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NASA Explains Dust Bowl Drought

NASA scientists have an explanation for one of the worst climatic events in the history of the United States, the 'Dust Bowl' drought, which devastated the Great Plains and all but dried up an already depressed American economy in the 1930's. Siegfried Schubert of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and colleagues used a computer ...

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NASAExplainsDustBowlDrought
Biology

How Does Salmonella Get Inside Chicken Eggs?

Salmonella enteritidis is a bacterium that causes flu-like symptoms in humans. It usually enters the human body through undercooked food that we eat, such as chicken eggs. Symptoms develop 12-24 hours ... Continue reading

SalmonellaChickenEggs
Chemistry

Your Nose Knows!

Would you like spearmint or caraway flavor? That's a strange choice, but believe it or not, they are the same thing. Well, almost. Spearmint and caraway both contain a molecule called carvone with the ... Continue reading

YourNoseKnows
Physics

Sonic Boom

They sound like thunder, but they're not. They're sonic booms, concentrated blasts of sound waves created as vehicles travel faster than the speed of sound. To understand how the booms are created, ... Continue reading

SonicBoom
Geology

When This Lake 'Burps,' Better Watch Out!

Nearly twenty years ago, two lakes in Cameroon, a country in Africa, 'burped,' killing hundreds of people. What makes a lake burp? Lake Nyos and Lake Monoun are unusual lakes. They each formed in the ... Continue reading

LakeBurps

Kepler's Conjecture

KeplersConjectureTake a bunch of oranges that are similar in size and try to pack them into a cardboard box. What is the most efficient orange arrangement so that you fit the most oranges into the box? Should you stack them into identical layers so that you have the same number of oranges in each layer; or should you have each alternate layer have fewer oranges which fit into 'valleys' of the layer below; or should you just pile them irregularly into the box?

This problem may seem simple enough to you, however many of the best mathematicians, including Harriot, Kepler and Hilbert, have thought about this problem throughout history. It was Kepler who first conjectured that the densest packing arrangement for identical spheres in a container is the one where each alternate layer has fewer spheres which fit into 'valleys' of the layer below. This arrangement is the same as the one you will most commonly see on fruit stands. The mathematical term for this arrangement is: 'face-centered cubic packing'. His conjecture was most probably based on simple experiments like the one you can do at home, however no one was able to mathematically prove it for almost 400 years!

In 1998, Dr. Thomas C. Hales, now a professor of mathematics at the University of Pittsburg, proposed his proof of Kepler's Conjecture. His proof is far from elegant. It involves over 250 pages of calculations and numerous computer calculations. The verdict is still not in as to whether he has 'really' proved Kepler's Conjecture, however so far, no opposition with a counter-proof has stepped forward.