ScienceIQ.com

Bizarre Boiling

The next time you're watching a pot of water boil, perhaps for coffee or a cup of soup, pause for a moment and consider: what would this look like in space? Would the turbulent bubbles rise or fall? And how big would they be? Would the liquid stay in the pan at all? Until a few years ago, nobody knew. Indeed, physicists have trouble understanding ...

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BizarreBoiling
Geology

Water In The Ground

Some water underlies the Earth's surface almost everywhere, beneath hills, mountains, plains, and deserts. It is not always accessible, or fresh enough for use without treatment, and it's sometimes ... Continue reading

WaterInTheGround
Astronomy

N81

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has taken a 'family portrait' of young, ultra-bright stars nested in their embryonic cloud of glowing gases. The celestial maternity ward, called N81, is located 200,000 ... Continue reading

N81
Mathematics

How To Calculate The Circumference Of A Circle

A circle is what you get if you take a straight line and bend it around so that its ends touch. You can demonstrate this by taking a piece of stiff wire and doing just that: bring the ends of the wire ... Continue reading

CircumferenceOfACircle
Medicine

Civets Lesson

Recently a Chinese television producer fell ill with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, better known as SARS. He is the first victim in many months, although an epidemic last year claimed nearly 8000 ... Continue reading

CivetsLesson

Making Cars Out of Soup

MakingCarsOutofSoupThere was an old TV show set on a spaceship some time in the future which included a machine about the size of a microwave oven. Whenever people wanted something like a meal or a component to repair the space ship, they would go to this machine, press a few buttons, and the machine would make it for them. Today these machines exist, they cannot make meals yet, but they are used a lot for making prototype parts. For example, car designers can create a three dimensional design on a computer and use one of these machines to 'print' the real thing!

The technology is called three-dimensional lithography and this is how it works: There are a range of plastic resins which are 'thermo-setting'. This means when they reach a certain temperature they solidify. A three dimensional lithography machine uses a tub of these resins and the heat of a laser beam to create a solid. Inside the tub there is a moveable platform. It starts at the surface of the tube and can be moved down into the fluid in very small steps. The machine's laser can be focused at any point on the surface of the fluid in the tub.

The computer design of an object is converted into a set of very thin slices. Each point has an (X,Y) coordinate and the computer works out which points are to be solid and which are not. The thickness of each slice is the same as each step the platform takes as it is slowly moved into the fluid. At the beginning, the platform is level with the surface of the fluid and the laser is guided to fire a short burst to heat up and solidify every (X,Y) point on the first slice of the object. The platform then moves down the thickness of one slice (this is the 'Z' direction) and the laser then solidifies all the points on the next layer. This process goes on until the object is complete and it can be taken out of the tub, ready to go.