propofol, pentothal, methohexital, etomidate or ketamine. (10-30 seconds)
Large doses of opioids will also render someone unconscious
Ketamine can also be given IM.
Inhalation (takes longer than 5 seconds, more like 2-5 minutes): Sevoflurane, isoflurane, desflurane or the older gases, like halothane, enflurane, cyclopropane or ether
This is the same guy that asked "How do you make a chemical to unconscious someone." This was my response:
To unconscious someone? I am going to start using adjectives as verbs too. I am going to thirsty some milk. OK, so... here is how I feel about the question. If you do not have the grammatical skills to ask this question correctly, you cannot be trusted to follow a lab procedure, nor can your motives for asking the question be trusted either. In both cases I am reluctant to answer the question. But I am going to give you a step by step process for the creation of a chemical to unconscious some one.
1) Take a bunch of corn or fruit and throw it into a big pot. Add lots of sugar and some bread and a couple packets of yeast.
2) Let that sit for a few days and then cook it for a while real slow and not hot enough to boil for a few hours.
3) Distill (fractional distilling works well and quickly if you have the lab for it) at about 177-180 degrees.
4) collect the distillate
5) give to victim in glass mason jar
6) sit back and wait.
melatonin is the closest to being able to paralyze someone.
Chlorine, Ammonia, Methylphenidate (Prescribed to those with ADD/ADHD), any type of chemical which smells like its not meant to be inhaled really.
Any chemical that could knock someone out could also potentially hurt them. Chloroform is in many household cleaning products but I wouldn't risk injury to another person.
Chloroform can be used
You get a bachelor's degree in chemistry or chemical engineering, and then you follow the instructions provided by someone who has a Ph.D. in one of those sciences, who is himself following instructions provided by someone with a degree in pharmacology.If you want to actually administer it, you should have a medical science degree and a specialization in anesthesiology, because otherwise you'll either not knock the person out (if the mix is too lean) or kill them (if it's too rich).There is no such thing as a safe, effective "knock out gas" that you can just casually dump into the air and have people harmlessly keel over.
Freeze it first. Alternatively, fill it with oil so that when you knock it over it won't be water that you spill.
since force is mass and acceleration the force needed to knock over a bowling depends on the mass of bowling and it acceleration.
A strike is a thing they called by a umpier in history, a strike would be when someone stops work to get better pay, or shorter hours or to even force an employer to agree to meet some other demand.
This chemical reaction is known as combustion.
sort of. if you tip someone over you just slightly push them.if you knock them over you push them hard
because someone may fall and hurt him/herself or even knock over a chemical
because someone may fall and hurt him/herself or even knock over a chemical
velocity
The answer is no, regardless of what you hear. The actual impact of a bullet fired from a handgun or shoulder-fired weapon will not physically knock a person over.
Chloroform
Money that was paid into your account by someone going into the bank and paying it over the counter
No the worst you can do is knock someone out or run them over with you race kart.
if you knock someone over they could either lose their head or die
yes he has, in Denmark 1992 he kicked someone because the person was trying to knock over the microphone stand.
Chloroform, but it only works in very large doses. Chlorophyll does nothing to knock people out, unless you count whacking someone over the head with a green plant.
You get a bachelor's degree in chemistry or chemical engineering, and then you follow the instructions provided by someone who has a Ph.D. in one of those sciences, who is himself following instructions provided by someone with a degree in pharmacology.If you want to actually administer it, you should have a medical science degree and a specialization in anesthesiology, because otherwise you'll either not knock the person out (if the mix is too lean) or kill them (if it's too rich).There is no such thing as a safe, effective "knock out gas" that you can just casually dump into the air and have people harmlessly keel over.