There are too many variables here to give you a simple number. The first is the amount and type of explosive, the type of magazine, it's location, and the nature of the work performed. The next major component would be the regulations governing this storage area- we get questions from every US state, several other nations, and miitary users. It may vary between OSHA and MSHA, between Corps of Engineers, Australia and Canada, surface or underground, and so on. You are welcome to contact me through my message board with additional specifics, and we'll try to help you. Sorry-
There is not a maximum distance the restroom is required to be from a work area. You have to be able to go to the restroom in a reasonable time on your break.
no, work done is the area under a force-distance graph
Explosives work well.
It doesn't work
People who make fire works!
It is different for each shape. A perimeter is the distance around an object and the area is the square units it takes up.
jackie magazine wich was named after her
http://www.bookrags.com/wiki/Dense_Inert_Metal_Explosive
Red Flag
I usually start with the definition of work: Work = force * distance so... Force = work / distance Distance = work / force So, no. You had it backwards.
That is not an accurate statement. Commercial and military explosives are VERY predictable. A good part of my work was PREDICTING what a blast would produce. However, homemade explosives can be VERY dangerous and unpredictable, since they lack any form of quality control in their making.
You should study Journalism in college if you would like to work for a magazine. You can also study English.