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Addendum:

> "Cast iron and carbon steel have nearly identical thermal conductivity (~52 W/m·K), which surprises most people."

is unsourced. And the precise "~52" is quite misleading - Wikipedia and online sources report thermal conductivities in the range of ~30-50¹.

Also:

> "Critically, whipped egg white foam drainage follows a hyperbolic saturation curve: v = V × t / (B + t), where V is the maximum drained volume and B is the drainage half-life (Lomakina & Mikova, 2006)."

As far as I can tell, the article² (cited twice for this claim) does not contain any equations modelling drainage over time, and especially not this equation or the term "hyperbolic".

So, it seems that you cannot really trust the sources the author's LLM included. For me, that means that I cannot trust any of the other claims in the article (or the author in general).

¹) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_thermal_conductivities

²) https://www.agriculturejournals.cz/pdfs/cjf/2006/03/02.pdf

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Similarly, the kite article [1] states that:

> The angle of attack, α, is the angle between the kite’s sail and the incoming wind. As α increases from zero, C_L increases approximately linearly until a critical angle (typically 12–18 degrees for flat surfaces), beyond which the airflow separates from the upper surface and the kite stalls (DT Online, 2024).

The supporting reference is [2]; this doesn't refer to a linear releationship or a critical angle, but does say that the angle of attack is typically 20 to 30 degrees (contradicting the claim that a kite would stall if the angle is above 12-18 degrees).

So I agree that this website does not seem trustworthy. Specific claims may or may not be correct, but they're not supported by the presented references.

[1]: https://www.absurdlyoptimized.com/outdoors/kids-kite/#ref-7

[2]: https://wiki.dtonline.org/index.php/Kite_Design_Basics

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