ScienceIQ.com

The Right Stuff for Super Spaceships

Revolutions in technology - like the Industrial Revolution that replaced horses with cars - can make what seems impossible today commonplace tomorrow. ...

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SuperSpaceships
Astronomy

Solar Spitwads

Take a piece of paper. Make a little wad. If you're a kid, spit on it. Put it in a straw and blow hard. If your teacher sends you to the principal's office, here's your excuse: you were making a model ... Continue reading

SolarSpitwads
Geology

CALIPSO in 2004

From reports of increasing temperatures, thinning mountain glaciers and rising sea level, scientists know that Earth's climate is changing. But the processes behind these changes are not as clear. Two ... Continue reading

CALIPSOin2004
Mathematics

Who Invented Zero?

Many concepts that we all take for granted sounded strange and foreign when first introduced. Take the number zero for instance. Any first-grader can recognize and use zeros. They sound so logical and ... Continue reading

WhoInventedZero
Physics

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 ... Continue reading

TheEarlyUniverseSoup

What Gives Hair Its Color?

WhatGivesHairItsColorPut a single hair under a microscope, and you'll see granules of black, brown, yellow, or red pigment. What you are seeing are tiny particles of melanin, the same pigment that gives skin its color. Inside hair follicles, special cells called melanocytes produce melanin, which is deposited in the middle layer, or cortex, of the three-layered hair shaft. As the hair grows upward, pigment continues to form in the cells of the cortex. Some hair follicles make more pigment than others. Usually the hair of eyebrows is the darkest colored hair on the body.

In hair as in skin, there are two kinds of melanin. Eumelanin makes hair black or brown. Pheomelanin makes it red or blond. Only redheads--or those carrying the genes for red hair--make pheomelanin. Auburn-hair results from pheomelanin nearly hidden by eumelanin, and pheomelanin present in small amounts can make black hair shiny.

Pigment production changes with age. Often Caucasians who are blond in infancy produce darker hair as they grow older. The gray or white hair of old age results from a loss of activity in the melanocytes. In young people, an enzyme called tyrosinase breaks apart the amino acid tyrosine as an important step in the manufacture of melanin. As people get older, less of that enzyme is produced, so less melanin is made. Eventually, the hair shaft grows out with little, if any pigment in the cortex. What's left is the color keratin. Keratin is the main protein that forms the structure of the hair shaft. Keratin without melanin looks yellowish gray.