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:) | ;) | :D | still cant believe this page is gonna reach pg 1000 | :) :D :) | ^^ | am i allowed to flood | Ball landed on 27
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Academic Excellence - St.Bede's Anglo Indian Higher Secondary ...
5, English, Shawn Anston. A. 6, Mathematics, Jayakaran.V Vignesh. G.K. 7, Science, Naveen. L. 8, Social Science, Shawn Anston Jayakaran.V ... | for leothegreat:
yes u r | going to tuition now..
b bye~~~ | still cant believe this page is gonna reach pg 1000
This does seem to be the most busy corner of the forum. Some medals and awards, together with financial retribution, should highly be considered by the game runners in recognition of the stoicism, perseverance and the unshatered belief in free speech of some distinguished citizens of the empire who have so altruistically and generously put their effort into realizing such an achievement! | i finished 11 merc quests | ....owhh.... never mind, forget what i've said... me just bored... | :)
BYE~~ | bye... | The bar (symbol: bar) is a unit of pressure equal to 100 kilopascals, and roughly equal to the atmospheric pressure on Earth at sea level. Other units derived from the bar are the kilobar (symbol: kbar),decibar (symbol: dbar), centibar (symbol: cbar), and millibar (symbol: mbar or mb). They are not SI units, nor are they cgs units, but they are accepted for use with the SI.[1] The bar is widely used in descriptions of pressure because it is only about 1% smaller than "standard" atmospheric pressure, and is legally recognized in countries of the European Union.[2]
Except for the power of ten, the definition of bar fits in the sequence of SI pressure units (Pa, kPa, MPa), namely, 1 bar ≡ 100,000 Pa = 100 kPa = 0.1 MPa. This is in contrast to the well-known unit of pressure, atmosphere, which now is defined to be 1.01325 bar exactly. As a rule of thumb, a bar is almost equal to an atmosphere.
The bar and the millibar were introduced by the British meteorologist William Napier Shaw in 1909. William Napier Shaw was the director of the Meteorological Office in London from 1907 to 1920.[3] | any body want meteorite shard just 3400 gold see it in market place.
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* 1 kbar = 1000 bar = 100,000 kPa = 100,000,000 dyn/cm2 = 100 MPa = 0.1 GPa
* 1 bar = 100 kPa = 1,000,000 dynes per square centimeter (baryes) = 0.987 atm (atmospheres) = 14.5038 psi = 29.53 inHg = 750.06 torr
* 1 dbar = 0.1 bar = 10 kPa = 100,000 dyn/cm2
* 1 cbar = 0.01 bar = 1 kPa
* 1 mbar = 0.001 bar = 0.1 kPa = 1 hPa (hectopascal) = 1,000 dyn/cm2
Example conversion: 1 atm pressure = 1.01325 bar = 1.01325 x 105 Pa = 1.01325 x 105 N/m2 | for ElfMoon:
no, i think wikipedia is wrong. the bar is a place where i'm gonna go soon... |
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