ScienceIQ.com

NASA Hits a Hole-In-One

How are NASA and golf related? Ask the professional golfers using clubs made from NASA's space-age technology. NASA needed stronger, more durable materials for its space missions. A landmark discovery was made during a research project with vitrified metals in 1992. A vitrified metal is a frozen liquid that fails to crystallize during ...

Continue reading...

NASAHitsaHoleInOne
Engineering

A Man-made 'Take' on Nature's Style

Advanced Composite Materials, (ACMs) are, as the name implies, composite materials. However, they consist exclusively of man-made specialty fibers bound in a matrix of plastics. The variety of such ... Continue reading

ACMNature
Astronomy

Sibling Rivalry: A Mars/Earth Comparison

Scientific understanding is often a matter of making the right comparisons. In terms of studying the Earth, one of the best comparative laboratories exists one planet over--on Mars. In many ways, the ... Continue reading

MarsEarthComparison
Medicine

It's Hay Fever Season!

If spring's flying pollen is making you sneeze, you are not alone. Some 40 to 50 million people in the United States complain of respiratory allergies, and experts estimate that three to four million ... Continue reading

HayFever
Medicine

How Much Coffee Will Kill You?

With the spread of Starbucks franchises all the way from Portland to Poughkeepsie, Americans are getting used to paying $3 or more for a proverbial ten-cent beverage. Of course, you get a bigger cup, ... Continue reading

HowMuchCoffeeWillYou

Respect Your Nose

NoseScienceOur language seems to indicate that we think of the world as divided up into things that 'smell' and things that don't. Garbage smells. Groceries don't. A dirty sock smells. A clean one doesn't. That way of talking doesn't give much respect to odors, or to our olfactory system. Once you appreciate the delicacy of our olfactory system's design, you're likely to give it a little more of the respect it deserves.

At the top of your nasal passages, just behind the bridge of your nose and where the passages are closest to your brain, there are five million smell receptor cells concentrated in two small patches no bigger than a dime, one for each nostril. There are about a thousand different types of receptor, each one of which allows a different odor molecule to 'dock' in it. That in turn triggers that receptor's neuron to fire and send a signal to the olfactory bulb, which relays the signal to several destinations in the brain.

Think of each receptor type as a different letter of an alphabet, and think of how many different words there are in your vocabulary. Now, think of an alphabet not of 26 letters but of a thousand. That gives you some idea of the potential complexity of the odor codes that can be sent to your brain. Impressive, isn't it!