try foam or something soft
or bubble rupp my name is Emily
Yes. Lying on its side it will break with very little pressure. That is why, when you break an egg, you always strike the side. Standing on end, an egg is much stronger.
Make the car out of a frame of popsicle sticks and the egg will not break.
The JavaScript switch statement is nothing more than a easy replacement for a series of if-then-else statements. Here's an example. var chicken; switch( chicken ) { case "fried": console.log('Fried chicken!'); break; case "fricassee": console.log('Fricassee!!!!!!!!'); break; case "egg": console.log('Which came first?'); break; default: console.log( 'With its head cut off.' ); }//end switch This statement takes a variable, then compares it to the values of each "case." When it finds a matchin value, it executes the code in that case statement. It will execute until it hits the "break" statement, so if you skip a break, then the code will continue straight through. This is the same structure as: if ( chicken "egg" ){ console.log('Which came first?') }else{ console.log( 'With its head cut off.' ); } As you can see, the switch statement is simpler, easier to read, and easier to maintain.
capacitor's characteristic is charging and discharging. discharged energy will be dropped by load . so it is connected in parallel
Of course it has a break . open circuit means infinite resistance , so no electrical charge can flow through it .
It depends if the egg is cooked or not. Allso on how height your going to drop the egg.
It depends. There are contests in egg dropping, to see how far an egg can be dropped or thrown. The dropping contest is a study in packaging the egg for the drop. So, if the egg is properly packaged, or dropped into, say, a haystack, it very well may survive the experience!
An egg is fragile but a chicken cannot break through it immediately but if it is dropped it will brake
A raw egg would break 'faster' but it depeneds on what you mean by faster. If you mean it would break easier then yes, it would be a raw egg. This is because a cooked egg's calcium shell has become harder, thus the term 'hard boiled egg'.
Boiled or not, the shell of an egg is very thin, and very weak. It is designed to be fragile enough for the unborn chick to be able to break through. Remember that this means it is a weak enough structure that an animal that has never once used it's muscles can break it from the inside. Nothing will keep the egg from cracking when dropped onto a hard surface.
how can you keep an egg from breaking if it is dropped
An egg breaks when dropped on a hard floor because the hard floor exerts a large amount of force on the egg over a very short period of time.In order to reduce that force so that it does not break the egg, you have to somehow decrease the time it takes for the egg to come to an absolute stop.So if you dropped the egg on something like a pillow, the egg would exert the same amount of force as it would on a hard floor, only the pillow would not exert as much force on the egg as the hard floor. Instead, it would be pushed back because the egg is pushing with the most force. This creates the soft, cushioned landing.Therefore, the net force of the egg vs the pillow is decreased and total elapsed time is increased, causing the egg to fall on the pillow undamaged. :)
By making something soft enough so the egg dosen't break on impact.
No, it will not break because the couch absorbs the speed of the egg dropping, causing the egg not to break. And now I tell you of a show called, "You Asked For It." A man stood on a (?two story) building and dropped a raw egg onto the ground-level parking lot. The egg bounced into another man's hand (2 or 3 feet bounce)! Then the man in the parking lot said, "You don't belive that this is a raw egg?" He turned his hand over, dropping the egg, which broke. (This was before the days when special effects were used to lie -- to amaze -- people; B&W TV show.)
you should build a box for the egg to go in so it will not break.
With a frying pan! lol The question should be How do you make sure an egg doesn't crack / break when dropped from 10 feet?
? That is what I want to know?!? And also How high does an egg have to be dropped for the wind to affect it?