i'm all out of blood...
More Blogs
-
1
Friday Jun 16, 2006
all rock hard with no one to do..... -
5
Monday Jun 12, 2006
A great sunday, an OK weekend overall... The Omen was better than … -
2
Friday Jun 09, 2006
...i have no idea what's going on right now...i think i'm just not go… -
2
Monday Jun 05, 2006
Generosity Is it possible to rid oneself of materialistic tendencies,… -
7
Friday Jun 02, 2006
The individual has always tried to struggle to keep from being overwh… -
1
Friday Jun 02, 2006
time to re-evaluate. take inventory and see what can be done. see i… -
1
Thursday Jun 01, 2006
i am tired of "people" who call themselves friends and constantly let… -
4
Tuesday May 30, 2006
Certain people need to know when to keep their mouths shut...They do … -
3
Friday May 26, 2006
ok, so here's my weekend saturday....3 hours of pain sunday..… -
0
Thursday May 25, 2006
New, Big, Black, Tat...Saturday.... fuck the nine's …
A clear cloudless day-time sky is blue because molecules in the air scatter blue light from the sun more than they scatter red light. When we look towards the sun at sunset, we see red and orange colours because the blue light has been scattered out and away from the line of sight.The white light from the sun is a mixture of all colours of the rainbow. This was demonstrated by Isaac Newton, who used a prism to separate the different colours and so form a spectrum. The colours of light are distinguished by their different wavelengths. The visible part of the spectrum ranges from red light with a wavelength of about 720 nm, to violet with a wavelength of about 380 nm, with orange, yellow, green, blue and indigo between. The three different types of colour receptors in the retina of the human eye respond most strongly to red, green and blue wavelengths, giving us our colour vision.
2) why is snow white when water is clear?
So, since snow is frozen water, and we all know that frozen water is clear, why does snow have a distinctive color? To understand this, we need to back up and look at an individual piece of ice. Ice is not transparent; it's actually translucent. This means that the light photons don't pass right through the material in a direct path -- the material's particles change the light's direction. This happens because the distances between some atoms in the ice's molecular structure are close to the height of light wavelengths, which means the light photons will interact with the structures. The result is that the light photon's path is altered and it exits the ice in a different direction than it entered the ice.
http://www.howstuffworks.com/
3) how much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
This is difficult to question answer. The amount of wood that woodchucks would chuck on a given day varies greatly with the individual woodchuck. According to a Wall Street Journal article, New York State wildlife expert Richard Thomas found that a woodchuck could chuck around 35 cubic feet of dirt in the course of digging a burrow. Thomas reasoned that if a woodchuck could chuck wood, he would chuck an amount equal to 700 pounds.
hehe