ScienceIQ.com

Non-Flammable Fuel?

When we're flying high above the Earth, few of us give much thought to aircraft safety. We're usually too busy wondering when lunch is going to be served. But flying safely is a goal of NASA's Glenn Research Center (GRC) in Cleveland, Ohio. They're working on the problems that could arise if fuel in the tanks were to accidentally ignite in flight ...

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NonFlammableFuel
Biology

A Tickle is All in the Timing

It's often been noted that no matter how hard you might try, you can't tickle yourself. Why not? Whether it's your finger or someone else's, a prod in the ribs is a prod in the ribs. Why should only ... Continue reading

Tickle
Astronomy

What Powered the Big Bang?

During the last decade, sky maps of the radiation relic of the Big Bang---first by NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite and more recently by other experiments, including Antarctic ... Continue reading

WhatPoweredtheBigBang
Mathematics

Unit Of Luminous Intensity (candela)

Originally, each country had its own, and rather poorly reproducible, unit of luminous intensity; it was necessary to wait until 1909 to see a beginning of unification on the international level, when ... Continue reading

Candela
Astronomy

Amazing GRACE

Gravity has an effect on everyone and everything on Earth. Although we can't see it, smell it, taste it or touch it, we know it's there. Although scientists already know quite a bit about this ... Continue reading

AmazingGRACE

The Art of Hunting

PrayingMantisMost of us have seen a praying mantis. Two thousand species of praying mantis are scattered throughout the world, ranging in size from less than half an inch (1.27 cm) to more than five inches (12.7 cm). In tropical regions, up to 350 species can inhabit an area. Although most of us place praying mantises in a class of their own, entomologists have classified them in the order Orthoptera that includes six families – including cockroaches and walking sticks.

In the United States, all species of the praying mantis are known as the gardener's friend because of their appetite for other insects. One of the most common in this country is the Chinese praying mantis, which was imported in 1896 for general release, an attempt by entomologists to augment the insect control services rendered by the smaller native species of North America. The praying mantis is also prey for other animals, especially bats. But even for bats, the praying mantis is no easy meal. A unique auditory system often helps the praying mantis escape these skilled night predators. Interestingly, for years the praying mantis was thought to be deaf because entomologists could not find its ears, although they had found ears on its relatives the crickets and grasshoppers. They were looking in the wrong place.

Mantises have a single ear slit, about a millimeter in length, and two teardrop-shaped eardrums, which face each other from opposite walls inside the slit and function as a unit. This single ear gives the praying mantis hearing in the ultrasonic range between 25 and 100 kilohertz. Although a single ear can't locate the source of the sound (an ability that requires two ears, separated), nondirectional hearing in this range is particularly useful to the mantis when bats, using sonar to navigate, are in the area.