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The Journey of the Monarchs

The life of Monarch butterflies is an amazing one. They develop as caterpillars from the roughly 400 eggs each mother lays on the underside of milkweed plant leaves. Then they spend their brief lives eating and gaining weight, sometimes reaching up to 2700 times their original weight. The caterpillars then pupate and transform into beautiful ...

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MonarchButterflies
Astronomy

Mercury

The small and rocky planet Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun; it speeds around the Sun in a wildly elliptical (non-circular) orbit that takes it as close as 47 million km and as far as 70 ... Continue reading

Mercury
Geology

A Undersea View of Our Earth's Geography

The ocean bottom is divided into three major areas: the continental shelf, the continental slope, and the deep ocean basin. The continental shelf extends underwater from each of the major land masses ... Continue reading

UnderseaEarthsGeography
Biology

How Biological Clocks Work

Anyone who has traveled has experienced jet lag—that groggy realization that while your day is beginning in Washington, DC, the night you just left in San Francisco is hardly over. Jet lag is an ... Continue reading

HowBiologicalClocksWork
Physics

How Fast is Mach 1?

A Mach number is a common ratio unit of speed when one is talking about aircrafts. By definition, the Mach number is a ratio of the speed of a body (aircraft) to the speed of sound in the undisturbed ... Continue reading

Mach1

Stars With Long Hair

StarsWithLongHairThroughout history, people have been both awed and alarmed by comets, stars with 'long hair' that appeared in the sky unannounced and unpredictably. We now know that comets are dirty-ice leftovers from the formation of our solar system around 4.6 billion years ago. They are among the least-changed objects in our solar system and, as such, may yield important clues about the formation of our solar system. We can predict the orbits of many of them, but not all. Around a dozen 'new' comets are discovered each year.

Each comet has only a tiny solid part, called a nucleus, often no bigger than a few kilometers across. The nucleus contains icy chunks and frozen gases with bits of embedded rock and dust. At its center, the nucleus may have a small, rocky core. As a comet nears the Sun, it begins to warm up. The comet gets bright enough to see from Earth while its atmosphere - the coma - grows larger. The Sun's heat causes ice on the comet's surface to change to gases, which fluoresce like a neon sign. 'Vents' on the Sun-warmed side may release fountains of dust and gas for tens of thousands of kilometers. The escaping material forms a coma that may be hundreds of thousands of kilometers in diameter.

The pressure of sunlight and the flow of electrically charged particles, called the solar wind, blow the coma materials away from the Sun, forming the comet's long, bright tails, which are often seen separately as straight tails of electrically charged ions and an arching tail of dust. The tails of a comet always point away from the Sun. Most comets travel a safe distance from the Sun itself. Comet Halley comes no closer than 89 million kilometers from the Sun, which is closer to the Sun than Earth is. However, some comets, called sun-grazers, crash straight into the Sun or get so close that they break up and vaporize. Impacts from comets played a major role in the evolution of the Earth, primarily during its early history billions of years ago. Some believe that they brought water and a variety of organic molecules to Earth.