Saturday, 28 November 2015

TAnko SCIEnce
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BELIEVE IT OR NOT


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AEROGEL(THE INSULATOR)




Despite their name, aerogels are solid, rigid, and dry materials that do not resemble a gel in their physical properties: The name comes from the fact that they are made from gels. Pressing softly on an aerogel typically does not leave even a minor mark; pressing more firmly will leave a permanent depression. Pressing extremely firmly will cause a catastrophic breakdown in the sparse structure, causing it to shatter like glass – a property known as friability; although more modern variations do not suffer from this. Despite the fact that it is prone to shattering, it is very strong structurally. Its impressive load bearing abilities are due to the dendritic microstructure, in which sphericalparticles of average size (2–5 nm) are fused together into clusters. These clusters form a three-dimensional highly porous structure of almost fractal chains, with pores just under 100 nm. The average size and density of the pores can be controlled during the manufacturing process.
Aerogel is a material that is 98.2% air. The lack of solid material allows aerogel to be almost weightless. The reason for the difference in the composition is the structure of the aerogel. Aerogel has a porous solid network that contains air pockets, with the air pockets taking up majority of space within the material.[8]
Aerogels are good thermal insulators because they almost nullify two of the three methods of heat transfer (convection, conduction, andradiation). They are good conductive insulators because they are composed almost entirely from a gas, and gases are very poor heat conductors. Silica aerogel is especially good because silica is also a poor conductor of heat (a metallic aerogel, on the other hand, would be less effective). They are good convective inhibitors because air cannot circulate through the lattice. Aerogels are poor radiative insulators because infrared radiation (which transfers heat) passes through silica aerogel.
Owing to its hygroscopic nature, aerogel feels dry and acts as a strong desiccant. People handling aerogel for extended periods should wear gloves to prevent the appearance of dry brittle spots on their skin.
The slight color it does have is due to Rayleigh scattering of the shorter wavelengths of visible light by the nano-sized dendritic structure. This causes it to appear smoky blue against dark backgrounds and yellowish against bright backgrounds.
Aerogel is an open porous network. The difference between an open porous network and a closed porous network is that an open porous network allows gases to enter and leave the substance without any limitation, while a closed porous network traps the gases within the material. [9]
Aerogels by themselves are hydrophilic, but chemical treatment can make them hydrophobic. If they absorb moisture they usually suffer a structural change, such as contraction, and deteriorate, but degradation can be prevented by making them hydrophobic. Aerogels with hydrophobic interiors are less susceptible to degradation than aerogels with only an outer hydrophobic layer, even if a crack penetrates the surface. Hydrophobic treatment facilitates processing because it allows the use of a water jet cutter.

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SD CARD
PC Cards (PCMCIA) were the first commercial memory card formats (type I cards) to come out , but are now mainly used in industrial applications and to connect I/O devices such as modems. Since 1994, a number of memory card formats smaller than the PC Card arrived, the first one was CompactFlash later SmartMedia and Miniature Card. The desire for smaller cards for cell-phones, PDAs, and compact digital cameras drove a trend that left the previous generation of "compact" cards looking big. In digital cameras SmartMedia and CompactFlash had been very successful[neutrality is disputed]. In 2001, SM alone captured 50% of the digital camera market and CF had captured the professional digital camera market. By 2005 however, SD/MMC had nearly taken over SmartMedia's spot, though not to the same level and with stiff competition coming from Memory Stick variants, as well as CompactFlash. In industrial and embedded fields, even the venerable PC card (PCMCIA) memory cards still manage to maintain a niche, while in mobile phones and PDAs, the memory card market was highly fragmented until 2010 when micro-SD came to dominate new high-end phones and tablet computers.
Since 2010, new products of Sony (previously only using Memory Stick) and Olympus (previously only using XD-Card) have been offered with an additional SD-Card slot.[1]Effectively the format war has turned in SD-Card's favor.

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WOMEN sPEAKS.....

Do Women Talk More than Men?

























About a year ago, Louann Brizendine, founder and director of the University of California, San Francisco's Women's Mood and Hormone Clinic, published The Female Brain. One of the most cited gems within its pages was a claim that women are chatterboxes, speaking an average of 20,000 words per day, nearly three times the mere 7,000 spoken by men.
Seemed to make sense, given the rep of women as purveyors of gossip, not to mention creatures incapable of keeping their traps shut. Right? Wrong.
A new study published today in Science reports men and woman actually use roughly the same number of words daily.
James Pennebaker, chair of the University of Texas at Austin's psychology department, says he was skeptical of the lopsided stats when he saw them quoted in an interview with Brizendine in The New York Times Magazine. "I read that and I knew it couldn't be true simply because we've run too many studies," he says, "it just didn't make sense." In fact, he had been collecting data over the past decade with colleagues at the University of Arizona in Tucson that specifically showed that the sexes are about equal when it comes to a war of words.

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THE SLOw.. CHANGING MAN


The plica semilunaris is a small fold of bulbar conjunctiva on the medial canthus of the eye. It functions during movement of the eye, to help maintain tear drainage via the lacrimal lake, and to permit greater rotation of the globe, for without the plica the conjunctiva would attach directly to the eyeball, restricting movement.[1] It is the vestigial remnant of the nictitating membrane (the "third eyelid") which is drawn across the eye for protection, and is present in other animals such as birdsreptiles, and fish, but is rare in mammals, mainly found in monotremes and marsupials.[2] Its associated muscles are also vestigial.[3] It is loose, thus eye movements are not restricted by it. Only one species of primate, the Calabar Angwantibo, is known to have a functioning nictitating membrane.

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TANKO SCience
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BRain FaCTs

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Ouates facts

Reference:www.brainyquote.com/quotes/topics/topic_inspirational.html

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EYE,,,@


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WHALE NoiSE,,.,


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Well, according to Leonado da Vinci's Vitruvian Man, your arm span equals your height.  Based on this you need a few numbers (and lots of approximation and assumptions!) to get the answer:

  • World population: 7.014bn est
  • Earth's circumference: 40,075km
  • Average human height: 1.7m

(7,014,000,000 people * 1.7m) / 40,075,000m = 297.54 times

Obviously this is incredibly inaccurate as: 

  • World population is constantly changing
  • I based human height on an average of a UK male and female when in reality it varies across the world
  • I also made the assumption that we could all hold hands 'as the crow flies' which implies a bit of walking on water!

Friday, 27 November 2015

Amazing Fact



 As a fun teaching tool for several areas of math and science, imagine that happening. The planet floats in water. What happens next and how does it look? Has anybody thought this through and made an animated video? First fill your tub to about the 50,000 mile mark. Surprise: most of the water turns into exotic high-density ice, due to the enormous hydrostatic pressure (assuming you have gravity, which you need to keep the water in place.) This happens even if the water’s boiling hot. So Saturn starts off sitting high and mostly dry, unless you crank your gravity down a lot. So in it (he?) goes. Briefly we’re distracted by the gorgeous shooting-star effect of the rings and the dozen or two moons burning up in our air and making incandescent splashes as they plunge to their own tiny dooms. Around the planet a tidal wave higher than Earth rises and radiates outward. Then we see all kinds of fizzing, bubbling and popping, on a majestically slow (planetary) scale. A shock wave of mist swells outward, moving at the speed of sound in the gas and taking hours to envelop the planet. 

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Reference:  https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/if-saturn-floats-then-what-happens.143675/

Tuesday, 24 November 2015

                                  @Tanko Science       

                    

Fact or Fiction?: A Cockroach Can Live without Its Head


Cockroaches are infamous for their tenacity, and are often cited as the most likely survivors of a nuclear war. Some even claim that they can live without their heads. It turns out that these armchair exterminators (and their professional brethren) are right. Headless roaches are capable of living for weeks.
To understand why cockroaches—and many other insects—can survive decapitation, it helps to understand why humans cannot, explains physiologist and biochemist Joseph Kunkel at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, who studies cockroach development. First off, decapitation in humans results in blood loss and a drop in blood pressure hampering transport of oxygen and nutrition to vital tissues. 
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How many atoms are in the human body?
Would you settle for a whole bunch? I didn't think so. The number of atoms in one person is almost too big to write out. But fortunately there's a shorthand system, called scientific notation, that we use instead for writing really BIG or really SMALL numbers. Since huge numbers are generally just estimates anyway, we just use the first few numbers, followed by a code that tells you how many zeros would follow if you wrote it all out. Ok, here it goes. Hydrogen,oxygen and carbon make up about 99% of the average human. I'm going to cheat a little and leave out the other 1%, which is made up of trace elements (that is, stuff there's only a trace of in the body). Then, let's assume an average adult weighs 70 kilograms. Be sure to keep in mind that the following numbers are based on the number of atoms, not percent of body weight (by weight we are mostly oxygen). A 70 kg body would have approximately 7*1027 atoms. That is, 7 followed by 27 zeros:
7,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
Of that, 4.7*1027 would be hydrogen atoms, which have one proton and one electron each. Another 1.8*1027 would be oxygen, which has 8 protons, 8 neutrons and 8 electrons. There are 7.0*1026 carbon atoms, which have 6 protons, 6 neutrons and 6 electrons. Now, let's add that all up:
ProtonsNeutronsElectrons
Hydrogen4.7*102704.7*1027
Oxygen1.4*10281.4*10281.4*1028
Carbon4.2*10274.2*10274.2*1027
Total2.3*10281.8*10282.3*1028
Well, you'll have to agree that really is a whole bunch.

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                           Albert Einstein's brain


The brain of physicist Albert Einstein has been a subject of much research and speculation. Einstein's brain was removed within seven and a half hours of his death. The brain has attracted attention because of Einstein's reputation as one of the foremost geniuses of the 20th century, and apparent regularities or irregularities in the brain have been used to support various ideas about correlations inneuroanatomy with general or mathematical intelligence. Scientific studies have suggested that regions involved in speech and language are smaller, while regions involved with numerical and spatial processing are larger. Other studies have suggested an increased number of glial cells in Einstein's brain.
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                                            Sailfish      Sailfish


Sailfish are a genus Istiophorus of billfish living in warmer sections of all the oceans of the world. They are predominantly blue to gray in colour and have a characteristic erectile dorsal fin known as a sail, which often stretches the entire length of the back. Another notable characteristic is the elongated bill, resembling that of the swordfish and other marlins. They are therefore described as billfish in sport-fishing circles.
for more informations visit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailfish
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Fact or Fiction?: The Tongue Is the Strongest Muscle in the Body

It can bend, it can twist, it can suck, it can cup. The tongue is an essential, often playful part of human anatomy. Many of us grew up believing the assertion that the tongue is the strongest muscle in the body. But is it really?

The short answer is no. But the explanation is not as straightforward as you’d think. We asked a few tongue experts (yes they do exist) why the myth has been so easy to swallow.

Maureen Stone, of the University of Maryland School of Dentistry, speculates that the myth of the tongue’s strength arose from its amazing stamina even in precision tasks like eating and speaking. “When’s the last time your tongue was tired?” she asks. “If you don’t have any disorders, the answer is probably never.” Stone says the tongue’s tenacity springs from the way it is built—with lots of similar bits of muscle that can each perform the same task. “It doesn’t fatigue,” she says, “because there’s a lot of redundancy in the muscle architecture. You simply activate different muscle fibers and get the same result.”

Stephen Tasko, a speech scientist at Western Michigan University, says that the question of whether the tongue is the strongest muscle in the body is itself misinformed. The soft patty of flesh we call the tongue is not just one muscle, it’s a conglomeration of eight separate muscles. Unlike other muscles, such as the bicep, tongue muscles don’t develop around a supporting bone. Rather, they intertwine to create a flexible matrix, forming what is called a muscular hydrostat; this structure is similar to an octopus’s tentacles or an elephant’s trunk.

Four muscles in the matrix, called the extrinsic muscles, anchor the tongue to structures in the head and neck. One muscle holds on to the base of the skull, another connects to a bone in the throat, there is a muscle that grabs on to the lower jaw and another wrapped around the palate. These propel the tongue from side to side, front to back and up and down.

The rest of the muscles make up the tongue’s body. They’re what give it the ability to contort into endless arrays of shapes and postures. They allow it to lengthen, shorten, curl, flatten and round, and they provide shape to assist in speaking, eating and swallowing.

Because the tongue is all muscle and no bone, it is very supple, boasting a huge range of motion and shape while preserving its volume. “It’s kind of like a water balloon,” says Tasko. “If you deform it in one place, it’s going to pop out in other spots.” Tasko believes the myth of extraordinary strength has persisted because of the tongue’s tireless flexibility. "We all know that you can do all kinds of gymnastics with your tongue,” he says, “because it always seems to be going, and it's highly agile.” He adds: “I think maybe those are construed as having something to do with strength."

By sticking a pliable air-filled bulb into a subject’s mouth, scientists can measure the maximal pressure the tongue can exert on an object. This device, called an Iowa oral performance instrument, is placed on the tongue and subjects are asked to push it toward the roofs of their mouths as hard as they can. Scientists also use this bulb to measure endurance, or how long the tongue can hold a certain posture. Such measurements have given the lie to the myth, because you’re not really measuring muscles but muscle systems. But what, then, is the strongest muscle system in the body? The answer turns out to be complicated and depends on how muscular strength is defined—but no matter, the tongue doesn’t win under any criteria.

There are lots of ways to measure strength. One is brute force, in which case biggest is best. All skeletal muscles are bundles of many individual fibers that contain small force generating structures called sarcomeres. “Generally speaking, more muscle tissue means a larger total number of sarcomeres, which means greater maximum force generation,” Tasko says. That means the largest muscles—the quadriceps on the front of your thighs and the gluteus maximus on your rear—produce the most force.

Muscle size and raw force aren’t everything though. Muscles work by pulling on bones, which act as levers that convert muscular contractions (small but powerful movements) into large motions—think: curling a dumbbell. Your bicep pulls on the bones in your forearm to lift the dumbbell. Because your forearm is long and the bicep pulls on it right near the elbow, says Khalil Iskarous, a linguist at the University of Southern California, the bicep has to pull with a lot of force to move your hand up to your shoulder. Your jawbone, in contrast, is a much shorter lever. Because of this, the masseter, the main muscle in your jaw, is also a contender for strongest muscle in the body.

Or maybe it’s not about force at all, but rather about overall work done in the course of a lifetime. By that measure, the hardest working muscle in your body is the one that’s pump-pump-pumping 24/7 to keep your blood flowing round and round, including to all the other muscles: your heart.

The tongue may not be as strong as the glutes, jaw or heart but strengthening it may still be useful. Tasko says there is some evidence suggesting that strengthening exercises may benefit people who have trouble swallowing, such as those recovering from stroke. Some speculate that strengthening the tongue may even improve speaking abilities or help treat speech pathologies. Tasko warns, however, that these assertions are controversial and need further testing.

But one thing’s certain: the tongue is definitely not the strongest muscle in the body. Maybe people continue to believe in its power simply because the tongue is weird; it’s literally inside your face, and people like superlatives. “People want to attach some kind of ‘est’ to it,” Iskarous says. “‘Strongest’ or this or that—and that’s maybe what stuck.”

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Monday, 23 November 2015







>6-3=6 ????????????PROVED BY EINSTEINS...@


A light source emits six pulses each second - the distance between the pulses is, accordingly, D = 50000 km. For a stationary (with respect to the source) observer the frequency and the speed of the pulses are: 

f = 6 ; c = 6D 

Then the observer starts moving at (1/2)c = 3D away from the source. According to special relativity, the frequency and the speed of the pulses relative to the moving observer change as follows: 

f' = 6 - 3 = 3 ; c' = 6D - 3D = (6 - 3)D = 6D 

The calculation: 

6 - 3 = 6 

that Einsteinians apply to the speed of light but to nothing else in Divine Albert's world is the essence of special relativity: 

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Psychotria Elata aka Hooker’s Lips: Latin America’s Kissable Flower.


Flowers aren’t always pretty and they can be quite shocking too — in a good or bad way. There are the boring and the colorful flowers, plus the ones that don’t look acceptable at all,  just like when you see the uninviting smiles of a Venus Flytrap.
But there’s a flower that’ll be nice enough to meet you or maybe kiss you with its luscious red lips. These lips belong to a plant with the scientific name Psychotria Elata, or commonly known as the Hooker’s lips. Yes, you’ve read it right. These aren’t from Angelina Jolie nor Mick Jagger, but from a plant that belongs to the 2000 species of the Psychotria genus plants which are the flowering plants of the Rubiaceae family. This genus is even known to produce psychedelic chemicals likedimethyltryptamine. It’s funny to know that this plant contains something psychedelic that it matches its seductive look.

Sunday, 22 November 2015


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             Homeopathy is a pseudoscience

    It is a belief that is incorrectly presented as scientific and is ineffective for treating any condition as proven by large-scale studies.
    Homeopathy is a system of alternative medicine created in 1796 by Samuel Hahnemann based on his doctrine of like cures like (similia similibus curentur), a claim that a substance that causes the symptoms of a disease in healthy people would cure similar symptoms in sick people.
    Large-scale studies have found homeopathic preparations to be no more effective than a placebo, suggesting that positive feelings after taking homeopathic medicines are due to the placebo effect and normal recovery from illness.
    Hahnemann believed the underlying causes of disease were phenomena that he termed miasms, and that homeopathic preparations addressed these. The preparations are manufactured using a process of homeopathic dilution, which involves repeatedly diluting a chosen substance in alcohol or distilled water, followed by forceful striking on an elastic body.
    Dilution typically continues well past the point where no molecules of the original substance remain.

      
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    Don’t Put Essential Oils on Animals



    People should know that cats die and dogs get very sick when you put essential oils on them as magical cure-alls. Ideally, just never put any essential oil on your animal because it’s stupid and unhelpful, but especially never put undiluted essential oils on a cat. They die. Essential oils actually are toxic to humans and other species too, but less surface area equals smaller toxic dose, and cat livers are notoriously sensitive, at least compared to humans and dogs. Here is one early report from 1998. More reports come out every year, but they don’t get published in the literature anymore because it’s widely known. Here isanother article from the Pet Poison Hotline.


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     About Cubital Tunnel Syndrome especially if you sit at a desk all day


    Cubital Tunnel Syndrome is a condition that involves pressure or stretching of the ulnar nerve (also known as the “funny bone” nerve), which can cause numbness or tingling in the ring and small fingers, pain in the forearm, and/or weakness in the hand. The ulnar nerve runs in a groove on the inner side of the elbow.
    If you sleep with your arm under your pillow, repeatedly lean on your forearm/elbow (work an office job), bend your elbow for sustained periods (using your cell phone), holding a tool (mouse) in a constant position performing a task, and/or are obese, you are at an increased risk.

    Symptoms

    • Pain and numbness in the elbow, hand, little/ring finger.
    • Weakness affecting the ring and little fingers.
    • Decreased ability to pinch the thumb and index finger.
    • Decreased overall hand grip.
    • Muscle wasting in the hand.
    • Claw-like deformity of the hand.

    Prevention

    Minimize the amount of time you lean on your elbows or keep them bent. If you like to sleep with your arm under your pillow, correct your sleep posture. Make sure your work environment is ergonomically correct. Get a pistol grip/vertical mouse and ergonomic keyboard, and make sure your desk is not too tall for you. Make sure to take frequent breaks from sitting at a desk.

    Treatment


    • Aside from simply avoiding activities that cause CTS, performing Ulnar Nerve glides to stretch out the nerve may relieve pain.
    • Ibuprofen can also alleviate the pain or numbness.
    • Surgery should be used as a last resort, but is a simple procedure that has a high success rat
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