ScienceIQ.com

Torque

A force may be thought of as a push or pull in a specific direction. When a force is applied to an object, the object accelerates in the direction of the force according to Newton's laws of motion. The object may also experience a rotation depending on how the object is confined and where the force is applied. A hanging door is an excellent example ...

Continue reading...

Torque
Engineering

Infrared Headphones

Infrared headphones use infrared light to carry an information signal from a transmitter to a receiver. Sounds simple enough, but the actual process is very complicated. The human ear gathers sound as ... Continue reading

InfraredHeadphones
Astronomy

Laser Guide Stars

Did you ever wonder why we have to have the Hubble Space Telescope so high up in the Earth's orbit? Why not just make a bigger and better telescope on the surface? ... Continue reading

LaserGuideStars
Engineering

How Can A Bullet-proof Vest Stop A Bullet?

Here's an experiment: take the small coil springs from a dozen or so retractable pens and roll them together in a heap until they are thoroughly tangled and entwined. Now try to pull them apart from ... Continue reading

BulletproofVestStopABullet
Engineering

Hollywood To The Rescue

Sixty years ago, World War II was driving many advances in the sciences; a surprising number of these developments have evolved to impact our lives today. At the beginning of the war, scientists and ... Continue reading

HollywoodRescue

The World's Biggest Popsicle

TheWorldsBiggestPopsicleStored in a commercial freezer in France, along with quite a lot of frozen meat and cheese, is about 15 kilometers' worth of ice cores, taken from glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica. Each giant 'popsicle,' ranging from one to three yards in length and about 5 inches in diameter, is carefully labeled.

These big popsicles are ice cores drilled from as much as 3 kilometers beneath the surface. Since ice and snow in Antarctica are deposited year after year and never completely melt, the layers pile up for thousands of years. The ice near the bottom of the latest core was laid down 740,000 years ago! Each layer is separated by a thin film of dust, so scientists can count back through the layers, year by year, and use the ice core to get information on what the earth was like thousands of years ago.

Air bubbles trapped in the ice contain a record of what the earth's atmosphere was like thousands of years ago. Levels of carbon dioxide, air pollutants, and oxygen can be calculated, and scientists can see how these levels have changed. Other measurements can give us a hint about the earth's temperature in the distant past.So now, scientists all over Europe are busily crushing and measuring their samples of the popsicles. When they're done, that ancient snow and ice that fell 740,000 years ago will melt and end up in the nearest river.