ScienceIQ.com

Re-emerging Microbes

The reappearance of microbes that had been successfully conquered or controlled by medicines is distressing to the scientific and medical communities as well as to the public. A major cause of this re-emergence is that microbes, which cause these diseases, are becoming resistant to the drugs used to treat them. According to the World Health ...

Continue reading...

ReemergingMicrobes
Medicine

Encephalitis and Meningitis

Encephalitis and meningitis are inflammatory diseases of the membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord and are caused by bacterial or viral infections. Viral meningitis is sometimes called ... Continue reading

EncephalitisandMeningitis
Physics

Neutrinos to the Rescue

Have you ever wondered what the most abundant particle in the universe is after photons of light? The answer is: Neutrinos. These tiny, neutral and almost mass-less particles that move at almost the ... Continue reading

Neutrinos
Chemistry

Radon, A Rare Element

To the best of our knowledge, the entire universe is constructed from just over a hundred different types of building blocks called atoms. Each has its own characteristic properties, and while there ... Continue reading

RadonARareElement
Geology

The Hole Scoop on Ozone

Ozone is a molecule containing three oxygen atoms. It is blue in color and has a strong odor. Normal oxygen, which we breathe, has two oxygen atoms and is colorless and odorless. Ozone is much less ... Continue reading

OzoneHole

Taming Twin Tornadoes

TwinTornadoesEvery time a jet airplane flies through the sky, it creates two invisible tornados. They're not the kind of tornados that strike in severe weather. These tornados are called vortices and can cause problems - similar to the problems tornados on the land cause--for airplanes that may pass too close to the strong wind.

A vortex is formed by the difference between the pressure on the upper surface of the plane's wing and that on the lower surface. High pressure on the lower surface creates a natural airflow that makes its way to the wingtip and curls upward around it. When flow around the wingtips streams out behind the airplane, the vortices formed are strong enough to flip another airplane. Vortices also cause drag on the originating airplane, and that decreases performance and fuel mileage.

Standard procedure in air flight is to stagger the planes' flight patterns so that the vortices have dissipated by the time another jet passes through the area. That works, but since vortices can spread over miles, the gap between planes must be quite large. To create that large gap in air space, fewer flights are permitted to take off from airports. If there was a way to reduce or eliminate those vortices, more flights could be fit into the same amount of time.