ScienceIQ.com

How Sublime

Show of hands. How many of you can't resist playing with dry ice? Dry ice is carbon dioxide frozen to -109.3 degrees F (-78.5 C). Throw a piece in water and it bubbles and boils. Expose a piece to air and it turns into white fog. The thing that makes dry ice do these tricks is a process called sublimation. ...

Continue reading...

DryIce
Biology

Billions and Billions

Nobody really knows how many brain cells anybody has, but typical estimates are around 200 billion. You've heard the late Carl Sagan talk about 'billions and billions of stars' in the universe. Think ... Continue reading

BillionsBillions
Physics

Many Happy Returns!

The boomerang is a bent or angular throwing club with the characteristics of a multi-winged airfoil. When properly launched, the boomerang returns to the thrower. Although the boomerang is often ... Continue reading

ManyHappyReturns
Biology

When Did A Cat Become A Kitty?

It has long been thought that cats were first domesticated in Egypt, about 4000 years ago. Indeed, they were very highly thought of in ancient Egyptian society. It was illegal to kill or harm them, ... Continue reading

WhenDidACatBecomeAKitty
Chemistry

Oil Viscosity

Everybody recognizes 'oil' as a word for liquid materials that do not behave like water. They have a 'thickness' and self-cohesive character (autocohesion) that enables them to form a film on a ... Continue reading

OilViscosity

Perfect Numbers

PerfectNumbersSome numbers are more special than others. According to Pythagoras (569 BC - 475 BC) and Euclid (325 BC - 265 BC), some are so special that they called them mystical or perfect numbers. The first perfect number is 6; the second is 28. The Greeks knew of two more: 496 and 8,128. Can you see a pattern? Try figuring out what is so special about these four numbers before you continue reading.

Well, the definition of a perfect number is: any number that is equal to the sum of its divisors (numbers that will divide into it without leaving a remainder). Therefore you can see that: 6 = 1 + 2 + 3; 28 = 1 + 2 + 4 + 7 + 14; and so on. Simple, right? How about the fifth perfect number? Can you come up with it? Don't even try … just continue reading.

It took mathematicians about 1,500 years (1536, Hudalrichus Regius) to discover the fifth perfect number: 33,550,336. The greatest contributions to future discoveries of perfect numbers were offered by French mathematicians Fermat and Mersenne, during early 1600s, when they devised a useful formula for finding perfect numbers. Many mathematicians have contributed since, and today we know of 39 perfect numbers. As you may guess, discoveries of new perfect numbers have become more frequent with the help of computers. The largest one has more than 4 millions digits, and was discovered in 2001. It turns out that all the perfect numbers discovered so far are even. Will we ever discover an odd perfect number? Will we discover an underlining mathematical law that prohibits this? Live and learn!