ScienceIQ.com

Dress Sizes The Scientific Way

In pre-industrial America, most clothing was crafted at home or by professional tailors or dressmakers from individual measurements taken of each customer. In the early Twentieth Century, the growing urban middle class began to purchase the affordable and fashionable ready-to-wear merchandise which new technology and industrialized production ...

Continue reading...

DressSizesTheScientificWay
Chemistry

What is Oxidation?

The term 'oxidation' derives from the ancient observation of rust (oxide) formation. Early chemists could determine an increase in the weight of a metal as it apparently captured something from the ... Continue reading

WhatisOxidation
Biology

Sex and the Sea Slug

The 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, ... Continue reading

SexSeaSlug
Biology

The Touching Brain

Our brain and skin are initially part of the same primitive formation during prenatal development, but they are separated during the process of neurogenesis (the embroyo's production of brain cells). ... Continue reading

TheTouchingBrain
Physics

Somewhere Over Which Rainbow?

How many rainbows are there really when we only see one during a rainstorm? The answer isn't as simple as you might think! Rainbows are formed when light enters a water droplet, reflects once inside ... Continue reading

DoubleRainbow

It's Gonna Hit Us... Or Is It?

MeteorHitRecently, some astronomers were concerned that a newly discovered asteroid might hit Earth in 2017. This was big news because even the impact of a modest-sized asteroid could have a devastating effect. In fact, a large impact 65 million years ago is thought to have wiped out the dinosaurs. So scientists take seriously any potential asteroid impact with the Earth. A few days after the discovery, scientists changed their minds and said there was no need to panic. This particular asteroid was not going to come even close.

If you go back over the last few years, you'll see this same thing repeatedly: first, a possible collision; next, a retraction. So what gives? Were the calculations all wrong? Actually not. In most cases it had to do with recalculations based on pre-discovery images of the asteroid. In effect, scientists looked backwards in time to make a better prediction about the future.

Astronomers use computers to take multiple pictures of the same part of the night sky over time. These pictures are compared. If a point of light appears to have changed position, we know that it is moving very fast. The background stars, since they are so much farther away, don't appear to move over a short period of time. But these initial pictures don't tell scientists too much. Instead, now that they know what they've found and where they've found it, they can go back to historical images of the same section of sky, taken all over the world. With careful examination, they can find the same asteroid in earlier pictures. This helps them come up with a much more accurate prediction of the asteroid's path. So far, no one has predicted an asteroid impact with Earth. And we are very thankful for that.