Showing posts with label RANDOM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RANDOM. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Monday, August 24, 2015
EARTH IS GOING TO BE DESTROYED, WORLD STILL NOT LEARNING FROM PAST
Location:
Japan
Sunday, August 02, 2015
All About Friendship Day :)
Amazing Facts About Friendship Day :)
We are
celebrating Friendship Day since childhood and we love it. Friendship is an in-depth relationship combining trust,
support, communication, loyalty, understanding, empathy, and intimacy. Friendship
Day offers you the opportunity to give your friends extra attention. We know
almost everything about Friendship but there are some really amazing things
about Friendship Day which we are unknown to.
Let’s have a look ;)
Let’s have a look ;)
Thursday, July 30, 2015
July 31, 2015, It's "BLUE MOON"
Some Interesting Facts about "BLUE MOON"
If I say, the moon is blue,
Will you believe that it is true?
Yeah! It is...
It’s a full moon on July
31, 2015. Although it will look ordinary, but actually it is extraordinary…!
It’s a blue moon! :D
Wanna catch the true blue moon this Friday? then turn your
gaze on the moon at exactly 6:43 a.m. EDT, for a rare cosmic event that occurs, well,
once in a blue moon ;)
Sunday, July 26, 2015
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Quickly zoom in on images by hovering mouse over thumbnail save your time
Enlarge thumbnails on mouse over. Works on many sites (Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Reddit, Amazon, Tumblr
Students and professionals don't have time for clicking every image now and then and open those images in other tab they need quick look of images , Many sites such as Twitter, Facebook, Amazon, eBay, and Wikipedia shows a larger image of small thumbnails images when you click them. Save yourself the time of having to click the image to view it by installing a browser extension that shows you the larger image by hovering the mouse over the image. The picture to the right shows a Twitter profile icon that is enlarged when hovering over the small icon in the Following section. Click the link below for your browser to open the extension that will add this feature.
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Meta center
Meta Center

Metacentre, also spelled metacenter, in fluid mechanics, the theoretical point at which an imaginary vertical line passing through the centre of buoyancy and centre of gravity intersects the imaginary vertical line through a new centre of buoyancy created when the body is displaced, or tipped, in the water, however little.
The centre of buoyancy of a floating body is the point about which all the body parts exactly buoy each other—in other words, the effective centre of the displaced water. The metacentre remains directly above the centre of buoyancy regardless of the tilt of a floating body, such as a ship. When at rest on even keel, the vessel’s centre of buoyancy is directly below the centre of gravity as well as below the metacentre. (The centre of gravity is the point in a body about which all parts of the body balance each other.) When a vessel tilts, one side displaces more water than does the other, and the centre of buoyancy moves and is no longer directly under the centre of gravity, but, regardless of the amount of the tilt, the centre of buoyancy remains directly below the metacentre. If the metacentre is above the centre of gravity, buoyancy restores stability when the ship tilts. The stability increases with the distance between metacentre and centre of gravity, called the metacentric height. If the metacentre is below the centre of gravity, the boat is unstable, and a tilt results in capsizing.
Sunday, May 10, 2015
Bourdon Pressure Gauge
Bourdon gauge

The Bourdon pressure gauge uses the principle that a flattened tube tends to change to a more circular cross-section when pressurized. Although this change in cross-section may be hardly noticeable, the displacement of the material of the tube is magnified by forming the tube into a C shape or even a helix, such that the entire tube tends to straighten out or uncoil, elastically, as it is pressurized.
Figure 3 (left) Bourdon gauge (right) Mechanism of the Bourdon gauge
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