Bust body fat with today’s Groupon at Metabolic Effect. Choose between two options:
- For $39, you get a 10-week online fat-loss program (a $199 value).
- For $41, you get three personal-training sessions (a $105 value).
Metabolic Effect helps reconfigure body shapes by evaluating stress levels, metabolic rates, and lifestyles, then providing essential guidance and information as customers embark on new exercise routines. The 10-week fat-loss program includes an individualized diet plan and a series of online workouts, with a regimen that changes every two weeks. Lifestyle lectures arrive via email, with new messages daily. Alternatively, schedule three personal-training sessions online and receive individualized attention from a certified personal trainer. Personalized workouts ensure that novices and athletes alike encounter challenges appropriate for their level of fitness.
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Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: Famous Equations
Math and science have long been two of our most treasured sources of equations. Here's a look at some of these famous mathematical statements:
The Energy-Mass Equivalence: E=MC²
In 1905, Alfred Einstein was the first to posit that mass and energy are actually the same thing, despite the fact that they are clearly two different things. Several weeks later, this famous equation created the atomic bomb. Today, scientists agree that the atomic bomb was a bad thing, that mass and energy are clearly two different things (Just look at them!), and that Einstein should apologize.
The Pythagorean Theorem: a² + b²= c²
British philosopher Pythagoras put forward this important theory about the length of triangle sides, which states that the three sides of any triangle always add up to 180 centimeters. Although it might look funny to modern brains, the reason that the equation contains letters instead of numbers is that numbers had not yet been invented. Unfortunately, the Pythagorean theorem has largely fallen out of favor because triangles aren't used anymore.
Pi: π = A/r²
This tasty mathematical constant expresses the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. Mathematicians must memorize all of pi's 100 digits to graduate from college and to receive the traditional mathematician's crown. Pi is closely linked to the mysterious circle, the boring geometric shape that contains a disappointing number of right angles. For most people, it's enough to remember pi's first three digits: three hundred fourteen.
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