due to loss of mercury into the glass, phosphor and electrodes, disintegration of the electrodes and increasing inefficiency of the phosphor, they will always eventually fail. but they do last a long time.
do you even know what a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faraday_cage is? they block electric fields. ergo, if my room, or anyone's room, were a faraday cage, they would not get wireless internet, be able to use their mobile phone, be able to listen to the radio...
now please, either
a) show some credible evidence
b) get a physics degree
c) stop posting.
and this argument has even begun to consider the implications of newtonian mechanics, and conversely, quantum indeterminacy on the concepts of free will in the first place.
wingedangel, do you even know what a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorescent_lamp is? or how it works? whilst it is possible for them to illuminate without being plugged in, it is impossible for them to last forever. no matter how thick the glass is.
due to loss of mercury into the glass, phosphor and electrodes, disintegration of the electrodes and increasing inefficiency of the phosphor, they will always eventually fail. but they do last a long time.
do you even know what a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faraday_cage is? they block electric fields. ergo, if my room, or anyone's room, were a faraday cage, they would not get wireless internet, be able to use their mobile phone, be able to listen to the radio...
now please, either
a) show some credible evidence
b) get a physics degree
c) stop posting.
and this argument has even begun to consider the implications of newtonian mechanics, and conversely, quantum indeterminacy on the concepts of free will in the first place.