foxy
i was made for lovin u...
visual arts because you get to do whatever you want in prac and in theory you get to give your opinion of artworks/artists!
You need not! Latin moderators out in force. It was about the only subjct i enjoyed in years 11 and 12, we had the same class and teacher for four years so it was like an institution. Every Friday from year 7 ended with double Latin, kinda weird.Originally posted by flyin'
latin ... need i say more ...
Do you mean quantum foam?Originally posted by utopian731
I think i would have massacred that course!! Didou do anything on the ripple theory?
Im doin BLibStudies (Intl), so I can absically choose anything, but first year is all arts subjects, so maybe in second year
subtitles ... please ...Originally posted by Weisy
Do you mean quantum foam?
(and why didn't you put in for a distinction course? It would've been fun to have you in cosmo, by the sound of things)
I dunno if its called quantum foam. The theory proposed in around 1997 by an Australian and a couple of American scientists that they had discovered "ripples" in the fabric of space-time that supported big bang theory, just like a pebble thrown into a pond. These ripples help to explain background radiation and why the temperature of the "empty" protions of the universe is 3K, not 0K.Originally posted by Weisy
Do you mean quantum foam?
(and why didn't you put in for a distinction course? It would've been fun to have you in cosmo, by the sound of things)
ahhh...no that's not quantum foam, that's just standard Big Bang theory, which started out by saying that if the initial temperature of the universe was extremely hot, given the backwards extrapolation possible from the current expansion rate of the universe, there should be some radiation left from the earliest times. The 3K background radiation was detected about 4 decades ago, but they hadn't found ripples in it. The ripples actually explain the theory because they indicate inconsistencies in the radiation, which over time could have formed structures in the universe. They didn't find the ripples until COBE discoevered then in 1992, I think.Originally posted by utopian731
I dunno if its called quantum foam. The theory proposed in around 1997 by an Australian and a couple of American scientists that they had discovered "ripples" in the fabric of space-time that supported big bang theory, just like a pebble thrown into a pond. These ripples help to explain background radiation and why the temperature of the "empty" protions of the universe is 3K, not 0K.
hee hee I liked chem too for the same reasons as you what made it really good was that our teacher was a pyro and everyone in our class were all pyros too. our teacher set up this experiment involving the usual stuff like toxic chemicals, explosions, lots of colourful fire and smoke. the explosion went off really well and made so much smoke that we had to run out of the room. after we recovered from the excitement he then said to us, 'that was cool. lets do it again, but this time lets use more.' I liked chem so much that Im doing it at uni this year.Originally posted by timmii
chemistry - interesting and straightforward, it also indulged my pyromanic tendencies [ can we test for hydrogen, please please??? I think we need to do a flame test....]
*thinks back to major project*Originally posted by utopian731
Whats quantum foam theory?