Category Archives: Students

Items for students and others, interested in learning about science and engineering and the application of science in our lives. We post many of the general interest items here.

Remote-Controlled Submarines

Remote-Controlled Omnidirectional Submarines:

These remote-controlled submarines fit into the palm of your hand and have dual propeller propulsion systems that allow omnidirectional movement underwater in a bathtub, swimming pool, or in shallow ponds. The submarines dive and surface like an actual naval submarine, and the three high-powered motors ensure rapid movement forward, backward, left, right, and while performing 360 progressive rolls. The submarines have dual LED headlights and each unit operates on a unique radio frequency, allowing underwater races with multiple submarines. Includes rechargeable batteries that run for three minutes after a three minute charge.

Fun looking toy. Via: Remote-Controlled Submarines. Related: Science and Engineering Gadgets and GiftsLego Autopilot Project UpdateUnderwater Robots Collaborate

Water Buffaloes, Lions and Crocodiles Oh My

Pretty amazing video. A look at real wild life with lots of excitement, a bit violence and some surprising turns. On my trip to Kenya I saw an interaction between lions and one water buffalo but it was without much of this action. Basically there was a standoff for like half an hour with half charges and the like. Even that was very interesting.

Related: Big Big LionsThe Cat and a Black BearJaguars Back in the Southwest USA

Building Engineering Outside the Box

Helix — a 1D skyscraper with a single corridor:

The principle is a cylindrical building with a helical shape for the floor. The slope of the floor is 1.5% (it rises by 1.5 cm every meter), thus hardly noticeable. The height of each ’storey’ is 3 meters, so that when you walk 200 meters along the corridor, you have walked a full circle, but you end up one ’storey’ above or below your starting point. This results in a diameter of approximately 60 meters, therefore quite common for large skyscrapers. The corridor is on the outside, so that everybody has access to the fabulous views over the city. Offices are all on the inside. As the tower is hollow in the middle, and the inner diameter of the patio is still approximately 40 meters, this makes for a very nice light shaft with peaceful lighting conditions.

The floor of each office is made horizontal, so that your chair does not roll down and hit the separation. But if you take your chair in the corridor, be careful not to let go of it. All things rolling naturally find their way to the lost+found in the lobby.

Ok, this doesn’t seem really practical for a skyscaper but it still is a cool thought experiment. And as they mention it works fine for the Guggenheim Museum in NYC.

International Student Collaboration

Contest links high school students worldwide:

During the school year, 58 teams of American students coupled with students from China, India and Japan tackled technological solutions to global warming. They chatted online, divided jobs based on skill, consulted with advisers, and in the final grueling weeks, wrote a professional business plan.

“The most important goal is to engage U.S. students in international collaboration using science and technology,” said David Gibson, executive director of the Global Challenge and a research assistant professor in computer sciences at the University of Vermont. The idea for the contest came to management consultant Craig DeLuca two years ago as one of his clients planned to outsource design and manufacturing, and his community in Stowe considered putting off buying science textbooks.

“I’ve got to do something so that our kids have a shot in the global economy,” he said then. He launched the contest in Vermont, and last fall it was awarded a $900,000 National Science Foundation Grant and expanded worldwide. Winners will be announced in June.

Not only does the contest encourage interaction between students across the globe to solve problems, it also exposes them to opportunities in science, technology, engineering and math, Gibson said. “We need projects like this across the nation, so we can scoop these kids up because schools don’t do it for them,” he said.

Chemistry of Common Items

The American Chemistry Society offers interesting articles on the chemistry of everyday products including: amber, henna, catnip and honey:

To make this delicious treat, foraging bees start out by guzzling nectar, a dilute solution of sugars in flowers. Then, they mix the nectar with enzymes in their stomachlike honey sacs. Back at the hive, the foragers pass the digested material to house bees who reduce the moisture content of the mixture by ingesting and regurgitating it. They then deposit concentrated drops into honeycomb cells. Over the next few days, bees fan the fluid with their wings to further concentrate it, and finally, they cap the cells with wax. At the same time, enzyme-mediated changes produce a range of sugars and acids in the honey.

Bee enzymes also show up in the finished product. Invertase is the most critical. It splits the sucrose in the nectar into fructose and glucose and also produces some erlose. Another enzyme, glucose oxidase, converts glucose to gluconolactone, which is then hydrolyzed to give gluconic acid, the principal acid in honey. Formic, acetic, butyric, and lactic acids are also found in honey, which explains why its pH typically measures 3.8-4.0 and bacteria have a hard time growing in it.

Related: Science Topics Explained on One PagePhysics Concepts in 60 Seconds

Deep-Sea Alien Abode Discovered

Deep-Sea Alien Abode Discovered by Jeanna Bryner:

Recent expeditions have uncloaked this polar region, finding nearly 600 organisms never described before and challenging some assumptions that deep-sea biodiversity is depressed. The findings also suggest that all of Earth’s marine life originated in Antarctic waters.

Scientists had assumed that the deep sea of the South Pole would follow similar trends in biodiversity documented for the Arctic. “There are less species in the Arctic than around the equator,” said one of the study scientists, Brigitte Ebbe, a taxonomist at the German Center for Marine Biodiversity Research. “People assumed that it would be the same if you went from the equator south, but it didn’t prove to be true at all.”

Very interesting stuff. Related: Altered Oceans, the Crisis at SeaOcean LifeAntarctic Robo-sub

CERN Prepares for LHC Operations

A Giant Takes On Physics’ Biggest Questions

The physicists, wearing hardhats, kneepads and safety harnesses, are scrambling like Spiderman over this assembly, appropriately named Atlas, ducking under waterfalls of cables and tubes and crawling into hidden room-size cavities stuffed with electronics.

They are getting ready to see the universe born again. Again and again and again – 30 million times a second, in fact.

Starting sometime next summer if all goes to plan, subatomic particles will begin shooting around a 17-mile underground ring stretching from the European Center for Nuclear Research, or CERN, near Geneva, into France and back again – luckily without having to submit to customs inspections.

Crashing together in the bowels of Atlas and similar contraptions spaced around the ring, the particles will produce tiny fireballs of primordial energy, recreating conditions that last prevailed when the universe was less than a trillionth of a second old.

Wow that sounds impressive. Oh yeah, it is impressive. Good writing too.

Related: New Yorker on CERN’s Large Hadron ColliderCERN Pressure Test FailureLHC Milestones

Bird Species Plummeted After West Nile

Bird Species Plummeted After West Nile:

Several common species of North American birds have suffered drastic population declines since the arrival of the West Nile virus eight years ago, leaving rural and suburban areas quieter than they used to be and imposing ecological stresses on a variety of other animals and plants, a new study has found.

In Maryland, for example, 2005 chickadee populations were 68 percent lower than would have been expected had West Nile not arrived, and in Virginia chickadee populations were 50 percent below that prediction.

It shows that the post-1998 declines were greatest at times and places in which the virus was especially prevalent — as indicated by the number of human infections diagnosed. As expected, American crows were among the worst hit, suffering declines of as much as 45 percent in some regions and wipeouts of 100 percent in some smaller areas. Other species that suffered included the blue jay, the tufted titmouse, the American robin, the house wren, the chickadee and — unexpectedly — the American bluebird.

Related: Avian FluH5N1 Influenza Evolution and Spread

Hot Ice Planet

Scooped!:

The planet has a mass of 23 Earth-masses and an orbital period of 2.64385 days. It orbits a red dwarf star 33 light years away. The temperature on the planet is somewhere in the oven-cleaning neighborhood of 600K (327K, 620F). No habitability news stories on CNN for this fine fellow. The transit depth is a healthy 0.6%, which implies that the the planet’s radius is ~25,000 km. That’s four times that of the Earth, and essentially identical to the 24,764 km radius of Neptune.

Astronomers Detect Shadow Of Water World In Front Of Nearby Star:

As the planet is close to its host star, its surface temperature is expected to be at least 300 C (600 F). The water in its atmosphere would therefore be in the form of steam. Inside, the water is crushed under intense pressure and adopts states unknown on Earth, except in physicist’s laboratories. Says Frédéric Pont: “water has more than a dozen solid states, only one of which is our familiar ice. Under very high pressure, water turns into other solid states denser than both ice and liquid water, just as carbon transforms into diamond under extreme pressures. Physicists call these exotic forms of water ‘Ice VII’ and ‘Ice X’. If Earth’s oceans were much deeper, there would be such exotic forms of solid water at the bottom.” Inside GJ 436’s planet, this strange ice is moreover heated to many hundred degrees.

That’s hot. Related: Transiting ‘Hot Neptune’ FoundPress release (in French)Google translation to englishPlanet, Less Dense Than Cork, Is Discovered