Well, the ' E ' on the left side of the equation doesn't stand for 'explosion',
and the reason for Einstein's study of the subject that led to his discovery
of the equation had nothing to do with explosions, and the equation today
crops up in a bunch of different scientific processes and procedures that have
nothing to do with explosions.
So the question is a lot like asking "Are forest fires part of Lord Kelvin's
discoveries concerning heat ?"
e=mc2 (e equals mc squared)
The number that equals 121 when squared is 11.
5.477225575 squared equals 30.
It is not used in medicine.
relativity intensity : kelvin = oxygen2
b = sqrt32 or 4 root 2
No, it equals -2xy. lrn2math
4
C equals the square root of 1000 or 31.622776601683793319988935444327...
66 squared equals 4,356.
61 squared equals 3,721.
93 squared equals 8,649.