ScienceIQ.com

Bioenergy Basics

Biomass (organic matter) can be used to provide heat, make fuels, and generate electricity. This is called bioenergy. Wood, the largest source of bioenergy, has been used to provide heat for thousands of years. But there are many other types of biomass--such as wood, plants, residue from agriculture or forestry, and the organic component of ...

Continue reading...

BioenergyBasics
Medicine

Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is caused by tiny bacteria called rickettsiae that live inside the cells of infected individuals. It has been reported throughout the United States, but is most ... Continue reading

RockyMountainSpottedFever
Astronomy

GP-B: More Than Just a Pretty Face

Questions about the ways space, time, light and gravity relate to each other have been asked for eons. Theories have been offered, yet many puzzles remain to be solved. No spacecraft ever built has ... Continue reading

GPBMoreThanJustaPrettyFace
Geology

Igneous Rocks, Born of Fire

Rocks are naturally occurring solid mixtures of substances primarily made of minerals. There are three kinds of rock on earth - igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rock. Sedimentary rock forms from ... Continue reading

IgneousRocksBornofFire
Mathematics

Fibonacci Patterns In Nature?

Often it takes a second look to see how mathematical numbers and patterns fit into the natural world. Numbers, after all, are manmade. However some very interesting number patterns underlie some ... Continue reading

Fibonacci

Serendipity In Science

SerendipityInScienceMost scientists accept the notion that serendipity plays a major role in their work. Too many discoveries have been, after all, the result of 'lucky accidents.' In the 16th century, for example, scalding with oil of elder was the preferred treatment for gunshot wounds. French physician Ambroise Pare learned otherwise when, after running out of oil during the siege on Turin, he found his untreated soldiers recovering better than the treated ones. Another example is Louis Pasteur. He left a culture of chicken cholera microbes in his lab while he took a three-month vacation. Its use upon his return led to the development of the first attenuated vaccine.

Scientists often find something of value while looking for something else. Rontgen's chance observation of a green glow in the corner of his laboratory led to the discovery of X-rays. [Radioactivity was unknown at the time. Rontgen had been trying to find out if cathode rays could pass through glass.] Finding a way to make rubber impervious to temperature changes became an obsession to Charles Goodyear. One day, in 1844, after countless unsuccessful trials, he dropped a mixture of rubber and sulfur on a hot stove. To his surprise, he found the mixture both flexible and tough over a wide range of temperatures. Vulcanization was born. Chance advances can be prompted by dreams. Kekule proposed the cyclical structure of the benzene ring after dreaming of a snake biting its tail. From a dream, Otto Loewi designed the definitive experiment that proved the chemical conduction of nervous impulses.

While most experts think serendipity is important in science, some reject the notion. Writes Lewis Wolpert in The Unnatural Nature of Science: 'Scientific research is based not on chance but on highly focused thoughts.... It is not by chance that it is always the great scientists who have the luck....We are surrounded all our lives by innumerable 'facts' and 'accidents'. The scientist's skill is to know which are important and how to interpret them.'