Originally posted by: electron
Originally posted by: Armitage
Originally posted by: JLGatsby
Originally posted by: Anubis
how much does that air in your lungs add to your weight?
Air weighs almost nothing, that's how you were able to breathe it in. If such a gas weighed anywhere near 21 grams, it sink to the floor and would not reach your nose, like pouring oil into a glass of water.
Uhm, wtf?? If how much of a gas weighed 21 grams? Your statement doesn't even begin to make sense without a volume. In fact air weighs about 1.1 kg/m^3 at sea leavel so 21 grams would be about 0.25 liters of air. However air in the lungs can't account for any weight loss (if it exists).
Never trust a "scientist" that uses the phrase "almost nothing" in his quantitative analysis. Such a "scientist" has almost nothing between his ears.
Originally posted by: electron
Originally posted by: Armitage
Originally posted by: JLGatsby
Originally posted by: Anubis
how much does that air in your lungs add to your weight?
Air weighs almost nothing, that's how you were able to breathe it in. If such a gas weighed anywhere near 21 grams, it sink to the floor and would not reach your nose, like pouring oil into a glass of water.
Uhm, wtf?? If how much of a gas weighed 21 grams? Your statement doesn't even begin to make sense without a volume. In fact air weighs about 1.1 kg/m^3 at sea leavel so 21 grams would be about 0.25 liters of air. However air in the lungs can't account for any weight loss (if it exists).
Never trust a "scientist" that uses the phrase "almost nothing" in his quantitative analysis. Such a "scientist" has almost nothing between his ears.
Originally posted by: electron
Originally posted by: Armitage
Originally posted by: JLGatsby
Originally posted by: Anubis
how much does that air in your lungs add to your weight?
Air weighs almost nothing, that's how you were able to breathe it in. If such a gas weighed anywhere near 21 grams, it sink to the floor and would not reach your nose, like pouring oil into a glass of water.
Uhm, wtf?? If how much of a gas weighed 21 grams? Your statement doesn't even begin to make sense without a volume. In fact air weighs about 1.1 kg/m^3 at sea leavel so 21 grams would be about 0.25 liters of air. However air in the lungs can't account for any weight loss (if it exists).
Never trust a "scientist" that uses the phrase "almost nothing" in his quantitative analysis. Such a "scientist" has almost nothing between his ears.
Originally posted by: albatross
What are engineers then? Pseduo Scientists? Do you know how much of this world is based on the assuming that things are "negligible"
echo! 😛
Originally posted by: Howard
How is death measured? Brain activity halts? Heart stops pumping?
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Howard
How is death measured? Brain activity halts? Heart stops pumping?
Perhaps death is caused by extreme sudden weight loss, of 21 grams!!! 😱 😱 Until further research is conducted, I urge everyone to Diet with extreme caution.
Originally posted by: Savij
Considering it's a single experiment with 7 people conducted nearly 100 years ago with large weights and very high precision, I would have to call the results suspect.
My initial thought on the matter is to question the scale. Is it somehow possible that the orienation of the body could affect the weights? Did the blood pool somewhere in the body as the subject died? Could that minute change in the distribution of the weight affect his scale's reading?
Originally posted by: JLGatsby
Originally posted by: Anubis
how much does that air in your lungs add to your weight?
Air weighs almost nothing, that's how you were able to breathe it in. If such a gas weighed anywhere near 21 grams, it sink to the floor and would not reach your nose, like pouring oil into a glass of water.
Originally posted by: Philippine Mango
Lol, oil doesn't sink in water, it floats therefore you are contradicting your self.