I think what this thread is more concerned with is more concerned with is libertarianism, rather than anarchism. Minarchism, which has been mentioned, is generally considered to be the most extreme form of libertarianism. Unfortunately, in the Australian political environment the position of...
mate, im giving up on you. you are attempting to convince everyone that, in fact, to work out the direction of the field, first you work it out, then you do the exact opposite to what you just worked out. send me a bunch of apology roses when the BOS releases results.
please tell me you are joking? according to you, if we switched the orientation of the magnet, the field would still be toward it as a small north pole would be attracted towards the south end. therefore according to your theory, the orientation of the magnet has not effect on the direction of...
do the experiment. if the rotor moves in the same way regardless of what end of the magnet you put near it then i will eat a turd. but as we did a similar experiment in class, and that didn't happen, i'm guessing my mouth will be kept turd free...
indeed you are right about the misinterpretation of the direction of the magnetic field, but the field is definetly to the right. it doesn't matter if there is only one magnet used. otherwise, we could say that even if there was another magnet, that the direction of the field would still be...
i use a different rule but i can still see why you are wrong. the field is to the right. the direction of a magnetic field is the direction of force experienced by a small north pole. the bar magnet is a north end. therefore a north pole will be repelledto the right. so try your rule again with...
the mass is definetly placed on side x, n im not just saying that to prove how good i am. look at the guy's picture. use the three finger rule. index is field, it points away from the north pole since field direction is the direction of a north pole. current flows from positive to negative...
the answer to 11 is definetly b. the torque graph cannot be (a) as torque cannot change from positive to negative as this would mean that the motor began turning in the opposite direction. Therefore it can't be (a). It can't be (c) becuase the value of the torque is not constant. It can't be (d)...
does anyone have a copy of the multiple choice questions? I left mine in the exam room :(
also, did people get for the galvanic cell one that Fe3+ reduced to Fe2+? and that bloody shipwrecks question on silver plating the nickel spoon. I had the spoon the cathode and a graphite anode in a silver...
OOOH NOOO. LOOKS LIKE I WAS USING THE TERM "SCALING" GENERICALLY TO MEAN ALL THE CRAP YOU JUST SAID. YOUR CYBER PENIS MUST BE SOOOO MUCH BIGGER THAN MINE. THINK OF ME NEXT TIME YOUR JACKING OFF TO YOUR "OH SO INFORMED" KNOWLEDGE OF SCALING AND. ILL PUT IT NIIIICE AND SIMPLE FOR ALL OF YOU BOSER...
Whilst I'm sure you had fun negative repping me, and I admit that what I said about SAM was unclear and misleading, if you are suggesting that standard and advanced are scaled completely the same then you are horribly mistaken. It's a myth that marks are scaled "just because of the differences...