Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies. More information

Talk:X-mass Carol

From Bioblast
Revision as of 08:11, 15 June 2020 by Gnaiger Erich (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Bits == :::: '''Voice O Table 1'''. Towards Table '''H'''10 :::: {| class="wikitable" |- ! Speaker !! Symbol !! Speaked !! What |- | Sport scientist || S || ??? .. We ne...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision β†’ (diff)

Bits

Voice O Table 1. Towards Table H10
Speaker Symbol Speaked What
Sport scientist S ??? .. We need more Beers. One per B on our table A. Example
Chemist C How many moles of B? - {They get 6 Beers} Example
Sport scientist S Don't push down to the unit mole for amount, let's stick to the count. I count NB = 6 Beers in our system A, and NB = 6 Bodies; divide the Beers by the Bodies, then you have one. Example
Chemist C You forgot the units. Example
Sport scientist S Who cares about units? Beer is Beer, Body is Body. Example
Mitochondrial biologist M Only when you count, not when you measure mass or volume. My Weizen is a 0.5 L beer, your Pils is a 0.33 L beer. Example
# # # Example
  • Chemist C: According to SI, you should use Base SI units, to express volume in the unit [m-3].
  • Mitochondrial biologist M: We are practical and use the liter [L]. I don't care about [m3].
  • Sport scientist S: Now it is me who cares. Since we express the BMI in SI units [kgΒ·m-2], this normalization for Area [m3] is closer to [m3] than to [L].
  • Chemist C: But this is trivial, 1 L = 1 dm3. And one mole ..

Before she contemplates on how many liters of Beer per B have been consumed