If all the polar ice caps melted, would the ocean become less salty? |
- If all the polar ice caps melted, would the ocean become less salty?
- Is there a tidal effect on our atmosphere?
- Do animals with high body fat, like seals or bears, suffer higher rates of heart disease than other animals?
- Are all spiderwebs chemically identical?
- If there's no blood supply to cartilage, how come glucosamine or chondroitin is "good for joints"? How do minerals/vitamins/hormones even get to cartilage cells without blood flow?
- How do astronomers determine the radius of the moon?
- Do Prime numbers change with base?
- Is the density of the materials that makes up Neutron stars and White dwarves a result of the properties of the material, or the gravitational feilds in which the materials reside?
- How can the same protein isoform (PrPSc) cause so many different diseases?
- How do they build highways in loose sand?
- How is the amount of semen expelled during ejaculation determined by our bodies?
- This might be an idiotic question, but do things really fall at the same rate?
- How hot is a nuclear meltdown? Are there materials like tungsten which could stay solid indefinitely?
- What causes phone's GPS to drift?
- How do different aged organs effect receipients of organ transplants?
- How does light get pulled back into a black hole?
- How does your body know when to stop adding more blood after you donate or lose blood in an accident?
- Will you burn more energy trying to keep yourself warm (in a cold environment) or try to cool yourself down (in a hot environment)?
- Would it ever be possible for humans to have gold-colored eyes (like cats, owls, wolves, bald eagles, etc.)?
- What would it look like inside a star?
- Why is a halogen more electronegative than it's halide?
- Since children are growing and constantly have dividing cells, why do they have lower cancer rates than adults (who are not growing)?
- Are cursive characters unique to modern times, or were there forms of cursive used by earlier civilizations?
If all the polar ice caps melted, would the ocean become less salty? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 02:54 AM PDT |
Is there a tidal effect on our atmosphere? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 12:50 AM PDT So I understand that the sun and moon's gravity creates a tidal effect on the oceans of our planets, but do they cause a similar effect on our atmosphere? Or is it not dense enough? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jun 2017 05:34 AM PDT |
Are all spiderwebs chemically identical? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 06:25 AM PDT Do spiders of different species create different chemicals to use in their webs? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 Jun 2017 08:33 PM PDT |
How do astronomers determine the radius of the moon? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 05:55 AM PDT |
Do Prime numbers change with base? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 05:13 AM PDT E.G., we use Base-10, but would there be different prime numbres in base 12? 20? 99? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jun 2017 06:35 AM PDT Also, what would happen if said material was placed in a low gravity situation, such as on earth? [link] [comments] |
How can the same protein isoform (PrPSc) cause so many different diseases? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 06:35 AM PDT Everywhere I read about prionic diseases, it always talk about the PrPSc protein, making a distinction between it and its isoform PrPC. But I imagine that not all PrPSc are the same, since they exhibit some differences in terms of symptoms, incubation period... But I can't seem to find what exactly is the difference between the prions that cause each disease. [link] [comments] |
How do they build highways in loose sand? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 04:20 AM PDT My question is basically only what is in the title, I am trying to find out how paved roads in the desert are made. Normally, constructors lay down a subbase on the subgrade (which in this case is sand) then a base course over that and then the pavement. The subgrade is supposed to hold the whole weight of the road, how do they solve this in the desert? [link] [comments] |
How is the amount of semen expelled during ejaculation determined by our bodies? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 07:16 AM PDT |
This might be an idiotic question, but do things really fall at the same rate? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 01:02 AM PDT If F=G(M1*M2/d2) then objects don't actually fall at the same rate, right? It's just that any experimental observation we've done on Earth shows that they do because M2 being the mass of Earth is so large that comparing different M1s is kind of irrelevant? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 Jun 2017 04:47 PM PDT Assuming that pressure isn't an issue would a large tungsten(or similar) vessel be able to contain a meltdown, or is a nuclear meltdown hot enough to melt pretty much anything? [link] [comments] |
What causes phone's GPS to drift? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 04:52 AM PDT I currently have an iPhone 6, but this question is probably general for all modern phones. What causes GPS drift (phone thinks it is somewhere and then somewhere else meters away, then somewhere else) and how can it be created by placing the phone in a specific location (like a box made out of something that doesn't disable the signal, only weakens it). More info: Mainly asking for Pokemon Go, but interested in GPS technology too. [link] [comments] |
How do different aged organs effect receipients of organ transplants? Posted: 20 Jun 2017 09:51 AM PDT For instance, if a 20 year old patient received a kidney from a 60 year old donor, by the time the patient was 60, that would be a 100 year old kidney! Is there reason to think that the kidney would "stop" working at a certain age, regardless of the patient's age? Or, in reverse, if for example, a 75 year old received a kidney from a 20 year old, would their body be shocked at how relatively healthy this one particular organ was? Even if the rest of their body was relatively healthy, the body would have slowed down compared to a 20 year old! Do hospitals try to match organs by age in addition to blood type, etc? [link] [comments] |
How does light get pulled back into a black hole? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 07:07 AM PDT Say I was standing inside account black holes event horizon holding a laser pointer. If I turned it on and pointed out outwards perpendicular to the event horizon, how does the light get pulled back into the black hole? The photons coming out of the laser would need to accelerate towards the black hole which means that their velocity would decrease to less than c. My understanding is that light always travels at c in a vacuum, so how is it possible for the photons' velocities to decrease? I think I might be confusing how photons behave with how ordinary matter behaves, but I'm not an expert.. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 21 Jun 2017 06:46 AM PDT |
Posted: 20 Jun 2017 11:05 PM PDT |
Posted: 20 Jun 2017 05:06 PM PDT I am wondering if it would ever be possible, through a genetic-engineering perspective, for humans to have the gold-colored eyes that other animals have. Let's say you have a futuristic culture in which designer babies are the norm, and diseases have been all-but-eradicated in this better "breed" of human which has resulted through generations of careful genetic selection. If these futuristic peoples have the ability to pick and choose certain phenotypes for their children, isn't there some way for a gold eye color to come about (as it would be an alluring and desirable trait)? Can we not simply "inject" the pigments from other animals exhibiting golden eyes into human eyes, or splice the genes from these animals into human DNA to allow for this to be a new genotype able to be passed on from parent-to-parent? Please help... I've done tons of research but can't seem to find the answer anywhere. I need to know if this is possible for a novel I am writing. [link] [comments] |
What would it look like inside a star? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 02:46 AM PDT So, incredible heat and pressure and magnetic forces from the fusion, but how much fusion actually goes on at a time? Stars last billions of years, so all their material clearly doesn't undergo fusion at once. We know what a fusion explosion looks like on earth, but what does it look like in a star? How long does it expand before it runs into other fusion explosions? How many fusion explosions are there in any given, say, square kilometer of space per minute? 1? 1 million? [link] [comments] |
Why is a halogen more electronegative than it's halide? Posted: 21 Jun 2017 02:28 AM PDT I tried asking my chemistry teacher why Cl2 was more electronegative than Cl- but wasnt able to understand her explanation. Help would be appreciated! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 Jun 2017 02:57 PM PDT |
Posted: 21 Jun 2017 01:53 AM PDT |
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