ComradeMicha
ComradeMicha t1_j6joqw6 wrote
Reply to comment by sim-o in ELI5: Why do european trucks have their engine below the driver compared to US trucks which have the engine in front of the driver? by Naofumitarddv
More suited, yes, but also it's mandated by European law. That's the actual reason.
ComradeMicha t1_j6a82hs wrote
Reply to comment by grondin in ELI5: Why are rainbows semicircular? by TheCubingPianist
There really is an xkcd for everything...
ComradeMicha t1_j1qh80q wrote
The only theory consistent with the Big Bang is that there is no "before", as the word "before" refers to a point lower than X on the time axis, but time itself was only created with the Big Bang, so the axis came into existence "after" the Big Bang, hence there can't be a "before".
It's like asking "what lies to the North of the North Pole?"
ComradeMicha t1_iyc9nc0 wrote
Reply to comment by HarveyH43 in ELI5 How is sitting for prolonged durations (<1hour) bad for your body? by [deleted]
Yeah, same here. Prolonged durations shorter than one hour are bad?
ComradeMicha t1_iy539u4 wrote
Reply to ELI5 what is dy/dx? by EarlaSallow
It generally means "how steep is the slope at this point?". The notation dy/dx can be summarized as "how much distance (d) do you go up (y) here for every bit of distance (d) you go sideways (x)?".
So if you have a gentle slope of a lush, rolling hill (or, say, a function y=0.1x+2), then you go up only a little bit when travelling sideways, in this example for every 1 unit of length sideways you only go up by 0.1 of those same units in the upwards direction, so dy/dx is 0.1/1 which is 1/10.
If, on the other hand, you have a sheer cliff of a giant mountain (or, say, y=9x-1), then for every bit you go sideways you go a lot further up, in this example 9 units up per unit sideways, so dy/dx is 9/1 which is 9.
If it's negative, that means you actually go down, not up.
Since you can easily calculate this for every known function f(x), this becomes a handy tool to find out more about that function. For example, if you want to know the maximum points (peaks) of said function, you simply have to find a point where the slope (dy/dx) first goes up (is positive), then goes down (is negative), i.e. it reaches a peak. That means you just find all the places where dy/dx is zero, and then in a second step you probe whether it went from positive to negative (maximum) or vice versa (minimum).
ComradeMicha t1_jac0lmc wrote
Reply to comment by NoPreparation4469 in W is the only letter in the alphabet with more than one syllable by chronolucks
But the V was just the way the Romans wrote the letter U, technically there's no letter V.