ScienceIQ.com

Why Doesn't Glue Get Hard In The Plastic Bottle?

Glue, in its many different forms, is a very simple-to-apply sort of thing that represents a surprisingly complex amount of chemistry and physics. On the face of it, what could be simpler? Put on the glue, press the two things together, the glue dries or gets hard, and two things that weren't joined together previously are sudden;y impossible to ...

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WhyDoesntGlueGetHard
Biology

Potassium Iodide To The Rescue

Since the end of the Cold War, the focus of the nuclear threat has changed from hostile countries to terrorist cells. What should we do if terrorists set off a dirty bomb in a populated area, or ... Continue reading

PotassiumIodide
Science

The Wright Sister

When you think of airplanes, you may think of Wilbur and Orville Wright. Their early experiments led to the first manned airplane flight 100 years ago. There's another member of the Wright family, ... Continue reading

TheWrightSister
Astronomy

A Satellite Of Our Own

The regular daily and monthly rhythms of Earth's only natural satellite, the Moon, have guided timekeepers for thousands of years. Its influence on Earth's cycles, notably tides, has also been charted ... Continue reading

ASatelliteOfOurOwn
Biology

If You're Bringing Cows, Bring Your Own Decomposers

Living organisms create a lot of waste products. Every year they deposit millions of tons of dead plant and animal matter on almost every corner of the earth - and they make dung, lots of dung. Where ... Continue reading

CowsAndDecomposers

Bird Flu, Swine Flu, Human Flu

BirdFluSwineFluInfluenza, unlike many viruses that make humans sick, can also affect birds and pigs. Generally strains of the influenza virus that causes disease in people are slightly different from those that affect birds and pigs. People and pigs can catch flu from each other, and birds and pigs can catch it from each other, but until 1997 people didn't catch it from birds. In that year there was an outbreak of bird flu in Hong Kong, and it seemed that people were catching it from chickens. (All the chickens in Hong Kong were slaughtered, and the outbreak ended.)

This ability of the influenza virus to infect animals as well as people is one reason we will never be able to completely eradicate it, as we have done with smallpox. Thanks to a worldwide vaccination program, smallpox is extinct in nature, and only exists in a few well-guarded laboratories. This was possible in part because smallpox has no hosts other than people. Flu, on the other hand, can hide out in various birds or in pigs, and return years later to start another epidemic.

While the virus is hiding out in birds, it can also mutate so that our immune system, and last year's flu vaccine, won't recognize it. That's why you need a new flu shot every year - you will be facing a new and slightly different flu virus every year. So far all the victims this year have caught the Bird Flu from birds, not from other people. This is important, because to start an epidemic the virus must be contagious from person to person, and so far this one isn't.