What do we mean when we say that an eagle has better eyesight than a human? |
- What do we mean when we say that an eagle has better eyesight than a human?
- Is there a decreased incidence of Long Haul COVID associated with breakthrough cases for vaccinated folks?
- Would a huge stretch of completely flat land be an old landform, or a newer one?
- Do COVID variants exist as discrete strains or is there a continuous distribution of variants?
- Did FoldingAtHome have any effect on the development of vaccines for Covid 19?
- Why would a satellite camera separate a moving object into RGB component images while also having a complete color image, all on the same capture?
- Is there work on sphere-packing inside a cone of a given aperture?
- Does psychiatric conditions like depression or psychosis cause brain damage?
- What makes up the gray matter of the spinal cord?
- Why don’t dorsal rami form nerve plexuses?
- The St. Clair River definitely has a delta when it enters Lake Dt. Clair. But why don't other connecting rivers in the Great Lakes have deltas, with the likes of the Detroit, St. Mary's, Niagara, and the St. Lawrence?
- What does it a mean for a fire to create its own weather?
- Do fish, whales or other sea animals drink water?
- What shape are the nuclei of each element?
- What was the land like during the Cambrian period?
- Does the body produce Vitamin D in the presence of moonlight similar to sunlight?
What do we mean when we say that an eagle has better eyesight than a human? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 08:52 PM PDT For instance, is its "picture" just zoomed in? Is it sharper, so sharp that it can so details from really far away? Are the colors brighter? Can it zoom in and out on command like a camera? Can it sharpen and blur like a camera? What does "better eyesight" mean? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 26 Jul 2021 04:02 AM PDT |
Would a huge stretch of completely flat land be an old landform, or a newer one? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 02:48 PM PDT If there aren't any hills obstructing anything, and seeing for MILES on flat land. Would that land be a very old landform, or not as old? [link] [comments] |
Do COVID variants exist as discrete strains or is there a continuous distribution of variants? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 08:28 PM PDT For example, if you look at two related variants, is there a continuous spread of variants that exist in between the two? How much does a given variant have to change to be considered a new variant? [link] [comments] |
Did FoldingAtHome have any effect on the development of vaccines for Covid 19? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 07:07 PM PDT A lot was talked about how FAH helped to show the "first moments of life of the virus" but I haven't been able to find anything related to whether this helped to achieve anything regarding Covid. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 25 Jul 2021 08:08 PM PDT This is the image in question. A while back, I was working and had to consult Google Maps for something and noticed something quite unique. The satellite managed to capture a plane mid flight, but the colors were separated into their separate RGB channels, and yet still had a full color image of the plane directly underneath it. I'm absolutely puzzled as to why this would occur, and it can't be some sort of prism effect because there's no gradient between each color on the tail of the plane. It's perfectly separated. I don't know if this should be a physics thing (I think it should because optics) or if it's more of a computer/engineering question.I can't remember exactly where, but I know for sure that it was in Florida. [link] [comments] |
Is there work on sphere-packing inside a cone of a given aperture? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 12:03 PM PDT I was doing the planning for a croquembouche, and that got me to thinking about the maximum number of cream puffs one could fit inside the (traditionally cone-shaped) dessert, which I thought I could model as spheres packed inside a cone. I would expect this amount to vary based on the cone's aperture, but I'm not sure, and my search for an answer to this question only turned up papers on packing cones inside of other things. Can anyone answer my question/point me in the right direction? [link] [comments] |
Does psychiatric conditions like depression or psychosis cause brain damage? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 02:06 PM PDT If so, how do these conditions contribute to brain damage? Do treatments like therapy or medication reverse it? [link] [comments] |
What makes up the gray matter of the spinal cord? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 03:01 PM PDT I am studying for an anatomy exam and on one of the slides it states, "gray matter in the spinal cord consists of short nonmyelinated interneurons and motor neurons." That's only partially true, right? In addition to neuroglia, the spinal cord gray matter also has sensory neurons, right? Since, during a monosynaptic stretch reflex, myelinated sensory neuron synapses with a motor neuron in the ventral horn of the gray matter. [link] [comments] |
Why don’t dorsal rami form nerve plexuses? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 02:55 PM PDT Studying for an anatomy exam and I saw that a distinction I must know is that ventral rami for plexuses (except T2-T12 which are intercostal nerves), but dorsal rami do not. What do dorsal rami form and why do they not form plexuses? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 25 Jul 2021 02:43 PM PDT |
What does it a mean for a fire to create its own weather? Posted: 24 Jul 2021 10:27 PM PDT Reporting on the Bootleg Fire this week made a big deal about it "creating its own weather". While I don't doubt that's true, what does it actually mean? How would that transition be measured? Are there some telltale features that make it safe to declare such a thing about a wildfire? [link] [comments] |
Do fish, whales or other sea animals drink water? Posted: 24 Jul 2021 11:39 PM PDT I'm spontaneously curious how animals that live under water, including, but not limited to, seawater, ingest water. Can some animals use their "skin", or is there another known way, besides drinking, to digest water underwater? [link] [comments] |
What shape are the nuclei of each element? Posted: 24 Jul 2021 06:24 PM PDT I'd heard the protons & neutrons were in a ball shape for most of the periodic table, but that later periods they started to look less like spheres and more like footballs (american). I'm thinking specifically how the protons & neutrons arrange themselves, if it's in basically a ball or what. I looked online and only found one blog, but it doesn't look academic. Anything in academic journals, I don't have access to right now, nor experience with sifting through them. [link] [comments] |
What was the land like during the Cambrian period? Posted: 25 Jul 2021 04:24 AM PDT Was there any hint of life of it save for bacteria of course? Any plants animals or fungi? Or was the earth just a barren wasteland? [link] [comments] |
Does the body produce Vitamin D in the presence of moonlight similar to sunlight? Posted: 24 Jul 2021 06:56 PM PDT |
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