11-15-2021, 06:02 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-15-2021, 06:39 PM by Wao nahele kane.)
(11-15-2021, 08:24 AM)TomK Wrote:"Our Hawaiian moon"? Seriously? I won't even comment on the plagiarism."~TomK(11-14-2021, 06:51 PM)Wao nahele kane Wrote:(11-13-2021, 03:10 PM)TomK Wrote: ... Then you decide to flame me for actually trying to start a discussion.
You mean a bit like how you enjoy flaming AaronM for trying to start a discussion?
Which reminds me... Nothing AaronM wrote was plagiaristic unless you believe all things stargazing are yours alone to share.
But what can I say, I'm just plagiarizing your conduct towards AaronM, you should be flattered. At least my flame contains facts and not obsfucation.
Yes, how indeed did lasers enter the topic... Muon beams aren't created by cosmic rays. And if someone decides to scan a volcano sometime in the future, using a muon beam scan, they won't use the term cosmic ray muons. Again, and this has clearly slipped by your limited comprehension skills, method of product production is commonly added to citations to differentiate sources. It's a thing we all become accustom to when using the English language. So again, cosmic ray isn't a descriptive of what a muon is, it's a descriptive of how the muon was generated, therefore cosmic ray is not a bit of a misnomer within the phrase, cosmic ray muon.
Do you know the difference between sunlight and flashlight? I'm going to assume that you do and you know a flashlight is typically a handheld device that uses batteries to power a bulb that emits light and that sunlight is light that is generated from the sun's nuclear fusion process. You also know that light is not the sun or the device we reference a flashlight, therefore muons aren't cosmic rays or a bit of a misnomer.
As per the rest of your "rant", pointless, like everything else you whined about.
Tom, you're a smart guy, take a hint and stop engaging in the poor form nonsense.
(11-15-2021, 12:18 AM)kalakoa Wrote: Fair trade wild-caught organic free-range muons.That made for a great laugh. Appreciated.
https://phys.org/news/2021-02-images-muon.html
https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1243096