@PetəíŕdtheWizard I got it. You have not brought substantial chemical topics, IIRC. And it was and as intended to be mostly about a subset of chemistry.
@PetəíŕdtheWizard So the question is, if staying in the room is for you any good. Nothing personal against you to get rid of you. It is on you to decide.
@CuckooBeats I am a 2-4 finger fast "hunt-and-peck" typer, as I had no typing lessons during my student phase and later did not make myself to learn it. I do not keep constant visual check while typing and then I have often this bad habit to send the text without check, optimistically thinking it was typed correctly. It is not like if I did not know to write better, it is just I do not know exactly what I am just sending.
@Poutnik I will stay in this room, because I think the occasional straying away can be interesting, sometimes. But if you think the room will be better without my avatar constantly lurking here, feel free to tell me. :)
BTW, as you are learning about genetics, J. G. Mendel, the founder of genetics, lived in my city and performed his famous experiment in the abbey at now named Mendel's square.
@CuckooBeats Or rather rules of combinatorics.
And in context of science, my city is sometimes called by experts Electron Valley (paraphrase to Silicon Valley), as 1/3 of the world production of electron microscopes is manufactured here.
oh since you are here, umm can you please help in this lol detect structure (as far as i know, its gotta have an ester group tho) C6H11O2F δ = 1.2 (s, 6H) δ = 2.2 (s, 3H) δ = 3.8 (d, 1H) δ = 4.1 (s, 1H)
we have one more colloquially used expression - "CID" or "Children's independence Day", celebrated on the occasion of the ending of (usually final term) school exams It is derived from the tv show - CID https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CID_(Indian_TV_series)
The Navier–Stokes equations ( nav-YAY STOHKS) are partial differential equations which describe the motion of viscous fluid substances. They were named after French engineer and physicist Claude-Louis Navier and the Irish physicist and mathematician George Gabriel Stokes. They were developed over several decades of progressively building the theories, from 1822 (Navier) to 1842–1850 (Stokes).
The Navier–Stokes equations mathematically express momentum balance for Newtonian fluids and make use of conservation of mass. They are sometimes accompanied by an equation of state relating pressure...
mehhh what the heck are tensors? i thought partial differential was it
E.g. a tensor matrix of polarizability of anisotropic crystal, multiplied by the vector of electrostatic field intensity, gives the vector of polarization, not parallel to the vector of the field.
a condition of neurodevelopmental origin that mainly affects the ease with which a person reads, writes, and spells, typically recognized as a specific learning disorder in children.