Math, asked by satupuri, 1 year ago

how many spherical bullets each of 5 cm in diameter can be cast from a rectangular block of metal 11 dm× 1 m × 5 dm

Answers

Answered by hardik751
0
THE TESLA EQUATION: TL = mc^2
There is an all encompassing lattice-type gravity-centered quantum thread particle network (not the string theory type) in space (and everywhere). 
The network is made from individual yet connected thread particles and conforms to whatever shape it is surrounding. So light traveling through a curved thread network (like the Earth or Moon) will of course curve. 

Is gravity curving the thread network? No! The thread network itself is what creates gravity (gravity is network tension). 
Does this invalidate any of Einstein's equations? Of course not, it is just another way to look at it. Einstein has field equations and this is the field (thread network). 

The thread particles are connected -- that creates a network. The network has tension on it so vibrations can easily travel through it on the threads. That's what light is... 

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WHY THE SPEED OF LIGHT IS "C" 
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There is a high tension thread particle network in space (not the string theory type). Everything is connected by the thread particle network and it moves along with largest mass in proximity (something like what gravitational fields would be doing). 
A good 2-D model would be something like a spiders web (individual thread lengths are approximately one Ångström). 
Now imagine an infinite 3-D spiders web. If a vibration was set off in it, it would travel forever and the speed the vibrations travel (through the net) is the speed of light (that's actually what light is, a vibration traveling through a thread particle network) 
The speed vibrations travel through the thread particle network is the speed of light "c" 
The particle network threads have a certain amount of tension, length and mass. That makes 'c' the speed it is. If the tension, length or mass changed so would 'c' 

Here is a regular thread tension formula... 

Tension = velocity squared x mass / Length 

If we plug c in and rearrange we get the one-inch formula... 

TL = mc^2 
Answered by shreybarh16
0

Answer:


Step-by-step explanation:

Divide it by

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