physical wave that propagates through the stick's material will travel at the speed of sound in that solid (which is faster than the speed of sound in air though). Thats what the speed of sound IS - how fast compressional waves travel through a medium. Moving the stick is equivalent to creating a wave. Look at it this way - the force that holds the stick together is the electromagnetic attraction between atoms. The force carrier for EM is the photon, which travels at the speed of light. So anything that moves the stick can, at the greatest, travel at the speed of light. Imagine laying a slinky flat on the ground and pushing on one end. You see a wave, and the whole thing ends up moved in the direction you pushed it in. This is the same way pushing a stick works, with REALLY small atomic "springs" created by EM repulsion between electron clouds, instead of the physical slinky spring. + Show Spoiler +
Did you really not read Manifesto's post about SHUTTING THE FUCK UP ABOUT THE STICKS + Show Spoiler +
|
|
|
On November 19 2010 23:02 SolHeiM wrote:Please explain.
Typed up a whole long-winded reply, but hit back by mistake. Here's the TL;DR version:
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night features Dracula as the final villain, and before the player battle with him, he asks the now-infamous question "What is a man?"
The joke is in reference to the Jeopardy-style presentation here, where he has to answer in the form of a question.
|
On November 19 2010 23:08 -ty[r]ant wrote:Typed up a whole long-winded reply, but hit back by mistake. Here's the TL;DR version: Castlevania: Symphony of the Night features Dracula as the final villain, and before the player battle with him, he asks the now-infamous question "What is a man?" The joke is in reference to the Jeopardy-style presentation here, where he has to answer in the form of a question. Originally that question comes from the drama "Oedipus the King" from Sophocles, where the protagonist has to answer that question to enter and safe the city.
|
|
|
If Microsoft's success is any indicator, apparently sex appeal sells (ROFL, I wouldn't catch Bill Gate's floppy!)
|
On November 19 2010 15:11 Jemmani wrote:i just made this one... figured i would contribute to the epic sfw thread!
You, sir, win 1 billion internetz.
|
|
|
|