Message from @Donald(KvyatFan26)

Discord ID: 814246712355979295


2021-02-23 17:57:10 UTC  

Sun

2021-02-23 17:58:54 UTC  

I think the answer is zero as the sun shines on both hemispheres equally

2021-02-23 18:01:15 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/813832862251876382/unknown.jpeg

2021-02-23 18:05:11 UTC  

thx

2021-02-24 02:05:43 UTC  

The Han suck balls

2021-02-24 02:05:54 UTC  

Aka the current ruling Chinese

2021-02-24 16:47:04 UTC  

Help

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/814176581848793119/image0.jpg

2021-02-24 17:37:00 UTC  

Have some identities
Sin^2(x) +cos^2(x) = 1
Sin^2(x) = 1/2(1-cos(2x))
cos^2(x) = 1/2(1+cos(2x))

2021-02-24 18:46:57 UTC  

@Nomad I'm taking Precalc right now as well, what do you need help with?

2021-02-24 18:47:50 UTC  

because those identities won't do jack shit right now

2021-02-24 18:48:07 UTC  

Yeah

2021-02-24 18:48:14 UTC  

Precalc was a while ago

2021-02-24 18:49:24 UTC  

obviously no offense intended

2021-02-24 18:49:32 UTC  

It's just, one needs a lot more

2021-02-24 18:49:55 UTC  

Yee

2021-02-24 18:50:01 UTC  

None taken

2021-02-24 19:19:41 UTC  

Help Pls

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/814214987227594822/Screen_Shot_2021-02-24_at_1.19.21_PM.png

2021-02-24 19:20:00 UTC  

What is the Degree of terms?

2021-02-24 19:23:09 UTC  

nvm figured it out

2021-02-24 21:00:25 UTC  

Aight good

2021-02-24 21:25:44 UTC  

lol i had shit like that a couple of weeks ago in alg 2 gio

2021-02-24 22:06:32 UTC  

When a physics problem uses forces but uses pounds, is it a pound of mass or weight?
ex. "A 60-lb block is moving down an incline". Is 60 lbs the mass or the weight, the force that it is pulled down with by gravity?

2021-02-24 22:07:06 UTC  

For pounds it is considered a unit of mass and can be used as force, also referred to as the pound-force\

2021-02-24 22:07:22 UTC  

so it's a 1:1 conversion?

2021-02-24 22:07:31 UTC  

its confusing for formulas like F = m * a

2021-02-24 22:07:38 UTC  

but yes

2021-02-24 22:07:41 UTC  

which is exactly what I am dealing with

2021-02-24 22:07:52 UTC  

so mass is given as, say, the same 60 lbs

2021-02-24 22:08:01 UTC  

and acceleration would be considered 1?

2021-02-24 22:08:12 UTC  

wahts the question\

2021-02-24 22:08:16 UTC  

even though in gravity's case it's 9.81 m/s

2021-02-24 22:08:37 UTC  

I need to find if a block slides on a hill

2021-02-24 22:08:59 UTC  

a 60 lb block is on a 60' incline, coefficient of friction is 0.1. Does it slide?

2021-02-24 22:09:20 UTC  

obviously it will because of the steepness but I need equations and numbers

2021-02-24 22:23:54 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/814261350251364392/unknown.png

2021-02-24 22:24:12 UTC  

missed a lesson yesterday but my teacher is still making me do it

2021-02-24 22:24:21 UTC  

i did what i understood but i don't know the mutations

2021-02-24 22:30:34 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/814263026848628786/Screenshot_89.png

2021-02-24 22:40:43 UTC  

pls help

2021-02-24 22:48:48 UTC  

thanks

2021-02-24 23:48:43 UTC  

@zay this chart should help you -- (link if the screenshot is too pixelated: https://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/genetic-mutation-441/)

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/814282698037395466/unknown.png