#121586 - 04/18/07 02:26 AM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 6657
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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Hmm, yeah, not sure... but if say 1/10 of them there bugs on our bodies are viruses, then that's 10^13 per person, times 10^10 persons for 10^23 viruses, just in people, not in soil, water, animals and plants.
My guess is there are more virii, 'cos they're much tinier, and I couldn't find anything definitive on their relative populations.
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#121660 - 04/18/07 05:27 PM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
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Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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Fleas can jump 130 times higher than their own height. In human terms this is equal to a 6ft. person jumping 780 ft. into the air.Not a direct link to this factoid (which is disputed - some say 80 times their height, which would still translate to a pretty darn impressive 480 ft), but fun anyway: http://www.ftexploring.com/lifetech/flsbws1.htmlIt has a lot to do with the 'square-cube law'. Strength goes up as the square of size but mass goes up (and down) as the cube. I think I may have talked about this before with the ant, mouse, cat, person, horse and elephant falling down a mineshaft...
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#121668 - 04/18/07 05:50 PM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: Bravus]
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Craftsman
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3513
Loc: N38d14.516m, W122d37.982m
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It has a lot to do with the 'square-cube law'. Strength goes up as the square of size but mass goes up (and down) as the cube.
Interesting. For any type of object or matter?
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#121683 - 04/18/07 07:24 PM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: David Koot]
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Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
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Basically, yes, if you simply magnify/shrink a shape, keeping its proportions, and keeping well away from the atomic scale or continental scale sizes...
It is a bit trickier than that for biological material because muscle because there are limits to how large or small cells can be - so a mouse has similar size cells to a person.
Muscle strength is basically proportional to the cross-sectional area of the muscle. Making the muscle longer does not make it any stronger - it just increases the distance over which it can exert the same strength.
In fact individual muscle cells can't vary the strength of their pull - they are either pulling or they are not. We control how hard we pull by using more or less cells, not by having each cell pull less.
Weight is proportional to volume.
This is why you can't just scale an animal up and down. A 7ft+ human has problems caused by their cross-section not being adequate for the amount of material above that point.
/Bevin
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#121690 - 04/18/07 08:20 PM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: bevin]
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Craftsman
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3513
Loc: N38d14.516m, W122d37.982m
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Absolutely fascinating! I did wonder about some of the issues Bevin raised, in terms of mass/volume ratios for living organisms, depending on the type of body tissue involved. I did not know that muscle exertion is a function of the number of cells! Great info! Thanks, Bevin.
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#121909 - 04/20/07 12:13 AM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: David Koot]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 6657
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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Not a factoid today but a link... One of my friends and former colleagues in Canada, Frank Jenkins, set me this (note that there's a link to a podcast online, so you don't have to live in Canada (or listen on Sabbath) to listen): This week on Quirks & Quarks: (CBC Radio 740 at 12:05 PM) http://www.cbc.ca/quirks/podcast.htmlIt's the Great Aussie/Canuck Science Adventure. The moose goes walkabout with the wombat, and the beaver goes camping with the kangaroo, as Bob McDonald goes Down Under for the Great Aussie/Canuck Science Adventure. Quirks & Quarks, Canada's national science program, and The Science Show, Australia's equivalent program on ABC Radio National, are joining forces for a unique exploration of science, north and south. And here's the kicker: both programs first went on the air at virtually the same time in 1975. And both are now broadcast on Saturdays at noon. In the first program, the host of The Science Show, Robyn Williams, introduces Bob to leading Australian researchers. And in the second program, Bob introduces Robyn to Canadian scientists. And both programs get to hear both of the hosts doing the interviews. April 21: Bob interviews the Australians: Bob learns about farming and eating kangaroos; saving the Tasmanian Devil from extinction; discovering the fossils of marsupial lions; and avoiding the deadly sting of the Irukandji jellyfish. All this and more on Quirks & Quarks, with host Bob McDonald, Saturday right after the noon news on Radio One, or anytime on our web page at cbc.ca/quirks.
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#122080 - 04/21/07 12:18 AM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: Bravus]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 6657
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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Fun science fact(oid)s tend to be from biology most often... but chemistry and physics are my beloved fields of science, so I wanted to try to include some from those fields too.
Here's a fairly simple one:
A pendulum one metre long has a 'period' for its swing (the time it takes to swing out to the other end and back to where it started) of 2.0050 seconds.
Many people thought the metre should have been defined as the length of pendulum that produces a period of exactly 2.0000 seconds, because that would have made it simple to measure one metre anywhere in the world if you had a watch and a piece of string.
But as it is, if you have a ruler, a piece of string and a weight, you can make a pretty accurate 'counting clock'.
(A metre is pretty close to 39 inches)
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#122322 - 04/22/07 09:45 PM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: Bravus]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 6657
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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The chemical element Gallium has a melting point of just under 30 C (86 F), which means that it melts in your hand (unlike M & Ms - and don't put it in your mouth!)Gallium is a semiconductor material, used to make some computer parts. Bentor, Yinon. Chemical Element.com - Gallium. Apr. 23, 2007 <http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/ga.html>
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#122323 - 04/22/07 09:51 PM
Re: Fun Science Factoid Of The Day
[Re: Bravus]
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Craftsman
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3513
Loc: N38d14.516m, W122d37.982m
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Okay, then HOW can it be used in a computer, in which the internal temperature will easily go above 100 degrees F, particularly laptops with the tiny fans?
Dave
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