ScienceIQ.com

Your Senses Make Sense of Energy

Your different sense receptors are designed to gather different kinds of sensory information about the world around you. That information is in the form of different kinds of energy. Your eyes sense light which is electromagnetic energy. Your senses of taste and smell detect chemical energy. Other senses respond to mechanical or thermal energy. But ...

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EnergySense
Biology

Is Your Immune System Educated?

When spring comes, do you hide indoors because your eyes and nose water, and you can't stop sneezing? Do cats or dogs cause you the same symptoms? Have you wondered why you have allergies and other ... Continue reading

ImmuneSystem
Medicine

Why Do We Call It A 'Vaccination?'

Smallpox 'vaccinations' are in the news nowadays. What is smallpox and what is a vaccination? Smallpox is one of the oldest and most horrible diseases afflicting the human family. In the past, it ... Continue reading

Vaccination
Physics

Newton's First Law of Motion

Sir Isaac Newton first presented his three laws of motion in the 'Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis' in 1686. His first law states that every object will remain at rest or in uniform motion ... Continue reading

NewtonsFirstLawofMotion
Mathematics

Picture This

What 3 dimensional shape will pass through a rectangle, triangle and circle each time filling the whole space? The answer may surprise you in it's simplicity. Before I tell you what it is, see if you ... Continue reading

PictureThis

Why is Red-Green Colorblindness a 'Guy Thing?'

ColorBlindnessColorblind girls and women are rare, while men who can't match their socks are relatively common. The reason is a genetic phenomenon called sex-linked inheritance. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes. One of those pairs, called X and Y, determines sex. Most females have 2 Xs. Most males have an X and a Y. The Y chromosome carries the genes that cause an embryo to develop as a male, but not many others. The X chromosome carries many genes that have nothing to do with sex and many that have no counterpart on the Y chromosome. So, for those characteristics, females get two genes, but males get only one.

Colorblindness is caused by a recessive gene. Recessive means two copies of the gene are required for the characteristic to show up. If one member of the gene pair is normal, then color vision is normal. The gene for colorblindness is carried on the X chromosome. Since it is relatively rare compared to the gene for normal color vision, most women who carry it have a normal gene on their second X chromosomes, so their color vision is normal. Unless their father was colorblind, they may not even suspect that they carry the gene--until they learn that they have a colorblind son.

Females can be red/green colorblind, but only if they get the recessive gene from both parents. For that to happen, their mother must be a carrier (or colorblind herself) and their father must be colorblind, too.