I was wondering this for sometime now:
Imagine there are two 5000GB hard disk.
1. Totally empty with 5000GB free space
2. Fully loaded with movies pics and whatsoever with no space left.
Will 2 be at least slightly heavier than 1 ??
I was wondering this for sometime now:
Imagine there are two 5000GB hard disk.
1. Totally empty with 5000GB free space
2. Fully loaded with movies pics and whatsoever with no space left.
Will 2 be at least slightly heavier than 1 ??
www.secondaryperspective.blogspot.com
No. The same weight.
I'm dropping out to create a company that starts with motorcycles, then cars, and forty years later signs a legendary Brazilian driver who has a public and expensive feud with his French teammate.
I'm dropping out to create a company that starts with motorcycles, then cars, and forty years later signs a legendary Brazilian driver who has a public and expensive feud with his French teammate.
I actually knew how data was written on HDs. The reason i asked this, is that by magnetizing, they had actually added electrons in it right? So does it weighs differently?
There is no such thing as 'nothing' if you understand me. Hence i asked using a 5000GB HD and 'slightly, even a tad' heavier. Imagine all the movies, pictures and stuffs.... 5000GB of them.... nothing was added? weird.
So.... is it?
www.secondaryperspective.blogspot.com
"The entire internet weighs 0.2 millionths of an ounce and although torrent traffic amounts to a massive 12 petabyte, it weighs in at just 0.06 millionths of an ounce."
What is the wight of all the bittorrents in the world?
how much does the internet weigh?
Last edited by aiasib; 06-05-2007 at 10:27 AM.
i would say no it isn't any heavier. the method used to magnetize the portion of the hard drive doesn't add any electrons, or anything else, to the material
the orientation of the magnetic dipoles will just change
How can men use sex to get what they want?
Sex is what they want. - Frasier
now that thats solved:
Is a charged battery heavier than an empty battery?
Don't forget E=mc^2. Doesn't the more energy and the moving parts mean higher mass?
True... We learned on high school the principle.. long ago and far back in memory, i think this was 2nd grade (14 y/o)
Anyway the liquids in the cell react to a kind of thingy in it. In this process they become solid (Redox reaction). I can't remember if there is much difference in weight, but I don't think so. It might be lighter, if you count in the loss of electrons in the process.
Say you have a reaction where 2 electrons leave the molecule, which then sticks to something becoming in the solid state. The 2 electrons leave it and go through your car
Damn how I hated chemistry !!!
Last edited by drakkie; 06-05-2007 at 11:56 AM.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)