ScienceIQ.com

A Quick Guide To Gliders

A glider is a special kind of aircraft that has no engine. Paper airplanes are the most obvious example, but gliders come in a wide range of sizes. Toy gliders, made of balsa wood or styrofoam, are an excellent way for students to study the basics of aerodynamics. The Wright brothers perfected the design of the first airplane and gained piloting ...

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AQuickGuideToGliders
Geology

Global Warming?

The contiguous United States experienced its 16th coolest summer on record and seventh coolest August, according to scientists at NOAA Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C. While much of the West, ... Continue reading

GlobalWarming
Geology

What Causes The Blue Color That Sometimes Appears In Snow And Ice?

Generally, snow and ice present us with a uniformly white face. This is because most all of the visible light striking the snow or ice surface is reflected back without any particular preference for a ... Continue reading

BlueColorSnowIce
Medicine

It's Hay Fever Season!

If spring's flying pollen is making you sneeze, you are not alone. Some 40 to 50 million people in the United States complain of respiratory allergies, and experts estimate that three to four million ... Continue reading

HayFever
Astronomy

318 Times as Massive as Earth

What is 318 times more massive than Earth? Jupiter, the fifth planet from the Sun (next in line after Earth and Mars). Jupiter is the largest planet in our Solar System. If you decided to take a ... Continue reading

Jupiter

Quarks

QuarksQuarks are the most fundamental particles that we know of. Both protons and neutrons are made of quarks. We know quarks exist; we have experimental proof. However nobody has been able to isolate them; they are always found bound in groups of two or three, like those in protons or neutrons. There are six different types of quarks (physicists call them 'flavors'), each with a unique mass. The two lightest, unimaginatively called the Up and Down quarks, combine to form protons and neutrons as shown in the image. The heavier quarks aren't found in nature and have so far only been observed in particle accelerators; these are: the Strange, Charm, Top and Bottom quarks. Physicist Murray Gell-Mann gave quarks their amazing name from a word in James Joyce's 'Finnegan's Wake'. Gell-Mann received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1969 for his contributions to the theory and interactions of elementary particles, including quarks.

Here is what Gell-man says about himself on his own Web site:

In 1969, Professor Gell-Mann received the Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles. Professor Gell-Mann's 'eightfold way' theory brought order to the chaos created by the discovery of some 100 particles in the atom's nucleus. Then he found that all of those particles, including the neutron and proton, are composed of fundamental building blocks that he named 'quarks.' The quarks are permanently confined by forces coming from the exchange of 'gluons.' He and others later constructed the quantum field theory of quarks and gluons, called 'quantum chromodynamics,' which seems to account for all the nuclear paticles and their strong interactions.