ScienceIQ.com

Jumping Starlight

'Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder what you are,' says the song by Jane Taylor. But stars don’t really twinkle; their light reaches the earth in a steady way. Why then do we see them flickering around in the sky? The answer is in the atmosphere. ...

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JumpingStarlight
Biology

Yes! We Have New Bananas

Did you know that a plant disease determined what banana variety is in your market? Bananas, which originated in Africa and are now grown in every tropical region, are perhaps the most popular fruit ... Continue reading

YesWeHaveNewBananas
Engineering

Space Lasers Keep Earth's Air Clean

Space laser technology is coming to our smokestacks and automobiles. Leave it to NASA to take its inventions to another level, helping to keep our air clean and breathable. A recent NASA invention, ... Continue reading

SpaceLasersKeepEarthsAirClean
Biology

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 ... Continue reading

EnergySense
Geology

Arctic Carbon a Potential Wild Card in Climate Change Scenarios

The Arctic Ocean receives about 10 percent of Earth's river water and with it some 25 teragrams [28 million tons] per year of dissolved organic carbon that had been held in far northern bogs and other ... Continue reading

ArcticCarbon

Now You See It, Now You Don't

EMRadiationWhat we call light is simply a narrow band of electromagnetic radiation that our eyes are sensitive to. This radiation enters our eyes and is conveyed to the brain by the process we call sight. While the mechanics of seeing is quite complex, the process of seeing is, in a different sense, quite extraordinary. Here are two examples.

Have you ever used a telescope to view a distant object and realized that the image you are seeing is upside down? A telescope with convex lenses creates an upside down image. Your eyes do the same thing. As light enters your eye, it passes through your cornea and is focused by your lens onto the retina, which contains light-responsive cells called rods and cones. Because it works much in the same way as a telescope, the image projected on your retina is upside down. The optic nerves in the back of your eyes conveys this upside down image to your brain. But when you look at your cat, he's not walking on the ceiling. Thankfully, your brain does the switch for you, and flips the image.

Each of our eyes has a blind spot, a place on our retinas about the size of a pinhead where there are no rods or cones. Our blind spot is the place where our optic nerves exit the eye and connect to our brains. But we don't usually notice this blind spot. That is because our brains fill in the information for us. We think we see what we should be seeing. The trick, of course, is that as we move and focus our eyes, the blind spot is a moving target. Our brains can make a pretty good guess as to how to complete the picture of what we are looking at. To see your blind spot, follow the link to the larger image of the image on the right. Close your right eye and focus your left eye on the purple soccer ball. Now slowly move your head closer or farther from your computer screen. Can you make the orange soccer ball disappear? Then you've found your blind spot.