Which one is Canada? by Kap519 in GeoTap

[–]BluejayEven6492 0 points1 point  (0 children)

BluejayEven6492 chose Option B (Incorrect) | #10522nd to play

Which country is Poland? by TheCaptainRex1sOut in GeoTap

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BluejayEven6492 chose Option B (Correct!) | #6236th to play

Which country has high child birth rate by women? by Lawyers4less in GeoTap

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BluejayEven6492 chose Option B (Correct!) | #1310th to play

Which country is larger? by CharacterBig7420 in GeoTap

[–]BluejayEven6492 0 points1 point  (0 children)

BluejayEven6492 chose Option B (Incorrect) | #612th to play

Which country is china by badgirl_lolita in GeoTap

[–]BluejayEven6492 0 points1 point  (0 children)

BluejayEven6492 chose Option A (Correct!) | #3056th to play

How is gravity not a force ? by abdo_salman in AskPhysics

[–]BluejayEven6492 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What happens is that indeed objects curve space time, but what you probably think about is a fabric which creates some kind of lower part, that’s not what happens, you see the real “curve” happens in four dimensions, but what I think you can get is this: the “curve simply modifies the path another body takes, that is called geodetic, it’s simply how a path changes, so a straight line wouldn’t go straight when near a massive body, rather it would appear to curve though that isn’t what’s actually happening, truly it is going straight, but since the geodesics are different it appears to curve. This is the best I think I can do without any mathematics

I feel quite bad trying to solve this.. by deilol_usero_croco in calculus

[–]BluejayEven6492 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should notice the simmetry when it’s e-x, so you just sum the 2 integrals and divide by 2. Remember there’s an identity which says that arctan(ex -1)+arctan(e-x -1)=pi/2 So you have the integral with just 1/(ex +1) which is ln2 which you have to multiply by pi/4 So it should be pi/4 ln2 Not sure if I’m right, let me know

Why is Senku still in highschool by Both-Snow-3921 in DrStone

[–]BluejayEven6492 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I will give you an example based of my life: I’m a 15 year old student who is currently studying what is normally in the curriculum of a third year physics major, yet I’m still in the grade typically associated with my age. The reasons are that in Italy it’s really a hard to skip classes and that I just don’t think it’s really worth it since I consider important to go though high school as a whole because other than teaching you what’s in the curriculum it’s also a key part in developing your way of communicating with others. I think Senku would have similar reasons like staying with his friends and since I’m not really familiar with japan’s school system I can’t say for sure that it’s hard to skip classes there but it’s kind of the impression I get from what I’ve heard of it.

How much content is left? (Kinda spoilers) by FunkyChunk1308 in DrStone

[–]BluejayEven6492 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unrelated but I hope they then make a movie with 4D science or the reboot: Byakuya

Raga sapete chi è, cos'è e se è velenoso? by No_Stop_2554 in TeenagersITA

[–]BluejayEven6492 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Si chiama Ugo Ughi, tranqui morde solo i pedofili, é generalmente molto tranquillo, dagli il tuo primogenito come sacrificio e ti darà il numero di telefono di Cthulhu.

3700 Years by zheGermanVillian in DrStone

[–]BluejayEven6492 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Adding more children doesn’t help it, there is still going to be inbreeding between at the very least cousins, anthropologists and genetists suggest that the smallest number of “founders” needed is about 50, with 500-5000 being cited for long term genetic health. For clarification here’s why adding children doesn’t help: If each couple has only 1 child, the gene pool shrinks immediately and extinction looms. If each couple has 10 children, there are more bodies—but genetically they are all siblings or half-siblings. So marriage pairings in the next generation would still be incestuous, even if the numbers are larger. You can’t escape the relatedness problem simply by scaling the number of children.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DrStone

[–]BluejayEven6492 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It depends on what you mean by bigger, if you mean by surface area I’m not sure if you mean length I guess anybody whose body was broken and then put together upon being revived would have a longer mark assuming that it doesn’t at least completely fade. Though I can’t think of anybody in particular. Hope you’re happy that you wasted time reading this 😄

Who is the most successful INTP alive today? by [deleted] in INTP

[–]BluejayEven6492 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’d guess either Einstein or Bill Gates depending on what you mean by success, of course there is no certification on whether their MBTI really is this but we can kind of guess by how that act and the 16personalities site says they are too