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What Give Batteries Their Charge?

There is in chemistry only one function that is of fundamental importance: the ability of atoms to share electrons. In any such sharing program, there must be electron donors and electron acceptors. In a great many compounds, all the atoms involved simultaneously donate and accept electrons, and everybody is happy. But each type of atom known has ...

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WhatGiveBatteriesTheirCharge
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
Geology

When This Lake 'Burps,' Better Watch Out!

Nearly twenty years ago, two lakes in Cameroon, a country in Africa, 'burped,' killing hundreds of people. What makes a lake burp? Lake Nyos and Lake Monoun are unusual lakes. They each formed in the ... Continue reading

LakeBurps
Geology

Crater Lake

Crater Lake: overwhelmingly yet sublimely beautiful. Moody. At times brilliantly blue, ominously somber; at other times buried in a mass of brooding clouds. The lake is magical, enchanting - a remnant ... Continue reading

CraterLake
Astronomy

Live Fast, Blow Hard, and Die Young

Massive stars lead short, yet spectacular lives. And, they usually do not go quietly, instead often blowing themselves apart in supernova explosions. Astronomers are curious about the details of the ... Continue reading

LiveFastBlowHardDieYoung

Jumping Starlight

JumpingStarlight'Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how I wonder what you are,' says the song by Jane Taylor. But stars don’t really twinkle; their light reaches the earth in a steady way. Why then do we see them flickering around in the sky? The answer is in the atmosphere.

The air in the atmosphere is turbulent. That means there are different layers of air with different temperatures; some hot, some cooler. Hot air is less dense than cooler air. The light of the stars bends when it goes from a less dense part of the atmosphere to a denser one. Think about a straw in a glass of water. The straw seems to bend when it enters the water, but actually light is bending as it goes from one medium (air) to another (water). This behavior of light is called refraction.

Little packets of air, called cells, move around in the atmosphere. Starlight bends a little each time it goes through one of these cells. When you see a star from the ground, its light has crossed hundreds of cells in the sky, refracting in random directions - so the image of the star appears to jump!