ScienceIQ.com

Bicycle Chain for Fleas

Sandia National Laboratories has engineered the world’s smallest chain. The distance between chain link centers is only 50 microns. In comparison, the diameter of a human hair is approximately 70 microns. This micro-chain has been made on the surface of a silicone substrate using photo-lithographic techniques, just like computer chips are made. It ...

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FleaBicycle
Biology

Wetlands Top Ecosystem

Wetlands are areas where water covers the soil, or is present either at or near the surface of the soil all year or for varying periods of time during the year, including during the growing season. ... Continue reading

Wetlands
Medicine

What is Asthma?

In many people, asthma appears to be an allergic reaction to substances commonly breathed in through the air, such as animal dander, pollen, or dust mite and cockroach waste products. The catch-all ... Continue reading

WhatisAsthma
Medicine

When and Why is Blood Typing Done?

Fans of the popular television show ER know how important blood type is in an emergency. 'Start the O-neg,' shouts Doctor Green, and the team swings into action. Green calls for type O, Rh-negative ... Continue reading

BloodTypes
Engineering

Taming Twin Tornadoes

Every time a jet airplane flies through the sky, it creates two invisible tornados. They're not the kind of tornados that strike in severe weather. These tornados are called vortices and can cause ... Continue reading

TwinTornadoes

Sex and the Sea Slug

SexSeaSlugThe sea slug, Aplysia. Now there's an expert on sex. Equipped with both male and female sex organs, this shell-less, subtidal mollusk lives alone most of the year. It loses its self-sufficiency, however, when the mating season comes around. In summer, sea slugs congregate in breeding colonies called (yes, it's true!) brothels. They crawl around and over one another, trading sperm.

The marvel of sea slug sex lies in how these virtually blind loners find each other for a few days annually. Their call to the brothel is neither sight nor sound, but a chemical compound called attractin. Released into water from egg-laying glands, attractin makes sea slugs irresistible to other sea slugs. Attractin is a pheromone. Pheromones are communication chemicals. They are released by one individual. They affect the behavior or body functions of another.

All animals produce a 'cocktail of chemicals' that influence attraction, mating, or both. Humans are no exception. In 1986, researchers in Philadelphia collected sweat from men's underarms and dabbed it on the upper lips of women. The women reported smelling nothing but the alcohol that had been used to extract the 'eau de sweat.' After three months of this dabbing, however, those women who had experienced formerly irregular menstrual cycles became as predictable as the tides. The investigators concluded that some chemical released from the male body could control the timing of the female menstrual cycle.