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tralalala
02-01-2008, 10:09 AM
The questions are as follows:
What are the differences between a rocket, a missile, and a shell?

What are the pros and cons of a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle - a military one)?

What is Acetone, and what is it used for in military forces?



These are for some contest I'm entering, problem is I can't seem to find any information about it :unsure: I'd be over the moon if anyone could give a hand here.. :) Thanks.

Sanka113
02-01-2008, 12:43 PM
google and wikipedia are your friends.

Biggles
02-01-2008, 08:32 PM
The questions are as follows:
What are the differences between a rocket, a missile, and a shell?

What are the pros and cons of a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle - a military one)?

What is Acetone, and what is it used for in military forces?



These are for some contest I'm entering, problem is I can't seem to find any information about it :unsure: I'd be over the moon if anyone could give a hand here.. :) Thanks.

The first is possibly that a shell is propelled by a discharge in the artillery piece and essentially just thrown at the target, a rocket is propelled by its own fuel but is unguided after it has been pointed and fired and a missile has its own propulsion and guidance system.

UAVs save on a very precious resource (a pilot) but are limited if a decision making process is required.

I think acetone is used in cordite (an explosive).

I could be talking pish of course. :dabs:

tralalala
02-03-2008, 01:17 PM
^ Makes a bunch of sense though.. Any "proper" sites I can get them from (wikipedia ain't enough.. It needs to written somewhere with rep.. Like a university/college paper).

Broken
02-04-2008, 04:20 AM
The questions are as follows:
What are the differences between a rocket, a missile, and a shell?

A shell has very limited range. Both a missile and rocket are long range solutions, but a rocket is uncontrolled while the missile is controlled.

What are the pros and cons of a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle - a military one)?
pro - small size, no pilot to worry about, possibility of 24/7 operation (only limited by the power source), low per unit price (compared to piloted alternative).

cons - lack of human intelligence in event of communications loss, malfunction, and the possibility of being hacked by the enemy.

What is Acetone, and what is it used for in military forces?
It is a general solvent (I use it at work) and as such has many general uses. Acetone peroxide is a very powerful explosive.





I feel like I'm doing some else's homework.
Their easy homework....

Snee
02-11-2008, 01:20 AM
^ Makes a bunch of sense though.. Any "proper" sites I can get them from (wikipedia ain't enough.. It needs to written somewhere with rep.. Like a university/college paper).

How about following the references and/or external links given by wikipedia near the bottom of the page?

Too much of a challenge?

cpt_azad
02-12-2008, 06:23 AM
^ Makes a bunch of sense though.. Any "proper" sites I can get them from (wikipedia ain't enough.. It needs to written somewhere with rep.. Like a university/college paper).

How about following the references and/or external links given by wikipedia near the bottom of the page?

Too much of a challenge?

That's not very helpful man, tralalala isn't the type of person to ask a question like this unless he already tried those methods.

I'm not going to reiterate what others have said, but Broken got it on the head though, his answers are spot on.

Barbarossa
02-12-2008, 11:55 AM
Yeah, just cite "Broken (interweb fantacist)" as your reference material, none of this wikipedia references nonsense :dabs:

Snee
02-12-2008, 08:35 PM
How about following the references and/or external links given by wikipedia near the bottom of the page?

Too much of a challenge?

That's not very helpful man, tralalala isn't the type of person to ask a question like this unless he already tried those methods.
Good one, I expect the link to Lockheed Martin's webpage (containing at least one reason as to why UAVs are useful), the article about "UAV's on the Rise" cited (I'm going to assume scientific journals and the like are reasonably reputable), the cbs news article linked to, and so forth, in the UAV-article (to name an example) on wikipedia contain nothing useful.

Oh, no, wait, they do.

I'm not going to reiterate what others have said, but Broken got it on the head though, his answers are spot on.
That, on the other hand, was not very useful. But I'm not really expecting any miracles, so that's on par with your usual course.


=-=-
@others in thread:


Not that wikipedia should be necessary or owt, assuming tralala's school has no database access to any of the big ones, or at least some sort of news archive (as incredible as that may sound, most half decent schools in civilized countries do, nowadays, and that's usually where they expect you to go for papers and articles from journals), he still has access to the internets. Searching for something like: "acetone military applications", should give some interesting results, and perhaps show you what a couple of companies and/or a us government agency or two have to say about it.

In conclusion, I don't know what his previous research consisted of, but I'm not impressed.


EDit: For that matter, wikipedia's accuracy has been rated to be fairly good, by experts, so much so that it's been suggested that it may well be more accurate as well as much more current than certain more traditional encyclopedias, which, as it happens, are sometimes used as references in college and university papers. (Obviously, it's not perfect either, especially when there's a politically related motif to an article.)

And don't get me started on colleges, universities, and shoddy research.

What I'm saying is that nothing is concrete, but that totally ignoring sources like wikipedia, which has a great deal of people reviewing every article, isn't very smart. And that it's tremendously useful for finding further avenues to look for answers.

krunktastic
02-12-2008, 11:13 PM
The number one mistake people will make when writing this paper is defining what something "is" rather than stating its function or purpose. State what these things do and how they relate to each other, society, and yourself. Make sure you develop a logical and coherent thesis and stray away from definitions.

tralalala
02-13-2008, 12:11 PM
Am done with it.. I never handed it in after all.. The last date was 10th Feb. :lol: Thanks for going through all the trouble though.