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Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Since light stops penetrating water at 1000 meters deep and the deepest freshwater lake is 1642 meters deep(both according to Google), is there an equivalent to deep sea creatures for freshwater?

Since light stops penetrating water at 1000 meters deep and the deepest freshwater lake is 1642 meters deep(both according to Google), is there an equivalent to deep sea creatures for freshwater?


Since light stops penetrating water at 1000 meters deep and the deepest freshwater lake is 1642 meters deep(both according to Google), is there an equivalent to deep sea creatures for freshwater?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 06:54 AM PST

I couldn't find anything on Google.

submitted by /u/AYY_LEMON
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What makes activities such as reading and crossword puzzles effective at helping cognitive function, but not "brain game" apps and their exercises?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 05:02 PM PST

I am reading about Lumosity and their settlement for making false claims about their product and am curious what the difference is between their "games", that seem to require focus and cognitive function, and other activities such as sudoku and reading, which we know can help prevent cognitive issues.

submitted by /u/Riff_28
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Ask Anything Wednesday - Biology, Chemistry, Neuroscience, Medicine, Psychology

Posted: 24 Jan 2018 07:07 AM PST

Welcome to our weekly feature, Ask Anything Wednesday - this week we are focusing on Biology, Chemistry, Neuroscience, Medicine, Psychology

Do you have a question within these topics you weren't sure was worth submitting? Is something a bit too speculative for a typical /r/AskScience post? No question is too big or small for AAW. In this thread you can ask any science-related question! Things like: "What would happen if...", "How will the future...", "If all the rules for 'X' were different...", "Why does my...".

Asking Questions:

Please post your question as a top-level response to this, and our team of panellists will be here to answer and discuss your questions.

The other topic areas will appear in future Ask Anything Wednesdays, so if you have other questions not covered by this weeks theme please either hold on to it until those topics come around, or go and post over in our sister subreddit /r/AskScienceDiscussion , where every day is Ask Anything Wednesday! Off-theme questions in this post will be removed to try and keep the thread a manageable size for both our readers and panellists.

Answering Questions:

Please only answer a posted question if you are an expert in the field. The full guidelines for posting responses in AskScience can be found here. In short, this is a moderated subreddit, and responses which do not meet our quality guidelines will be removed. Remember, peer reviewed sources are always appreciated, and anecdotes are absolutely not appropriate. In general if your answer begins with 'I think', or 'I've heard', then it's not suitable for /r/AskScience.

If you would like to become a member of the AskScience panel, please refer to the information provided here.

Past AskAnythingWednesday posts can be found here.

Ask away!

submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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How do microSD cards work?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 08:24 PM PST

SD cards already seemed pretty insane to me, cause you are fitting 512 gb of data on a drive the size of your thumb. But seeing that there is now a microSD card that can fit 512 gb of information on a card the size of your fingernail, that has to beg the question, how do microSD cards work, and how the hell can it fit half the size of my hard drive in a space almost 10 times smaller?

submitted by /u/ezjie
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How does a Launch Loop work exactly? What in it is sending objects into orbit?

Posted: 24 Jan 2018 05:39 AM PST

Why are our brains so high up in our bodies?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 08:09 AM PST

Since blood is heavily influenced by gravity, and the brain requires a lot of oxygen to function properly, why do we have our brains in the highest part of our body, as it takes a lot of energy for great amounts of blood to be pumped all the way up there?

submitted by /u/GCallen
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If you blow too hard on a recorder, it plays completely the wrong note. Why? The same holes are open as when you blow correctly. What's going wrong?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 07:34 PM PST

[Orbital Mechanics] What does burning radial out/in do?

Posted: 24 Jan 2018 07:22 AM PST

Hi all,

I've begun playing around with Kerbal Space Program and there are some things that are unclear to me when it comes to orbital mechanics.

In orbital mechanics, speed and altitude are linked: a satellite or a ship orbits a body at a given altitude and a given speed (at least that's what I understand). If I increase the speed (by burning prograde) I will increase my altitude and vice versa.

I also understand that if I burn normal (or antinormal) I increase (decrease) the angle of my orbit: this seems easy to understand when summing speed vectors.

What I don't get is burning radial out / in. Suppose I'm orbiting the body at 2000m/s @ 100km. If I burn radial out (away from the body), I will increase my altitude (because I'm providing thrust in that direction). Then if I stop burning, let's say I'm now at 110km altitude, what happens? Well I'm at 110km altitude for which the orbital speed is supposed to be 2100m/s (for instance, haven't made the calculations), but I'm still going 2000m/s because I haven't accelerated in the direction I'm orbiting. So the ship / satellite should begin to lose altitude to get back to 100km, right?

Or am I missing something?

Another question that is related: how is it even possible to do orbital rendez-vous?

I mean if I'm trying to rendez-vous with a satellite orbiting the body at a certain speed (and thus altitude). If I come from "under", meaning if I have a lower altitude, then I have a higher speed. So I'm "gaining" on it. Suppose I time my prograde burn so that I rise to the target altitude (and speed) but I'm a few kilometers ahead of the target. Then I'm toasted right? Because if I'm a few kilometers ahead of the satellite and try to slow down a bit by burning retrograde so that it can catch up on me, then I'm also lowering my orbit.

I get that we have computer models that make very powerful computations, but when we are talking about docking a ship to the ISS, I suppose the computer models cannot compute a single burn that will place the ship at exactly the correct position and speed, at mm/s and mm accuracy. So there has to be adjustment burns, even minor ones. But since altitude and speeds are always linked, how does one position exactly at the correct speed and altitude?

Sorry if this is obvious, but something's not ticking with me on this one :/

Thanks in advance :)

submitted by /u/nschoe
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Why do our eyes tear up when we’re choking?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 08:31 AM PST

I had the fun experience of choking on a small piece of cereal this morning and I noticed my eyes automatically got watery when I started choking. What do tears have to do with breathing?

submitted by /u/lovethecrazies
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Why do LHC's two pipes placed horizontally to the ground ?

Posted: 24 Jan 2018 06:13 AM PST

I had recently the opportunity to ask questions about the LHC to experts, and few questions pops up only after the meeting.

One of the question is the following : there is two parallel pipes, crossing only at particular places (where collision detectors are, obviously). According to drawings and explanations i found, these two pipes are arranged so they are side by side (they have the same altitude).

This seems odd to me because (1) this makes the outer pipe longer than the inner pipe, since they both follow the same line and (2) needs more complex arrangement of the magnets that curves the particles trajectory. This probably have a consequence on computations and engineering implementation.

On the other hand, making them stacked up would not change anything about how the LHC works, but would counteract the one-is-longer-than-the-other effects.

So, what didn't i understood ?

submitted by /u/elucator
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How do electrons distribute themselves in a cross section of a wire, when they move through it?

Posted: 24 Jan 2018 06:10 AM PST

In addition, would it be possible to measure differences in electron density (or probabilities of electron distribution) through a cross section of a wire with sufficiently sensitive equipment?

submitted by /u/mechdoc
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How much do we expect noise to drop in major cities with the rise of electric vehicles?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 04:53 PM PST

Starting to see more electric vehicles on the road and some point they will replace current conventional vehicles which are rather loud.

Will there be a drastic drop in noise or will it remain around the same?

submitted by /u/contracthitman
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Do parasitic worms, such as nematodes, have immune systems?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 08:36 PM PST

I was shown a video of Eosinophils attacking a nematode, clustering around it and entering the worm.

Here is the video in question:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fw_I21RnBWg

It made me wonder, do internal parasites have their own immune systems that do battle with ours? For example, would the same thing be happening to the Eosinophils when they enter the worms, being swarmed and attacked by the worms own immune system?

submitted by /u/KameraadLenin
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How do tsunamis work and, more specifically, why wasn’t there a large tsunami after the earthquake off the Alaskan coast?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 04:08 PM PST

How do we fall asleep?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 02:32 PM PST

Not why we fall asleep. I believe nobody knows the answer to that anyways?

Most of the time we don't remember falling asleep. I ask because from time to time including last night I remain conscious while it happens and before I drift off I can choose to stay awake or not while my body is about to shutdown. It's weird when I think about it, but what exactly is going on?

submitted by /u/real_shadowave
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Photons a massless particle with momentum?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 10:52 PM PST

In not a physicist but it seems that to have momentum you would need mass. Anyone mind explaining this?

submitted by /u/nessiehunt
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Why are milliampere hours commonly used instead of watt hours to measure battery capacity?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 08:01 AM PST

When you're looking at the capacity of batteries, it generally gives you the capacity in mAh. I don't understand why though because without knowing the voltage, knowing the mAh tells you nothing about the batteries actual capacity. Wouldn't it make more sense to use watt hours instead of milliamperes when talking about batteries? That way you wouldn't need to then find the voltage and do the math to actually know the capacity. Is there some benefit to using mah that I'm not seeing?

Also side question, why do companies always use milliampere hours instead of just amp hours. Wouldn't it just be easier to say for instance this phone has a 2.7 Ah, or this battery bank has a capacity of 30Ah rather than saying 2700mAh of 30000mAh? It seems like a horrible misuse of the metric system. I'd be like me saying I'm 1800 millimeters tall. Sure it's technically accurate, but it feels needlessly complicated.

Edit: Fixed typo

submitted by /u/RichHomieJake
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Black holes can expel jets of charged matter at relativistic speeds; do these jets provide thrust to the black hole?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 08:42 PM PST

These 'astrophysical jets' are understood to be ionized matter. Should the incredibly powerful expulsion of this matter (thrown across thousands of parsecs at speeds up to .80c) not propel the expelling body in the opposite direction?

Could not the supermassive black hole at the center of every galaxy be accelerating along the axis of the jet and dragging the galaxy with it? Are the galaxies all receding from us not due to expansion of space but because each galaxy has its own thrust?

submitted by /u/Avalanche2500
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What exactly does 100% Humidity mean?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 01:15 PM PST

One of my old science teachers told me that 100% humidity means it is raining. I don't really understand, because a light drizzle will certainly be less humid than a heavy downpour. Was he wrong? Or does the humidity scale just stop at the point that rainfall occurs?

submitted by /u/RebelEmpoleon
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Why isn't smoke hot?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 01:02 PM PST

To touch. Wasn't sure whether to tag as Chemistry or Physics

submitted by /u/sleeptoker
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Why will two balls shot into Newtons cradle release two other balls? (with energy and momentum conservation alone there are more options)

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 02:09 PM PST

If you shoot two balls into Newtons Cradle another two balls will be released at the other end. If none of the balls touch I understand this outcome. I noticed that if you glue the first two balls together you will have a different outcome:

https://imgur.com/TqBuTXk

But if the two balls touch, and are not glued, you would also expect a different outcome (harder for me to calculate). If you shoot one ball in and all the other balls touch you would also expect a complicated outcome (all the balls moving after collision (probably)).

However this is not what you find experimentally... Can someone explain why Newtons cradle always acts like none of the balls touch.

TO THE MODS: I know that previous posts about Newtons cradle have appeared on ask science, but they newer really approach the real question. The closest I got was this post: https://www.reddit.com/r/askscience/comments/7g5p31/what_determines_the_number_of_balls_being_knocked/ and especially this site: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/262998/experimental-data-for-asymmetric-newton-cradle

However if you try to read it you will find that they use the "successive impact model". However the use of this model is what I am questioning (you would not expect this model to apply to a newtons cradle where the balls touch). No good answer exist on /r/asksience.

submitted by /u/Luage
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Tuesday, January 23, 2018

If I plant a garden of vegetables near a busy street, will my vegetables absorb pollution from the vehicles driving by?

If I plant a garden of vegetables near a busy street, will my vegetables absorb pollution from the vehicles driving by?


If I plant a garden of vegetables near a busy street, will my vegetables absorb pollution from the vehicles driving by?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 08:37 PM PST

I wonder if the plants would have some way to counteract pollutants that are in the air (specifically: vehicle emissions & synthetic, residual dust from vehicle-tire disintegration).

Or, If when I go to eat my kale or whatever vegetables... I am actually eating more pollution than I would if I bought it from the store.

Thanks

submitted by /u/AppreciateYa
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Could there exist a planet made completely out of water?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 07:30 PM PST

Can a DNA test determine your nationality or origin?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 03:21 AM PST

There are various DNA tests which claim that they can track your nationality or origin. How possible is that? If it is, how specific can they be?

For instance, can they find if a person is European or African?

If the above is true, can they be even more specific? For example can it distinct if a person is Swedish or German?

submitted by /u/AresProductions
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Is the 7.9 earthquake in Alaska related in any way to the recent eruption of Mount Mayon in the Philippines?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 05:15 AM PST

Why do most earthquakes not cause Tsunamis, but some do?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 06:14 AM PST

What causes drastic temperature changes day to day?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 03:55 AM PST

The tilt of the earth causes seasons, but why can one day be freezing and the next be mild or warm?

submitted by /u/embiggen_Japan
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Is it possible to test a sample of ashes for organic substances, such as human remains?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 07:45 PM PST

For example, if a sample of ash was taken with burned wood matter and human remains mixed in, would it be possible to test the ash and come to the conclusion that a human had been burned to death in the area?

I realize this is probably a silly question to ask, given that once burned, it is difficult to test for DNA from ashes. So the question is more can it be identified as human remains than can DNA be found. I'm trying to write something realistic about this in a story of mine, the scenario being some people were murdered by magic flames that burned them to ashes instantly and an investigative force is testing the ash to see what it is comprised of.

submitted by /u/rubyhardflames
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If I suspended two large masses in space sufficiently far apart such that they were not moving relative to one another, could I tether them and use the expansion of space between the objects to generate energy?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 03:48 PM PST

If two large objects were tethered to one another and a generator were attached to a string in the middle could you accelerate the two objects towards one another as space expands in between them and use this acceleration to generate energy from the work done? Where does this energy come from and is it dark energy? How much energy could you make with say, 1000kg objects 1 light-year apart? 1000 light-years? (I'm not sure at what scale the expansion of space starts beating the gravitational pull)

submitted by /u/RadiatorSam
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What makes the Magnetic South Pole and the Geomagnetic South Pole seperate locations, and why are they seperate?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 04:17 PM PST

Was watching CGPGrey's video Who Owns Antarctica? (Bizarre Borders Part 3) and noticed that when he made a quick mention that there was more than one "South Pole", there was a Magnetic South Pole, and a Geomagnetic South Pole. What's the difference between Magnetic and Geomagnetic, and why are the two in seperate locations?

submitted by /u/MHMRahman
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In terms of electron excitement, how does black work?

Posted: 23 Jan 2018 04:56 AM PST

The past two lessons in my A Level Chemistry course have involved the excitement of electrons in d-orbitals to a higher energy level and then emitting a wavelength of visible light, resulting in us seeing colours in transition metal solutions, but how does black work?

My thought was that electrons don't get excited enough to get to a higher energy level to emit a wavelength of visible light.

Sorry if wording is terrible, I'm not really sure how to phrase this.

submitted by /u/MatthewWSG
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We can focus and reflect visible light. Can we focus and reflect other wavelengths like x-rays and microwaves?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 10:39 PM PST

What sort of material can be used to focus and reflect wavelengths that are much longer and shorter than the visible spectrum?

submitted by /u/photolouis
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What properties of water make it such an efficient radiation shield?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 03:06 PM PST

I've seen pictures of nuclear plants using pools of water as a radiation shield, why is that? Ex. https://www.bcm.edu/bodycomplab/Radprimer/radpenetration.htm

submitted by /u/RippinDankBonks
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Why do ice cubes seemingly fuse together when put in a water bath, for example. And how does this occur?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 10:25 PM PST

Is the body able to process 100 % of caloric intake, or is there bypass?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 09:45 PM PST

Why don't we all get Dementia or Alzheimer's? They wouldn't be stopped by natural selection, they happen after middle age, usually

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 05:43 PM PST

If different races aren't like different dog breeds, what are they and is "race" even real?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 02:17 PM PST

During ice ages large amounts of water was locked up in the poles. Did this increase the salinity of the water remaining in the oceans?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 10:26 PM PST

Pretty much just the title.

submitted by /u/Elephantinspector
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Why does oxygen make meat go bad, but not living things?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 07:52 PM PST

Why are there no more big bangs happening?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 08:31 PM PST

Can pinpointing where a headache is on your head help tell you the cause of the headache?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 07:57 AM PST

Why are there relatively few mammal species native to South America, despite the continent's diverse biomes and otherwise lavish wildlife?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 04:33 PM PST

Are there ever actually caves behind waterfalls?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 07:33 AM PST

If there's a waterfall in a video game, chances are that there's a secret behind it. How often does this actually happen? I imagine the running water would erode the rock and fill the cave.

submitted by /u/MikeOShay
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Monday, January 22, 2018

Ethiopia is building the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa, Egypt opposes the dam which it believes will reduce the amount of water that it gets, Ethiopia asserts that the dam will in fact increase water flow to Egypt by reducing evaporation on Egypt's Lake Nasser, How so?

Ethiopia is building the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa, Egypt opposes the dam which it believes will reduce the amount of water that it gets, Ethiopia asserts that the dam will in fact increase water flow to Egypt by reducing evaporation on Egypt's Lake Nasser, How so?


Ethiopia is building the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa, Egypt opposes the dam which it believes will reduce the amount of water that it gets, Ethiopia asserts that the dam will in fact increase water flow to Egypt by reducing evaporation on Egypt's Lake Nasser, How so?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 03:42 AM PST

AskScience AMA Series: I am a biologist studying invertebrate vision, AMA!

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 04:14 AM PST

My name is Daniel Zurek, I'm a biologist studying invertebrate vision. I investigate how vision-guided behavior and visual system design evolve to match ecological demands, and am particularly interested in the dynamic natural context in which sensory information is gathered. I'm currently based at the University of Cincinnati, after studying in Germany, Australia, and postdocs at Cornell and U Pitt.

My current research revolves around the mechanics and evolution of color vision and colorful displays in jumping spiders. I've also studied locomotory attachment devices in insects, and worked with tiger beetles, extremely fast predators that run so fast their eyes can't keep up! My research has been covered by Science, Nature, National Geographic, and a host of major newspapers.

Important research questions aside, I just love animals that do cool stuff! I'm an avid macro shooter/filmer and enjoy science communication. I've also spent a lot of time thinking about science crowdfunding, and have worked as a consultant and grant officer for Experiment.com.

More about my research at danielzurek.com

A NatGeo writeup about one of my research topics: https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2015/05/150518-jumping-spider-color-vision-mating-animals-science/.

I'll be on at 6 PM ET (23 UT), ask me anything!

submitted by /u/AskScienceModerator
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What exactly do they do with your body when you die, if you're an organ donor?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 03:23 PM PST

Simplified explanations of Sub-refraction and Super-refraction?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 03:45 AM PST

So I understand how they both effect radar and radio waves but I don't understand exactly why. I know a trapping layer happens because of temperature inversion, but what makes a Super-refractive and Sub-refractive layer? Could someone explain it as simply as possible?

submitted by /u/Montrepido
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Has Alzheimer's ever been observed in animals?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 12:00 PM PST

Do plants require constant nutrition or do they eat in cycles?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 03:15 PM PST

If the Universe contains everything in exist but is constantly expanding, what exactly is it expanding into and can we exit the Universe?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 07:07 PM PST

Why is the weak force considered to be a force?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 11:33 PM PST

The electromagnetic and strong forces (and gravity I guess) pushes and pulls and so it it is intuitive that they are called forces. But the weak force does not push or pull as far as I understand it.

Is it just a term arising from convention since the fundamental forces arises from symmetries in guage theory?

submitted by /u/BeforeTime
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Why do scientists believe that type S seismic waves reappear in the inner nucleus?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 04:13 AM PST

How do zookeepers avoid accidentally domesticating animals in zoos?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 02:36 PM PST

How come water does not flow deep into our ear canal?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 12:07 PM PST

Topologically, how many holes does a t-shirt have?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 02:17 AM PST

Does it have one hole or two holes?

submitted by /u/Artyflex
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If 1+2+3+... can be "regularised" to -1/12, does it follow that 1+4+9+... can be 0 or that 1+8+27+... can be 1/120?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 03:41 PM PST

0 and 1/120 being the zeta function at -2 and -3? What about 1+1+1+... being replaced by ζ(0)=-1/2? Have these ones ever come up in some useful application?

submitted by /u/Dashkins
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How does quantum mechanics explain covalent bonds?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 08:42 AM PST

I am studying physics in university right now and my professor mentioned this in class but did not elaborate much. I was wondering how QM explains why atoms covalently bond (need the answer in very layman terms haha) and what was previously thought before quantum mechanics came around?

Thanks! :)

submitted by /u/comrade53
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What is the difference between thermal conductivity and thermal conductance?

Posted: 22 Jan 2018 12:50 AM PST

I've read a few definitions but the two appears to be the same, although the unit for thermal conductivity is written as W/mK while thermal conductance is W/m2 K

submitted by /u/IAmTryingToStudy
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What percentage of the light that hits your retina is actually absorbed by it?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 12:54 PM PST

Can we detect absolute zero black bodies with our current telescopes?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 11:10 PM PST

A black body is, "an idealized physical body that absorbs all incident electromagnetic radiation, regardless of frequency or angle of incidence. ... The radiation is emitted according to Planck's law, meaning that it has a spectrum that is determined by the temperature alone, not by the body's shape or composition."[1]

If I'm understanding correctly, a black body at absolute zero would emit no radiation at all. Is this related to antimatter? Could this be where unknown elements have been hiding?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_body[1] http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/cosmos/B/Blackbody+Radiation https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaFdCvnV8PM

submitted by /u/Player2QQ
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If planets orbit the stars, satellites (moons) orbit planets, can there be something natural also orbiting the moons? How many iterations are possible? Do we know of any?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 11:02 PM PST

Is there anything like a moon of a moon?

submitted by /u/pabra
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How does letting a dish soak with soap and water work?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 02:28 PM PST

Why are long things flexible while short pieces of the same object are rigid?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 10:32 AM PST

Is there any sort of concept of a genomic efficiency, i.e., is there any benefit to having a higher ratio of coding DNA to junk DNA?

Posted: 21 Jan 2018 11:43 AM PST

Is there no sort of penalty for carrying around all that non-coding DNA?

submitted by /u/feed_me_haribo
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