- Joined
- 22 Sep 2005
- Posts
- 3,267
- Location
- Manchester
damn this is an interesting thread 
a few people are missing the point a little i think. i am aware that there is a lot missing from my original question. but i suppose you could look at this not from a nuclear way but from a more diagramatic approach.
i thoguth of this question years ago in school and it just came back to me recently. it troubled bme beacuse a circle is an arc, no finish and no end.
push a glass, or a mug up to a wall and look at the rim, follow it round... the moment the edge of the rim curves round toward the wall the wall is the exact moment that it starts to curve away.
i suppose this theory would work with egg shaped objects based on how its curvature is constant.
im startign to believe the answer is Zero.

a few people are missing the point a little i think. i am aware that there is a lot missing from my original question. but i suppose you could look at this not from a nuclear way but from a more diagramatic approach.
i thoguth of this question years ago in school and it just came back to me recently. it troubled bme beacuse a circle is an arc, no finish and no end.
push a glass, or a mug up to a wall and look at the rim, follow it round... the moment the edge of the rim curves round toward the wall the wall is the exact moment that it starts to curve away.
i suppose this theory would work with egg shaped objects based on how its curvature is constant.
im startign to believe the answer is Zero.