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Coffee: Beverage Of Sedition

Coffee is the most popular drink in the world, consumed regularly by about one-third of the global population. Tea runs a close second. And then, of course, there's Coca-Cola. Why are coffee, tea, and cola so popular? They all contain caffeine, which acts as a stimulant -- just like the closely-related alkaloids cocaine and nicotine. Also like ...

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CoffeeBeverageOfSedition
Astronomy

Crab Nebula

For millions of years a star shone in the far off constellation of Taurus. So far away, and so faint that even if our eyes were ten thousand times more sensitive, the star would still not be visible ... Continue reading

CrabNebula
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
Engineering

Ants Are Wimpy

It's common knowledge that ants can lift many times their own weight. We are frequently told they can lift 10, 20, or even 50 times their weight. It is most often stated something like this: an ant ... Continue reading

Ants
Physics

The Coriolis Effect

The Earth, rotating at about 1000 miles per hour (1,609 km/hr), influences the flow of air and water on its surface. We call this the Coriolis Effect, named after French scientist Gaspard Coriolis, ... Continue reading

Coriolis

SARS: Mother Nature Strikes Again!

SARSMotherNatureStrikesAgainSARS, short for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, is big news this spring. By the middle of April 2003, over 2000 people had been diagnosed with it in China and Hong Kong, another few hundred in the rest of Asia, and over a hundred in the US and Canada. Over 100 victims had died.

SARS is a 'new' disease, which feels like a bad case of flu (fever, headache, bad cough). But it's not caused by the flu virus. Scientists aren't sure what causes it, but at present the most likely culprit is a new kind of coronavirus. Well-known coronaviruses cause colds in humans and severe illnesses in cats and dogs, but this is the first to cause severe illness in people. SARS is not the first new disease in recent memory, nor is it the worst. AIDS was first found in humans in the 1980s, and now infects millions. Modern airplane travel makes it easy to spread new diseases to all corners of the world in just a few weeks.

How does a 'new' virus happen? A virus is nothing but DNA in a protein capsule, hardly even worth being called alive. In order to make you sick, it must enter the cells in your body, splice itself into your DNA, and take over running the infected cell, forcing the cell to make more virus copies instead of going about its usual business. At various times in their travels from one host to another, viruses can pick up extra genes, including some that enable them to make people sick (when they couldn't before). This is Mother Nature at work, always coming up with something new!