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Cake day: July 31st, 2024

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  • uh it should be in kgs sorry, I was just bewildered how I managed to fuck up an equation with it literally being in front of me (cus I googled it). The number comes up to a little less than 2 protons… which means (according to my food poisoned brain’s calculation) that if there were 2 protons in a sphere with a radius of 15 cm, it would collapse into a black hole.


  • I tried to calculate how much this kitty would have to weigh to make a blackhole and… I found 3.13*(e)^(-27). Society is so fucking lucky I didn’t decide to study math

    Edit: my painkillers finally kicked in and I redid my calculation: Assuming the cat as a sphere with 15 cm radius, the cat would have to weigh 1.00994318 e26 kg which isn’t as glaringly wrong as my previous calculation. (omg I wrote e^-27 whats wrong with me)


  • Dave2@lemmy.blahaj.zonetoScience Memes@mander.xyzIt's true...
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    7 months ago

    Education-wise it is best to have an “uninteresting” cadaver to start with. Otherwise one might spend half a lesson trying to figure out something beyond their scope. But after grasping the basics it is best to delve into such variations, otherwise one might learn them mid-surgery. For research it is best to have the test subject be as “normal” as possible (unless the research is about the variation), so the findings are not skewed.