Noop.
C-4 requires a HIGH-ORDER explosive (detonation wave) to explode. This is usually provided by a blasting cap, detonation cord or another high-order explosive.
Technically, a firecracker doesn't explode, it "deflagrates" (burns very, very quickly)
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Using Excel, the statement in cell C4 would be input as follows: =if(B4>99999,0.07,0.05) However, the case where B4 is in between 99999 and 100000 is not accounted for in the solution (or in the question).
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The seven cervical vertebrae are labeled C1, C2, C3, ... C6, and C7. They're lined up in the space from the hole in the bottom of your skull down to just above that bump at the top of your back, between your shoulders. That bump is T1 ... it's right under C7. The upper few C's, at the top of the spine just under the skull, are really tiny. "C4-5" is the disk that forms the pad between C4 and C5. Similarly, "C5-6" is the disk that forms the pad between C5 and C6. If a disk wears away or springs a leak, that's not good. The material can get into the middle of the vertebrae, where it's not supposed to be, and press directly on the spinal cord. Also, the nerves that go from the brain to everything else in the body leave the spinal cord and come out through those little spaces between the vertebrae. If the space closes up and a nerve gets pinched in there, that's a problem. The fix is to take out what's left of the disk, line up the vertebrae if they've shifted, space them correctly, put a new thin disk of bone in the space, and fasten everything solid. After a while, new bone grows over the whole thing. The process is called "fusion", a word that means joining two separate things into one, because the vertebrae above and below the bad disk become a single unit. Good luck to you. I had C4-5, C5-6, and C6-7 fused all at once. It wasn't bad at all, and it sure fixed the problems.
To open the door, you have to turn all the squares grey by landing on it with the knight chess piece. If you land on a grey box, it'll turn back to it's original color.Columns (A to D, left to right) Rows (1-4, top to bottom)C2 A3 C4 D2 B1 C3 D1 B2 D3 B2 A2 C1 B3 D4 B3 A1 B3 C1 A2 C3 A4 C3 A2 C1See related link below for screenshots.
My top 10 list:1.Aryabhatta (Place value system and zero, Approximation of π(pi) and denoting its irratinal nature, formula for area of triangle, concept of sine, cosine etc, summation of series of squares, cubes), indeterminate equations in his book aryabhattiya2. Bhaskaracharya http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bh%C4%81skara_II3. Bouddhayan (original discoveror of the pythagorus theorem)4. Brahmagupta(gave rules to compute with 0)5. Shridharachharya (proposed quadratic equation roots, gave rules for finding volume of sphere)6. Srinivas ramanujan (his cryptic formula is still of relevance)7.Panini8. Varahmihir (given trignometic equations :( sin2x+ cos2x=1 etc)9.K. S. Chandrashekharan (worked on number theory and summability)10. The great Vashishtha Narayan Singh (worked on REPRODUCING KERNELS AND OPERATORS WITH A CYCLIC VECTOR, Ex-NASA mathematician)Note: 60% of these mathematicians are from the Gangetic Belts of India.