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Eating Disorders

Eating is controlled by many factors, including appetite, food availability, family, peer, and cultural practices, and attempts at voluntary control. Dieting to a body weight leaner than needed for health is highly promoted by current fashion trends, sales campaigns for special foods, and in some activities and professions. Eating disorders involve ...

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EatingDisorders
Geology

Wetter not Necessarily Better in Amazon Basin

June through September is the dry season for the Amazon Basin of South America. Yet the basin's dry season may be getting uncharacteristically wetter, according to NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center ... Continue reading

AmazonBasin
Astronomy

GP-B: More Than Just a Pretty Face

Questions about the ways space, time, light and gravity relate to each other have been asked for eons. Theories have been offered, yet many puzzles remain to be solved. No spacecraft ever built has ... Continue reading

GPBMoreThanJustaPrettyFace
Physics

What Makes a Frisbee Fly?

If you have ever been to the park or the beach, you've probably seen one of these plastic discs flying through the air. We're not talking about a UFO, we're talking about the Frisbee, more commonly ... Continue reading

Frisbee
Physics

The Equivalence Principle

Four hundred years ago--or so the story goes--Galileo Galilei started dropping things off the Leaning Tower of Pisa: Cannon balls, musket balls, gold, silver and wood. He might have expected the ... Continue reading

TheEquivalencePrinciple

Ice That Burns

IceThatBurnsWhat looks like regular water ice but hisses and jumps around like water on a hot plate when you put it on a room-temperature surface and bursts into flame when you light it up? It is a rare and fascinating form of methane gas called methane hydrate.

Methane gas is primarily produced by bacteria while decomposing plant and animal matter and is the principle component of natural gas. It is a colorless, odorless and flammable gas that is less dense than air. Methane hydrate is a whole new form of matter where ordinary methane gas molecules are captured within a cage of water ice molecules. Methane hydrate is produced wherever methane, water, high-pressure and low temperature coexist. It was first noticed in 1930 in gas pipelines and in 1964 naturally occurring in one of the Siberian gas drills. Since then one of the most common places one can find methane hydrate is on the sea floor, deep below 400 meters in cold waters. Organic matter gets slowly deposited on the bottom of the oceans where it decomposes producing methane gas which gets trapped within water ice crystals formed by high-pressure and low temperature.

In addition to its fascinating properties, this ice that burns may hold two important keys to our future. First, some preliminary research indicates huge deposits of methane hydrate on the ocean floors making it an important energy source for our future. Second, melting of these deposits due to global warming of our oceans may release significant quantities of methane gas into the atmosphere, which in turn would further contribute to global warming thus starting a vicious circle. On May 2, 2000, the President of the United States enacted the Methane Hydrate Research and Development Act of 2000. Many US and foreign agencies are intensively working on the methane hydrate problem today hoping to efficiently use this natural source of energy and avert global warming catastrophe.