Why would flour be a particularly good substance for mapping gravity
fields?
I can't believe you're so thick. Even YOU should understand that flour dust
is light enough to be held aloft by air. Now...
What would happen when a grain of flour dust suddenly became 100 times
heavier than it is naturally? Use your brain ffs instead of asking such
stupid questions.
Put another way, why wouldn't iron dust of the same grain size as flour dust
stay aloft? Or gold dust...
--
| spi...@freenet.co.uk | "I'm alive!!! I can touch! I can taste! |
| Andrew Halliwell BSc | I can SMELL!!! KRYTEN!!! Unpack Rachel and |
| in | get out the puncture repair kit!" |
| Computer Science | Arnold Judas Rimmer- Red Dwarf |
Got me there too. Iyyyy thought you used a gravy toe meter dangling below a
helicopter - especially if you've trodden in the Bisto. Looks like a very
thin long torpedo.
Torpedo: Whacko Jacko at it up a conical hill!