Message from @DinkyDingus
Discord ID: 606328394463838228
Sup
why do you keep sharing that pic
so your a flat earther
you're*, and yes
Look at pictures of the ocean taken from 3,000 feet and it looks flat. Go to Salt Flats or calm lakes and they are flat. Russia has a huge lake and it will freeze perfectly flat. You can find numerous pictures of mountains reflected on flat lakes. No distortion by a curve.
so, outside of the semantics of "moscovium" and "element 115", do you understand why the reactor he described wouldnt work?
No because I've never attempted to build a moscovium reactor and neither have you
you dont have to build an "element 115" reactor to understand why it wouldnt work
all you need is a basic understanding of atomic physics
How can you say what would and would not work when you personally haven't experimentally tested it?
do you understand radioactive decay and nuclear fussion?
You need a basic understanding of science
because it defies atomic physics
VARIABILITY OF RADIOACTIVE HALF LIFE: http://web.mit.edu/~redingtn/www/netadv/XperDecRat.html
i have it, apparently you do not
fission*
You might want to look ino methods of varying the radioactive half life of fissionable isotopes
So Human Sheeple belives in flat earth
no
Science is the result from experiment, nobody's tried to replicate a Moscovium reactor, we don't know.
additionally, his description simply provides a method (which wouldnt work) of producing heat. and in no way does it describe how it would create "anti-gravity"
an "element 115 reactor"
How do you know it wouldn't work if you haven't personally experimented at trying to build one?
again, because it defies nuclear physics
would you like me to explain
Guys
Explanations are not scientific proofs
HOW DID HITLER NOT DIE
By faking his death
You were at ww1..?
You mean ww2 surely
And no I was not
then how do you know
smh explainations are the basis of our current theorized understanding of the universe. Ever heard of special relativity?
dragons are real?
no
at least he believes area 51
what happens when matter touches antimatter?