A:Heavy metal poisoning is highly likely if fish-oil supplements are overconsumed in extreme amounts, however, because heavy metals (mercury, lead, nickel, arsenic, and cadmium) that selectively bind with protein in the fish flesh can leach into the fish oil. B:Would it be a wise precaution to suggest that children and pregnant women stop taking fish-oil supplements? Answer: leaves
A:Heavy metal poisoning from consuming fish oil supplements is highly unlikely, because heavy metals (mercury, lead, nickel, arsenic, and cadmium) selectively bind with protein in the fish flesh rather than accumulate in the oil. B:Since heavy-metal toxicity is something that occurs slowly over a lifetime, in even the worst case scenario, could fish-oil supplements still be taken by the elderly without undue worry? Answer: say
A:Heavy metal poisoning from consuming fish oil supplements is highly unlikely, because heavy metals (mercury, lead, nickel, arsenic, and cadmium) selectively bind with protein in the fish flesh rather than accumulate in the oil. B:Would a warning label that reminds users to take fish oil supplements only in their recommended doses be a sufficient precaution (or perhaps even an unnecessary one) given the level of risk? Answer: say
A:With a semimajor axis of 2.5294 AU, or roughly 2.5 times the distance between Earth and the Sun, Toutatis has a 3:1 orbital resonance with Jupiter and a near-1:4 resonance with Earth. It thus completes one orbit around the Sun for every 4.02 annual orbits of Earth. The gravitational perturbations caused by frequent close approaches to the terrestrial planets lead to chaotic behavior in the orbit of Toutatis, making precise long-term predictions of its location progressively inaccurate over time. Estimates in 1993 put the Lyapunov time horizon for predictability at around 50 years, after which the uncertainty region becomes larger with each close approach to a planet. Without the perturbations from the terrestrial planets the Lyapunov time would be close to 10,000 years. The initial observations that showed its chaotic behavior were made by Wiśniewski. B:If a scientist created a machine that doubled the amount of gravitational perturbations of Toutatis, would it make it easier to predict the orbit of Toutatis in the future? Answer: leaves
A:There is little chance of heavy-metal poisoning occurring due to the ingestion of fish-oil supplements, because heavy metals such as mercury, lead, nickel, arsenic, and cadmium do not accumulate in the oil of the fish, and instead selectively bind to proteins in the animal's flesh. B:Would it be a wise precaution to suggest that children and pregnant women stop taking fish-oil supplements? Answer: leaves
A:There is little chance of heavy-metal poisoning occurring due to the ingestion of fish-oil supplements, because heavy metals such as mercury, lead, nickel, arsenic, and cadmium do not accumulate in the oil of the fish, and instead selectively bind to proteins in the animal's flesh. B:Since heavy-metal toxicity is something that occurs slowly over a lifetime, in even the worst case scenario, could fish-oil supplements still be taken by the elderly without undue worry? Answer: say
A:Heavy metal poisoning from consuming fish oil supplements is highly unlikely, because heavy metals (mercury, lead, nickel, arsenic, and cadmium) selectively bind with protein in the fish flesh rather than accumulate in the oil. B:Would it be a wise precaution to suggest that children and pregnant women stop taking fish-oil supplements? Answer: leaves
A:There is little chance of heavy-metal poisoning occurring due to the ingestion of fish-oil supplements, because heavy metals such as mercury, lead, nickel, arsenic, and cadmium do not accumulate in the oil of the fish, and instead selectively bind to proteins in the animal's flesh. B:Would a warning label that reminds users to take fish oil supplements only in their recommended doses be a sufficient precaution (or perhaps even an unnecessary one) given the level of risk? Answer: say
A:This offers several advantages. Computer programmers have to worry about where their data is physically stored or whether the user's computer will have enough memory. It also allows multiple types of memory to be used. For example, some data can be stored in physical RAM chips while other data is stored on a hard drive (e.g. in a swapfile), functioning as an extension of the cache hierarchy. This drastically increases the amount of memory available to programs. The operating system will place actively used data in physical RAM, which is much faster than hard disks. When the amount of RAM is not sufficient to run all the current programs, it can result in a situation where the computer spends more time moving data from RAM to disk and back than it does accomplishing tasks; this is known as thrashing. B:Does the location of data matter? Answer:
say