Posted on 01/17/2005 11:01:41 AM PST by NormsRevenge
If your beer gets warm you're not drinking fast enough. That bit of advice works in Phoenix when it's 115 degrees. I guess when it's below -40 degrees you need to drink it fast before it freezes.
Bad day to be on the Rail Road...when I worked for the old Soo Line in Superior...the pull aparts and derailments were bad this time of year...getting called out for in the middle of the night even worse...
Hundred below wind chills do bad things to machines as well as animals and men.....
How it can shrink rail is truly amazing...
Would that be those down jackets that made people look like human hand grenades?
Northwest Airlines outlawed them because they took up too much room on their 700 passenger DC-9's.
Feels Like: 78°F
Oh, the humanity!!
I was born and raised in Superior.
Northwest Airlines. The only airline that has seats leaning forward.
Now THAT'S some series cold (and impossible prior to "global warming :-)
So...it was you humping those empties into Murphy Oil, then ?
Figure it would freeze a ring or two around a polar bears ass
I'm the "2" (above zero) in your map...I work at that airport. Anyway our low this morning was -18.
shhh you might inadvertantly cause brain freeze with that question
Not commenting on the validity of global warming (I suppose since scientific community is divided on this issue I'll have to say I just don't know), but the only thing that matters is the average temperature, not records one way or another.
not quite -40 is the same for f and c, but at that point whos counting anymore
Damn that's cold. I didn't even know Kelvin had a negative scale, that would make it roughly -490F wouldn't it?
Or are we into a whole new scale at that point.
has there ever been anything recorded below absolute zero, I thought the closest they have come to recording a temperature near absolute zero was at mit with a sodium gas at one-half billionth a degree from absolute zero or something like that.
I think he was joking, but negative temperatures on Kelvin scale actually do exist. However such temperatures can not be achieved by traditional means (ie. "cooling). I'm not good at explaining this stuff, so here's a related article I googled http://www.maxwellian.demon.co.uk/art/esa/negkelvin/negkelvin.html
Below absolute zero was the science geeks lackey...
considering that absolute zero in farhenheit is -459 degrees I am guessing it is something like -530 degrees farhenheit, without a calculator handy could be more could be less.
its off the edge of my slide rule.
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