ScienceIQ.com

The Early Universe Soup

In the first few millionths of the second after the Big Bang, the universe looked very different than today. In fact the universe existed as a different form of matter altogether: the quark-gluon plasma or QGP, a weird 'soup' of quarks and gluons buzzing around frantically at temperatures of over 1,000,000,000,000 degrees. ...

Continue reading...

TheEarlyUniverseSoup
Engineering

New York to London in Less Than Two Hours

If flying from New York (USA) to London (UK) in less than two hours sounds like science fiction, continue reading. On September 1, 1974 Major James V. Sullivan, 37 (pilot) and Noel F. Widdifield, 33 ... Continue reading

FastestPlane
Biology

Palm Trees and Prickly Pears

If you drive around Southern California you'll see a lot of palm trees and prickly pear cacti. If you drive around Southern Spain you will too! How did it happen that two places an ocean apart have ... Continue reading

PalmTreesandPricklyPears
Physics

Galileo Thermometers

Every substance has the property of 'mass', which is the basic physical presence of matter. Matter occupies space. A physical mass contained within a physical space produces the physical property of ... Continue reading

GalileoThermometers
Medicine

There's No Such Thing as a Safe Suntan

Every time you step outdoors, you are bombarded by ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the sun. UV rays cause the number of free radicals in cells to increase. Free radicals are atoms or molecules that ... Continue reading

SafeSuntan

The Placebo Effect

PlaceboEffectTo test new drugs, researchers usually divide their subjects into two groups. One group receives the experimental drug. The other receives a placebo or 'sugar pill' that should have no effect on the illness. Participants don't know which group they are in. In double blind studies, not even their doctors know. Nevertheless, more than one in three of those who take the placebo get better. Why? Maybe they would have improved without treatment. Maybe getting treatment changed their attitude toward the illness. They don't get any better, but they aren't as worried. Or maybe their belief in the treatment stimulates the immune system.

The first evidence of a genuine immune response to a placebo came in 1975 from Robert Ader and Nicholas Cohen at the University of Rochester in New York. They mixed a drug that slows the immune response with sweet water and gave it to rats. The drug worked as expected. The immune response slowed. The surprise came when the same rats got sweet water without the drug. Their immune responses slowed, although the drug was no longer present. Somehow, the rats' brains had dampened the immune system in response to sweet water alone.

If rats can display such complex associations, what are humans capable of? According to the American Psychological Association, optimism is a potent force for good health. Psychologists at the University of California Los Angeles measured confidence and fear among first-year law students. The students showed no differences in their immune systems before school began. By mid-semester, the optimistic students had higher counts of both natural killer and helper T cells than did their pessimistic peers.