ScienceIQ.com

Picture This

What 3 dimensional shape will pass through a rectangle, triangle and circle each time filling the whole space? The answer may surprise you in it's simplicity. Before I tell you what it is, see if you can visualize the shape using the following requirements. ...

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PictureThis
Biology

How Do They Grow Those Colossal Pumpkins?

Those enormous pumpkins that set records every fall are living proof that both genes and environment make living things what they are. Home gardeners out to break the 2002 record for the world's ... Continue reading

ColossalPumpkins
Medicine

Eating Disorders

Eating is controlled by many factors, including appetite, food availability, family, peer, and cultural practices, and attempts at voluntary control. Dieting to a body weight leaner than needed for ... Continue reading

EatingDisorders
Physics

What Is An Atom?

Atoms are the extremely small particles of which we, and everything around us, are made. A single element, such as oxygen, is made up of similar atoms. Different elements, such as oxygen, carbon, and ... Continue reading

WhatIsAnAtom
Engineering

Don't Blow A Gasket!

Don't blow a gasket! Who hasn't heard this old adage at some time? What does it actually mean, and for that matter, what is a gasket? Gaskets are simple structures used to fill in and seal the spaces ... Continue reading

DontBlowAGasket

Liquid Glass Is All Wet

LiquidGlassAs a liquid changes to a solid, its molecules go from a state of turmoil and chaos to a state of order. As these molecules slow down to form a solid, they arrange themselves into a crystalline pattern. But glass is a unique substance, for unlike all other solids, its molecules remain disordered. This has led some to speculate that glass is really a liquid that never quite settled into being a solid. Their evidence comes from the condition of very old glass panes, which may be thicker at the top or bottom, or cloudy, or have swirls. They theorize that these variations are the result of very slow movement of the not-quite-solid substance. But is this correct?

In the process of changing from a liquid to a solid, a substance becomes more viscous, which means it becomes thicker. Think of the difference between pouring water and pouring maple syrup. As glass cools, it becomes much more viscous than other liquids, to the point where crystals cannot form. Nonetheless as it cools further, it becomes hard and inflexible like any other solid.

So what about the evidence of those old window panes? Actually glass-making was less sophisticated centuries ago. It is much more likely that the cause of the misshapen glass was the glass-making process rather than a tendency for glass to keep moving once it is cooled. Next time the neighborhood kids hit a baseball through your front window and it shatters, keep that in mind.