ScienceIQ.com

The Ants Go Marching One by One, Hurrah!

Have you ever wondered how ants know the way from one place to another? Even when you remove them all, they are right back to the trail they were on before as if there were an invisible road telling them where to go! How do they do that? Well, actually, there are invisible roads telling them where to go, and they are called pheromone trails. ...

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AntsMarching
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
Geology

Why Don't We Try To Destroy Tropical Cyclones?

There have been numerous techniques that we have considered over the years to modify hurricanes: seeding clouds with dry ice or Silver Iodide, cooling the ocean with cryogenic material or icebergs, ... Continue reading

TropicalCyclones
Medicine

Re-emerging Microbes

The reappearance of microbes that had been successfully conquered or controlled by medicines is distressing to the scientific and medical communities as well as to the public. A major cause of this ... Continue reading

ReemergingMicrobes
Biology

Our Brains: A Wasted Resource?

Have you ever heard people say, 'Human beings use only 10 percent of their brains?' It implies that some gifted scientist has already been able to accurately calibrate the brain's maximum operational ... Continue reading

WastedBrains

What Is Reduction?

WhatIsReductionLong ago, in a laboratory far, far away...before the development of the atomic theory we now use, scientists believed in a principle called animism, and that the chemistry of different materials was controlled by different proportions of certain reactive principles. Under certain conditions, a material that formed from the increase of a specific reactive principle could be made to revert to its original form. This was made to happen by reducing the proportion of a particular reactive principle that it contained.

Metals, for example, were observed to change into oxides by the absorption of and combination with the active principle of 'air'. As the amount of this principle increased, so did the transformation of the metal. Now, if this 'oxide' was heated strongly enough or treated with certain other materials, the amount of 'air' it contained could be reduced, and the oxide would revert back to the original metal. (Magic!)

Eventually the process became known simply as 'reducing' or 'reduction'. Investigation and research revealed the underlying electronic process of reduction. In reduction an atom or element gains control of a certain number of electrons from a material called a reducing agent. The gain of electrons by a chemical species is reduction. Reduction always occurs simultaneously with oxidation. For example, in the course of a reaction to form two C - O bonds, in the oxidation of a carbon - carbon double bond by potassium permanganate, the manganese atom is itself reduced and gains control of five electrons to go from an oxidation state of +7 to +2.