ScienceIQ.com

Cosmos Provides Astronomers with Planet-Hunting Tool

If only astronomers had a giant magnifying glass in space, they might be able to uncover planets around other stars. Now they do -- sort of. Instead of magnifying a planet, astronomers used the magnifying effects of one star on a more distant star to reveal a planet around the closer star. The discovery marks the first use of a celestial phenomenon ...

Continue reading...

PlanetHuntingTool
Astronomy

Pluto Is Way Out There

Long considered to be the smallest, coldest, and most distant planet from the Sun, Pluto may also be the largest of a group of objects that orbit in a disk-like zone of beyond the orbit of Neptune ... Continue reading

PlutoIsWayOutThere
Astronomy

Look, Up in the Sky. It's A Bird. No It's A Meteorite!

Most folks probably think of swallows and the ringing of the Mission bells when the words San Juan Capistrano are heard or seen. This is a popular tradition that celebrates the return of cliff ... Continue reading

MeteoriteSky
Geology

CALIPSO in 2004

From reports of increasing temperatures, thinning mountain glaciers and rising sea level, scientists know that Earth's climate is changing. But the processes behind these changes are not as clear. Two ... Continue reading

CALIPSOin2004
Biology

Are Mushrooms Plants?

Mushrooms are classified under the Kingdom Fungi, whereas plants are in the Kingdom Plantae. So, how are mushrooms so different from plants? They both grow in the soil and are not animals, but that is ... Continue reading

AreMushroomsPlants

Respect Your Nose

NoseScienceOur language seems to indicate that we think of the world as divided up into things that 'smell' and things that don't. Garbage smells. Groceries don't. A dirty sock smells. A clean one doesn't. That way of talking doesn't give much respect to odors, or to our olfactory system. Once you appreciate the delicacy of our olfactory system's design, you're likely to give it a little more of the respect it deserves.

At the top of your nasal passages, just behind the bridge of your nose and where the passages are closest to your brain, there are five million smell receptor cells concentrated in two small patches no bigger than a dime, one for each nostril. There are about a thousand different types of receptor, each one of which allows a different odor molecule to 'dock' in it. That in turn triggers that receptor's neuron to fire and send a signal to the olfactory bulb, which relays the signal to several destinations in the brain.

Think of each receptor type as a different letter of an alphabet, and think of how many different words there are in your vocabulary. Now, think of an alphabet not of 26 letters but of a thousand. That gives you some idea of the potential complexity of the odor codes that can be sent to your brain. Impressive, isn't it!