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How Many Cows Does It Take To String A Tennis Racquet?

How many cows does it take to string a tennis racquet? According to Professor Rod Cross of the University of Sydney, an expert on the physics and technology of tennis, the answer is 3. Many top professional tennis players still prefer to string their racquets with natural gut instead of synthetics due to natural gut's soft feel, high elasticity and ...

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TennisRacquet
Astronomy

Introduction To Jupiter

With its numerous moons and several rings, the Jupiter system is a 'mini-solar system.' Jupiter is the most massive planet in our solar system, and in composition it resembles a small star. In fact, ... Continue reading

IntroductionToJupiter
Biology

Does Your Beagle Have A Belly Button?

Our navels, also know as belly buttons, are scars left over from our umbilical cords. While in the mother's womb, a baby receives food and oxygen and rids itself of waste through the umbilical cord. ... Continue reading

BeagleBellyButton
Physics

Ultraviolet Light

Ultraviolet light is a form of radiation which is not visible to the human eye. It's in an invisible part of the 'electromagnetic spectrum'. Radiated energy, or radiation, is given off by many ... Continue reading

UltravioletLight
Biology

Luck Of The Irish?

In the 1800s many Irish were poor tenant farmers who farmed mainly for the landowner and relied on small plots for their own food. Because high yields of potatoes could be obtained from these small ... Continue reading

LuckOfTheIrish

Tobacco Mosaic Virus

TobaccoMosaicVirusWe all know that AIDS, SARS and flu are all caused by viruses. Most people, however, don't realize that some of the earliest work on viruses was done on a common plant virus, Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). Over 100 years ago, Martinus Beijerinck described a 'mosaic disease of tobacco' in which sick plants developed a yellow-green 'mosaic' symptom on their leaves. Beijerinck passed sap of infected leaves through porcelain filters and showed that the filtered sap was infectious. He concluded that something smaller than bacteria caused the disease and used the term virus to describe this unusual agent of disease.

Wendell Stanley used TMV to demonstrate the 'non-living' nature of viruses. He showed that TMV could be crystallized and that virus crystals were still infectious when placed back in tobacco. For this revolutionary work, he received a Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1946. Viruses are composed mostly of a nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) and coat protein that covers the nucleic acid. Ten years later, Heinz Frankel-Conrat used TMV to show that the genetic material was nucleic acid (RNA), and not protein, when he proved that TMV nucleic acid was infectious. He took the virus apart, and using only its nucleic acid, was able to infect plants that went on to produce complete viruses.

Today, TMV remains both an important source of disease for a wide variety of plants and an essential tool for the advanced study of viruses. It was the first virus for which the entire nucleic acid was sequenced and the first virus for which plants were genetically engineered to create TMV-resistant plants.