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8 votes
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'She's perfect and she's beautiful': Frozen baby woolly mammoth discovered in Yukon gold fields
7 votes -
Distillation and sealing of 139g of pure cesium into a glass vial
9 votes -
The world’s biggest bacterium found in Caribbean mangrove swamp, visible to the naked eye
17 votes -
Why do we see color?
4 votes -
A frog so small, it could not 'frog'
9 votes -
Over twenty-five years ago Kári Stefánsson began examining the DNA of Iceland's inhabitants in search of the genetic causes of illness
4 votes -
Prince Rupert's Drop exploding in epoxy resin at 456,522 fps
6 votes -
Autistic people care too much, research says
25 votes -
Penrose Unilluminable Room is a room with mirrored walls that can't be fully illuminated by a single point source of light
3 votes -
Death could be reversible, as scientists bring dead eyes back to life
6 votes -
Powerful ‘machine scientists’ distill the laws of physics from raw data
19 votes -
The hyperbolic geometry of DMT experiences
7 votes -
Autopsy of Adam & Eve: Looking at a selection of paper instruments from the 15th-17th century, at the Royal Society
3 votes -
Repulsive Curves
4 votes -
From high-protein food to plastics and fuel, Swedish scientists are attempting to tap seaweed's huge potential
8 votes -
Why everyone ignored the world's best mathematician
4 votes -
What's next for AlphaFold and the AI protein-folding revolution
11 votes -
How do these rocks move on their own in the desert? Ninety-nine years later... we solved it.
19 votes -
Cody's algae panel
5 votes -
Nuclear waste is safer than you think
12 votes -
New type of ultraviolet light makes indoor air as safe as outdoors
5 votes -
The portentous comeback of humpback whales
2 votes -
This animal’s behavior is mechanically programmed
6 votes -
Dual use of artificial-intelligence-powered drug discovery
5 votes -
Doctors transplant a genetically modified pig heart into a human for the first time
19 votes -
The twitches that spread on social media
10 votes -
A stereo movie created by NASA researchers shows the altitude of the Tonga plume during the eruption
5 votes -
Their bionic eyes are now obsolete and unsupported
29 votes -
A mathematician explains what Foundation gets right about predicting the future
5 votes -
Moderna begins HIV vaccine trials
32 votes -
Making what is said to be one of the worst smelling substances ever invented, US Government Standard Bathroom Malodor
18 votes -
Crow-plagued California city turns to lasers and boomboxes to clear the air
12 votes -
The attack of zombie science - They look like scientific papers. But they’re distorting and killing science.
8 votes -
Predictive pattern classification can distinguish gender identity subtypes from behavior and brain imaging
14 votes -
What "impossible" meant to Richard Feynman
7 votes -
Electric kettles turn off automatically when the water starts to boil. So what happens when you boil alcohol that has a lower boiling point?
6 votes -
First pig-human transplant: A recap
4 votes -
How to tell if we're beating COVID-19
4 votes -
Archaeology’s sexual revolution
9 votes -
Japan’s monkey queen faces challenge to her reign: mating season
8 votes -
What Sci-Hub’s latest court battle means for research
11 votes -
The top scientific journal retractions of 2021
9 votes -
Energy, and how to get it - All of us know people who have more energy than we do, but the science of the phenomenon is just coming into view
10 votes -
Strong new evidence suggests a virus triggers multiple sclerosis
12 votes -
The phylogenomics of evolving virus virulence
6 votes -
The dolphin clitoris is full of surprises, scientists discover
10 votes -
mRNA vaccine technology has helped repair broken hearts in mice
12 votes -
How do I calculate my family's "average family location"?
So, I just listened to a This American Life podcast called Ghost in the Machine. In one of the stories, a man decides to calculate, every week, the Average Family Location of his family. By that,...
So, I just listened to a This American Life podcast called Ghost in the Machine. In one of the stories, a man decides to calculate, every week, the Average Family Location of his family. By that, he means: once you add everyone's coordinates for every coordinate in which they've been in that period, what city/location represents the average point between them all?
I decided to do the same for my family, which will be much easier because there are no touring musicians among us. The one complication is that a good chunk of the family is on other continents, and I wouldn't want us to "meet" in the middle of the ocean. So some approximation might be warranted.
I'd be happy if someone could provide me the math, I'm fairly confident I would be able to do it with a calculator or maybe put into some crude Python. I don't think I need to make a weekly report, since we're not that mobile. Maybe twice a year, or once every two months.
Thanks!
Edit: I don't know much math
Edit2: holy shit this is not simple at all! Now I feel kinda bad for throwing this problem at you guys. I really thought it would be quick and easy!
9 votes -
I need cool facts about huge numbers
So, my 5-year-old nephew is obsessed with huge numbers, especially named numbers such as googol, duodecillion, and centillion. The other day I spent some time reciting these numbers to him, and...
So, my 5-year-old nephew is obsessed with huge numbers, especially named numbers such as googol, duodecillion, and centillion. The other day I spent some time reciting these numbers to him, and trying (and failing) to describe them. What I need are some cool facts about these numbers, such as "there are 1 quadrillion cat hairs in the world", or "there are not enough stars in the universe to fill one googol".
Besides math, his main interests are super-heroes and, apparently, cars.
I'm not a math or physics guy, so hopefully you guys can help me cheat :P
12 votes