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There's Oil Down There

Ever wonder what oil looks like underground, down deep, hundreds or thousands of feet below the surface, buried under millions of tons of rock and dirt? If you could look down an oil well and see oil where Nature created it, you might be surprised. You wouldn't see a big underground lake, as a lot of people think. Oil doesn't exist in deep, black ...

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TheresOilDownThere
Astronomy

Ancient Planet in a Globular Cluster Core

Long before our Sun and Earth ever existed, a Jupiter-sized planet formed around a sun-like star. Now, 13 billion years later, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has precisely measured the mass of this ... Continue reading

GlobularClusterCore
Physics

When Do We Encounter Ionizing Radiation In Our Daily Lives?

Everyone who lives on this planet is constantly exposed to naturally occurring ionizing radiation (background radiation). This has been true since the dawn of time. The average effective dose ... Continue reading

IonizingRadiation
Engineering

X-Ray Astronomy vs. Medical X-Rays

It's natural to associate the X-rays from cosmic objects with an X-ray from the doctor's office, but the comparison is a bit tricky. A doctor's X-ray machine consists of two parts: an X-ray source at ... Continue reading

XRayAstronomyvsMedicalXRays
Mathematics

How To Calculate The Circumference Of A Circle

A circle is what you get if you take a straight line and bend it around so that its ends touch. You can demonstrate this by taking a piece of stiff wire and doing just that: bring the ends of the wire ... Continue reading

CircumferenceOfACircle

Neurogenesis

NeurogenesisUntil recently, any doctor would have told you that when you lose brain cells, you can never replace them. Scientists now know that the human brain has the ability to regenerate brain cells, or neurons, a process known as neurogenesis, in at least the hippocampus (used for memory) and olfactory bulb (used for smell).

If your hippocampus isn't working right, you can't learn anything new or access recent memories. Damage to your hippocampus can make it impossible to create new memories (a condition called anterograde amnesia - Leonard Shelby's condition in the movie Memento) or remember what happened in the days or months before the accident. The hippocampus is also one of the first brain structures to be damaged by Alzheimer's Disease. That's why Alzheimer's first shows up as difficulty with recent memories, while memories of long-ago events remain intact until the disease is more advanced.

When your olfactory bulb stops replacing its cells, it's often a sign that there's something wrong with other parts of your brain, too. Loss of smell in old age can be a sign of Alzheimer's, perhaps because when the brain stops replacing olfactory cells it stops replacing cells in the hippocampus-based memory system as well. That's why one of the latest diagnostic tools for Alzheimer's is a scratch-and-sniff test.