A Conversation for Ask h2g2
useless facts
Swodahs Neetriht Posted Oct 5, 2004
Absolutely everything everywhere of any kind (with the possible exception of black holes) is over 99.9% empty space. The nucleus of an atom comprises 99% of its total mass, and if a typical atom were the size of an American football field, the whole nucleus would be the size of a grain of salt on the fifty yard-line, with the rest being made of absolutely nothing. How's that for mind-boggling?
useless facts
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Oct 5, 2004
The view of the atom as empty space is a common and useful one, but it is not strictly true. Think rather of a football pitch with a grain of salt at the centre representing the nucleus and a very thin soup filling the rest of the field. The electron doesn't occupy a single position around the atom. Instead it is spread out very thinly over the whole of the space around the atom. To be really accurate, each electron is spread very thinly over the rest of the entire universe.
useless facts
Dr Hell Posted Oct 5, 2004
The molecules in air have a volume of approximately 0.008 cubic nm. And, in our atmosphere each molecule occupies a volume of (roughly) 0.037 cubic nm (multiply that with 6.022E23 and get 22.3). That means, the molecule itself, in a gas, occupies only 20% of the volume in which it is in. So 80% of the air volume consists of pure vacuum.
HELL
useless facts
Edward the Bonobo - Gone. Posted Oct 5, 2004
During WWII, the Clydeside shipyards produced a greater tonnage of ships than the entire US. While being bombed.
useless facts
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Oct 5, 2004
Ireland has the remains of over 40,000 Celtic ring-forts, which were left undisturbed because people thought they were inhabited by fairies.
useless facts
Edward the Bonobo - Gone. Posted Oct 5, 2004
I'm sure there are one or two people on the "Freeedom From Faith Foundation" conversation forum who'd be prepared to believe that
useless facts
Dr Hell Posted Oct 5, 2004
The Statue of Liberty was originally planned to be a lighthouse for the Suez canal. It was not a *present* of the French for the Americans. In reality most of the statue (70%) was financed by ordinary american citizens through small donations. The French only paid for the transport.
useless facts
Swodahs Neetriht Posted Oct 6, 2004
Hmm, not quite sure about that whole atom thing. It's true that you could think of it as soup, because an election can be thought of as a wave, but it can also be thought of as a particle. In that case, it would occupy only one position in space, but according to certain things like the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, you can only know certain things about its position, speed, etc. In that case, it isn't spread out through the whole universe, but it affects the whole universe in a VERY VERY small way. The whole duality thing is what makes everything on that level so hard to visualize.
useless facts
(crazyhorse)impeach hypatia Posted Oct 6, 2004
more money was spent filming Tora Tora Tora than was lost in hardware during the bombing of Pearl harbor
useless facts
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Oct 6, 2004
Hell, what you say about the Statue of Liberty does not match with the Edited Entry on it, A985287. According to that Entry, the statue was originally intended for America and was a gift from the French, although the pedestal was funded by average American citizens making small donations.
useless facts
Dr Hell Posted Oct 6, 2004
Oops... So let me try to put it right. Last week I read an article in the paper (in German - link here: http://www.zeit.de/2004/41/A-Bartholdi) - And it confirmed what I was suspecting, when I saw the designs for the lighthouse "projet de phare pour Suez" in the Bertholdi Museum in Colmar.
Originally the design for the statue was intended to be a lighthouse on the mediterranean side of the Suez canal. According to the article I read, Bartholdi was inspired by monumental constructions, like the pyramids and the colossus of rhodus. He started doing designs for the lighthouse. One of them is *very* *very* similar to the Liberty, the inscription was to be: "Progress or Egypt, bearing the light to Asia" (in original "L'Égypte ou progrès éclairant l'Orient" compare that with "Liberté éclairant le monde" which is the Liberty's inscription) However, the whole negotiations with the Egyptians ended at an early stage. Nevertheless he exposed the designs on the World-Expo of Paris 1867. (I tried to google for that design, maybe someone has more success). *Later* on he embarked in (an already progressing) initiative (started by Édouard-René Lefebvre de Laboulaye) to construct a memorial to celebrate the American centennial. So he took the designs back from the drawer and re-coined them to fit the spirit. Hence my affirmation that *originall* the Statue was planned for the Suez canal.
As to funding - my bad - I should've written, it was not a present of the French *government*, they only (half-heartedly) funded the transport. The statue was a gift of ordinary French people who raised the money (250,000 bucks) via donations. The pedestal was paid by ordinary american people, via small donations.
So in the end, there's not such a big conflict with the Edited Entry, the Entry starts at a later point of the History and omits the preceding episode of the Lighthouse design. The funding part was my bad, sorry.
H
useless facts
A Super Furry Animal Posted Oct 6, 2004
As was stated in a trailer for a Channel 4 programme a while back "Only one of these three facts is true".
Come again?
RF
useless facts
Gnomon - time to move on Posted Oct 6, 2004
... assuming a linear rather than exponential reduction.
useless facts
Edward the Bonobo - Gone. Posted Oct 6, 2004
Again referring to shenanigans on the Freedom From Faith Foundation conversation...there are some on there who refuse to acknowledge the very existence of such a thing as a 'fact'. Apparently, there is a small probability that the world is not round.
Key: Complain about this post
useless facts
- 541: Swodahs Neetriht (Oct 5, 2004)
- 542: Yowuzupman- New Top Speed 122 (thats mph you metric fools) (Oct 5, 2004)
- 543: Gnomon - time to move on (Oct 5, 2004)
- 544: Dr Hell (Oct 5, 2004)
- 545: Edward the Bonobo - Gone. (Oct 5, 2004)
- 546: Watermusic (Oct 5, 2004)
- 547: Gnomon - time to move on (Oct 5, 2004)
- 548: Edward the Bonobo - Gone. (Oct 5, 2004)
- 549: Fathom (Oct 5, 2004)
- 550: Dr Hell (Oct 5, 2004)
- 551: Swodahs Neetriht (Oct 6, 2004)
- 552: (crazyhorse)impeach hypatia (Oct 6, 2004)
- 553: Gnomon - time to move on (Oct 6, 2004)
- 554: Dr Hell (Oct 6, 2004)
- 555: Gnomon - time to move on (Oct 6, 2004)
- 556: A Super Furry Animal (Oct 6, 2004)
- 557: Dr Hell (Oct 6, 2004)
- 558: Gnomon - time to move on (Oct 6, 2004)
- 559: Edward the Bonobo - Gone. (Oct 6, 2004)
- 560: Dr Hell (Oct 6, 2004)
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