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Can Drunk People Perform Calculations

How much alcohol gets a person drunk if drinks beer of 4.5% and spirits of 43%?

Well roughly, one new single (25ml) of a strong spirit such as whiskey yields around 10ml of pure alcohol which is similar to a half pint of medium strength. If you're drinking bottled beer then adjust your calculations accordingly as volumes per bottle vary.

With this in mind; a double whiskey is the equivalent of a pint and a single is the same as a half.

If you're drinking somewhere that sells the traditional full measures (35ml and 70ml) then shorts will get you smashed quicker.

If you drink mixers and cocktails which you are unfamiliar with it can get incredibly complicated. Especially if your drink has several alcoholic components.

How much will affect you? It depends on many many things, as the others already said. Try sticking to say one pint/double per hour for one night. That sounds sensible to me for your body weight. If you feel drunk, stop. Next time, adjust your intake up or down based on how well you did last time. This is probably the quickest and easiest way you're going to sort it out.

If you and your friends buy rounds then this can be difficult to stick to. Buying rounds was actually made illegal in Britain with the passing of the Defence of the Realm Act 1914 precisely for the reason that it forces people to get drunk. When it's your round you could always try buying yourself a non-alcoholic becks. I drink it and it tastes great. Very hard to tell the difference. The price is very similar too. Sometimes cheaper!

Why can't I get completely drunk?

At parties I would drink 40oz King Cobras the whole night til like 9am and I would still feel good and sober just a little buzz, but not stupid stumbling drunk. Just as if a normal person had like 4 shots of tequila. It's just you build up tolerance. I gave up drinking though, my kidneys and liver and pancreas were starting to give out. My kidneys still ache sometimes and I am proudly almost 7 months sober. It's hard but not impossible. If you need help don't be afraid to look for help. I did.

Could a mosquito die of alcohol poisoning from biting a drunk person?

Short answer: No (probably not at least).Long answer: provider below…I don’t see why not. Theoretically we can get drunk by drinking the blood of someone who is drunk so why can’t mosquitos? That’d be gross if someone did that though. You also have to consider the level of alcohol in your blood and how much blood the mosquito consumes. Mosquitos are pretty small creatures and I looked it up that they drink about 3mg of blood in a bite, so about 0.003mL of blood. Let’s also assume our average drunk person has the average amount of 5 liters of blood going through their body. Also, our drunk person is pretty drunk, so let’s assume they blow into a breathalyzer and get 0.15mg/L. That’s about double the legal driving limit (maybe to some of us that isn’t very drunk). With a little bit of math and conversions this comes out to be 0.315g/L of ethanol in the bloodstream. If our person weighs 170lbs then that means they have about 0.0093g/lb of ethanol. This is the magic number. So, for the mosquito to get drunk, we need its blood volume to be at the same concentration of our drunk guy and at the same ratio to its body weight. . If the mosquito drinks 0.003mL of blood they will be consuming 0.000000945g of ethanol. So now our question is how much blood is inside the mosquito!? Well, since mosquitos drink about their body weight in blood, lets assume their blood volume just doubled with their intake of our drunk guys blood. So now the mosquito has a blood alcohol content of 0.000000474g/L. Our average mosquito here weighs about 2.5mg (not much). That is 0.0011 lbs. This means the mosquito has 0.000417g/L of ethanol inside him. Unfortunately, that is about 22x less than the amount he needs to be drunk. Then again I could have done my calculations incorrectly. Anyways, I hoping that poor guy would be at least a little tipsy.

How many people around the world are drunk right now?

1 million approximately.Let's do some quick calculations:World population = 7.1 billionAround 1.4 billion live in extreme poverty (< $1.25 per day)Let us assume that these people cannot afford liquor, food being their primary concernRemaining population = 7.1 - 1.4 = 5.7 billionPercentage of population under 18 (legal drinking age in many countries) = ~33% (one-third)Hence, Population that can afford and legally drink = .67 * 5.7 = 3.8 billionAssuming only 10% of people drink regularly, we have 380 million people sample sizeLet's say these people only drink once a month and the normal drinking session lasts 2 hours.Hence, at any given time,380 million * 2 hours/month / 24*30 hours/month = 1 million people (approx).Hence, at any given time, 1 million people are drunk or getting drunk.

4 People have asked this question in the chemistry section and have been ignored! Calling all physicists!?

Like an object in a gravitational field, an electron in an atom has potential energy based on the force attracting it to the proton.
U = k q1 q2 / r^2
I don't remember the value of k offhand, and you might instead have learned 1/(4 pi e0).
Put in the constant, the distance, and the charges of a proton and electron. Make sure your units come out to (some power of) joules.

Note that the result is negative. At greater distance, the potential energy rises toward zero. To ionize the atom, you need to add enough energy to knock the electron off to effectively infinite distance - ie, make the potential energy zero.

The absolute value of your potential energy is the ionization energy.
Multiply by Avogadro's number to scale up from one atom to one mole.

For the wavelength, stay with the number for a single atom. You need to add that much energy in a single photon.
The energy of a photon is related to its wavelength by the equation E = hc/λ. Look up the values of those constants and solve for λ.

I’ve had 20 shots of tequila and 4 beers? How drunk will I get? I’m 15 and 5’5.

You will probably end up in the ER or on the bathroom floor with alcohol poisoning . And that is after you made a complete and utter fool out of yourself and threw up everywhere if you are 15 you should not be drinking especially that much you can kill yourself and if everyone else is just as wasted no on is even going to notice that you are dying of alcohol poisoning and not only that no on e will lwant to call 911 because you are under 21 and any person that is there with you will get in trouble for allowing a minor to drink.

Can you get drunk off of?

The drink you described would have an ABV of 19%, or 38 proof. So, assuming that you did a shot of each into a beverage (1 shot= 1.5 oz) you would have 4.5 oz of 38 proof liquor. In calculating how much would get someone drunk, you then must consider the definition of "one drink", which for mixed drinks is 1.5 oz of 80 proof liquor. That means that "one drink" is a beverage containing about 6/10 of an ounce of actual alcohol (which works out to also be about how much is in a 5% abv beer). Your drink contains just under 9/10 of an ounce of alcohol, so it's worth about 1.5 drinks. So, here's how many of your drink it would take for the following people to drunk past .10 (pretty well sauced, but not to the point of slurring):

100 lbs- 2- .13
125 lbs- 2- .10
150 lbs- 3- about .13
175 lbs- 3- about .11
200 lbs- 4- over .11

So one of those won't get you drunk, but a couple will depending on your weight.

-edit-
I might've done my math for the initial abv a little bit off, since others seem to think it would have a 22-23% abv. I just averaged the abv across the three, is there a specific recipe for this drink that changed the measurements?

Is Excel Drunk? It says 1-1=-1.82E-11?

This is just info so that my question makes more sense.

I have data in five columns, tracking amounts owed by people
Column
A - Yes or No
B - Name
C - Sub-total
D - Tax
E - Total

In column F I have a list of the different names, and beside each name, in column G, I have the function, =SUMIFS(E:E,B:B,FX,A:A,"No"), So that I can track the total owed by each person.

I also have, in H1 =SUM(E:E), to track overall income
and in H2 =SUMIF(A:A,"Yes",E:E)

In cell H3, I did, =H1-H2-SUM(G:G), just to make sure that I didn't forget someones name.

QUESTION:

So cell H3 should be zero right, but no, it is some insanely small number, -1.82E-11. I mean, the logic makes sense that since all numbers are calculated using the same data point, in order to arrive at the same number, H3 should be zero. Can anyone please explain this? Thank you VERY VERY much, in advance.

Could I get drunk off a 75cl bottle of 11.5% rose wine?

Size has nothing to do with it, some people can get drunk on that, others won't

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