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Jupiter's Great Red Spot - A Super Storm

The most prominent and well-known feature of the planet Jupiter is the Great Red Spot. It is not a surface feature, as the hard core of Jupiter lies at the bottom of an atmosphere that is thousands of miles deep. So what can explain something as seemingly permanent as the Great Red Spot? ...

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JupiterRedSpot
Biology

Spiders and Their Venom

Spiders, which have been around for about 300 million years, are built differently from insects. They have eight legs, not six, and their bodies are divided into two sections, not three. Entomologists ... Continue reading

SpidersVenom
Astronomy

White Dwarfs

White dwarfs are among the dimmest stars in the universe. Even so, they have commanded the attention of astronomers ever since the first white dwarf was observed by optical telescopes in the middle of ... Continue reading

WhiteDwarfs
Chemistry

Chemical Burning

Chemical burns are the result of very normal reactions that can occur between the offending material and living tissue components. People generally tend to regard their bodies as things outside of the ... Continue reading

ChemicalBurning
Geology

Finding Ice In The Rocks--Evidence Of Earth's Ice Ages

In the late 1700s, geologists began trying to determine how huge boulders of granite weighing several tons could have moved as much as 80 km (50 miles) from their origins in the Swiss Alps. Some ... Continue reading

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Fahrenheit 100 and Rising

Fahrenheit100When you are well, your body temperature varies only a little around 37o C. (98.6o F.), whether you're sweating in a steam room or hiking in the Yukon. The hypothalamus in the brain controls body temperature. It works like a thermostat, sensing the temperature of your blood. When a pathogen (disease-causing microbe) invades, however, the body fights back with every weapon in its arsenal. Heat is one of them. The immune system sends chemical messages to the hypothalamus, signaling the need for a rise in body temperature. In response, the hypothalamus causes the pituitary to release a hormone called TSH (for thyroid stimulating hormone).

TSH travels through the blood and reaches the thyroid gland in the neck. There, it stimulates the thyroid to make another hormone, thyroxine. Thyroxine travels to all the cells of the body. It makes them burn food faster, generating more heat. The result is a fever--defined as a body temperature of 100o F. or greater. Many pathogens can't survive such high temperatures, so the fever kills them. As the pathogen begins to lose the battle, other chemical messengers travel to the hypothalamus. The hypothalamus signals the pituitary. TSH production decreases, thyroxine levels decrease, and body cells release energy more slowly. Body temperature returns to normal.

There's a lot more to a fever than a change in temperature. Researchers find high levels of immune chemicals including interleukin-6 in people with fevers. When healthy volunteers took IL-6 in a research project, they got fevers and flulike symptoms.