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If there are 100 kilometers in a stud, how big will Proxima Centauri be? (in studs)
First to answer correctly wins! |
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WhosoeverJoin Date: 2012-02-24 Post Count: 7660 |
644376 studs. Do I win? |
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nope.
Example of what you should do:
123, 123, 123
you know what i mean |
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vev1223Join Date: 2009-11-13 Post Count: 642 |
25 |
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ZdaiJoin Date: 2008-12-28 Post Count: 8718 |
8 |
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the correct number of studs it would be is the correct number... *mind blown* |
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ZdaiJoin Date: 2008-12-28 Post Count: 8718 |
94 |
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none of you are guessing right |
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ZdaiJoin Date: 2008-12-28 Post Count: 8718 |
67 |
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ZdaiJoin Date: 2008-12-28 Post Count: 8718 |
67 |
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0% of the people who posted here except me don't know it. |
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Also, 100 km in a stud is a scale of 1:400,000 |
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yea see
'the correct number of studs it would be is the correct number' |
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ok enough jokes,
The object you want to know in studs is 39,900,000,000,000 km. Now if there are 100 km in a stud all you have to do is divide 39,900,000,000,000 km by 100. So the correct answer would be
3.99x10 to the 11th power (simplified)
399,000,000,000 (not simplified) |
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Proxima Cenauri is 200,000 km in diameter -.-
no star is bigger than 3 billion km |
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oh in diameter I thought to said length |
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In that case the answer is 2000 studs in diameter |
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