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Saturday, October 9, 2021

Why are virus vaccines grown in animal cells instead of human cells?

Why are virus vaccines grown in animal cells instead of human cells?


Why are virus vaccines grown in animal cells instead of human cells?

Posted: 09 Oct 2021 12:45 AM PDT

What happens to a metal when it goes under radiation hardening and what are the radiation level to make it possible?

Posted: 09 Oct 2021 03:18 AM PDT

Where does the human body gets Chlorine for gastric acid?

Posted: 09 Oct 2021 07:12 AM PDT

So yea, I'm aware that table salt provides quite a bit of chlorine by mass (60%). But is not like we have to eat +1-2g of salt every day. Early humans wouldn't have easy access to salt until many thousands of years ago.

So where do we get our chloridric acid for digestion? I'm genuinely intrigued.

submitted by /u/Moisty_Amphibian
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Why does mars have ANY surface features given that it has no plate tectonics and has wind storms?

Posted: 09 Oct 2021 07:31 AM PDT

My 9 year old daughter asked this question today. I googled and found that mars definitely doesn't have plate tectonics. Wouldn't everything get corroded overtime to make the planets surface very smooth? But we know it has valleys, canyons and mountains. Is that due asteroid imapcts?

Sorry, if this sounds like a very dumb question.

submitted by /u/tijR
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How were we able to develop Western Blots?

Posted: 09 Oct 2021 07:32 AM PDT

This is something that just absolutely blows my mind, and I cannot understand it yet. How were we able to develop Western Blots? The procedure seems so well put together, but I cannot understand the logic behind it. How did researchers go about figuring out a way to detect specific proteins using Western Blot?

submitted by /u/celestialceres1
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What sorts of images do we anticipate seeing with the James Webb Space Telescope? Do you think they will be similar to the Hubble eXtreme Deep Field (HXDF) image, and familiar to us, or will they probably be new and different?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 11:20 PM PDT

When black hole data was being rendered back in 2016, there was a close idea of how the image would appear. Do we have an idea of what the JWST will find?

submitted by /u/Interdisciplinary
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How do giraffes (and other leaf-eating animals) get enough protein?

Posted: 08 Oct 2021 05:36 AM PDT

What is the route of uptake of organophosphates in insects?

Posted: 08 Oct 2021 05:25 AM PDT

I'm aware of the various routes of uptake in humans but im struggling to find a source that clearly states whether organophosphate insecticides have to be ingested by an insect or whether physical contact is all that is required. Thanks in advance

submitted by /u/Rathamor33
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How did our distant ancestors cut umbilical cords, like the time before knives. Maybe a sharp rock?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 09:24 AM PDT

Friday, October 8, 2021

AskScience AMA Series: I'm a psychologist/neuroscientist studying and teaching about social media and adolescent brain development. AMA!

AskScience AMA Series: I'm a psychologist/neuroscientist studying and teaching about social media and adolescent brain development. AMA!


AskScience AMA Series: I'm a psychologist/neuroscientist studying and teaching about social media and adolescent brain development. AMA!

Posted: 08 Oct 2021 04:00 AM PDT

A whistleblower recently exposed that Facebook knew their products could harm teens' mental health, but academic researchers have been studying social media's effects on adolescents for years. I am a Teaching Assistant Professor in Psychology and Neuroscience at UNC-Chapel Hill, where I teach an undergrad course on "Social media, technology, and the adolescent brain". I am also the outreach coordinator for the WiFi Initiative in Technology and Adolescent Brain Development, with a mission to study adolescents' technology use and its effects on their brain development, social relationships, and health-risk behaviors. I engage in scientific outreach on this important topic through our Teens & Tech website - and now here on r/AskScience! I'll see you all at 2 PM (ET, 18 UT), AMA!

Username: /u/rosaliphd

submitted by /u/AskScienceModerator
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Can any element experience metal bonding under the right conditions?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 05:23 PM PDT

Do people with better memory have/maintain more synapses?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 01:48 PM PDT

I just learned through an online lecture (found it on youtube by luck) that the brain is constantly changing. New synapses form, old synapses "disappear" etc.

The neurologist said, that this is the reason why we inevitably get worse at something when we get better at another thing. But he also said, that scientists still don't know what it is we get worse at, when we get better at something else.

My question is: what about those people who have absolute recall? (edit: Hyperthymesia was the word I was missing) Those people that can remember every moment of their life? (I know that those people are very rare but I'm just wondering: what about them?) How can they remember everything of their lives if the number of neurons doesn't really change much after birth? (Or is this part already been proven wrong? The lecture is from 2012 and at that point the professor said that only the hyppocampus can create completely new neurons but not the cortex.)

Now if instead, those people just have a brain that has a better ability to create new neurons, that would actually make a lot more sense. Can someone tell me if/what they know?

submitted by /u/livingstudent20
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How can they generate enough energy to emit a 10 PW laser beam?

Posted: 08 Oct 2021 02:08 AM PDT

Three corners of QR code has distinct pattern which indicates the correct direction to read the code. But isn't that enough with only one corner? That way it can contain more data. What is the reason for this?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 07:03 AM PDT

Electron Paramagnetic Resonance - How Does It Work?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 11:41 PM PDT

Hi! I'm just hoping someone can give me a basic overview of how electron paramagnetic resonance works. I have a basic understanding of how NMR works, but wasn't really able to find a solid, easy to understand overview of EPR. The wikipedia page seemed to give an ok explanation, but I want to confirm I've understood it correctly. Thanks in advance to anyone who can help :)

submitted by /u/A_Scientician
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How to set up the integrals for voltage in a two wire transmission line?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 11:31 PM PDT

Why is the first integral for the first integral for both V_a and V_b in this problem (only the first one on the page) from r to ∞? Isn't there supposed to be zero charge inside a conductor? So shouldn't the lower integration bound be at the outer end of the conductor? I thought that maybe they were assuming the center of the conductor was location at position (0,0) and hence the distance would be r, but the conductors can't both be at the origin, can they? Are we using a separate coordinate system for each one? I'm not sure that makes sense since we ultimately want the voltage between them.

I understand the rest of the problem -- it's just the integration bounds being the same for both voltages that has me a little confused.

submitted by /u/dcfan105
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Why does a camera obscura work even without a projector?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 01:22 PM PDT

I recently read about the concept of camera obscura and how the light rays pass through the pinhole in order to create an upside down image.

What i don't fully grasp, however, is why does an image form in the first place, when there is no projector-like device generating it? If the wall containing the pinhole were removed entirely, no image would be formed at all on the opposite wall. It is this difference that confuses me. When there is no wall (or the pinhole is very large), a lot more rays come in yet no image is formed, so why does the much smaller amount of rays passing through the pinhole actually creates an image?

submitted by /u/Xen0m0rph
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Change in wavelength, when light hits a denser medium?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 07:32 AM PDT

I am aware, that when light hits a medium, it slows down and therefore changes in wavelength. I would like to know big an alteration in wavelength takes place when it hits glass and similar surfaces. I would also like to know if the type of glass/surface - that is, whether it be reflective, diffracting, absorbing or scattering - has different degrees of impacts on wavelength alteration. If light were to hit a standard camera lens with or without reflective coating, would the shape of the lens have any further impact on the wavelength?

What happens exactly, when light hits the sensor on a camera? Wouldn't the entire spectrum of wavelengths contained within said light be imposed on it? Given a reflective surface filmed with a camera, wouldn't it be possible for a camera to show light in a photo that is outside of the human eye's range of vision?

How big would the shift in wavelength with surfaces and lenses be?

How would I go about calculating the shift in wavelength mathematically?

submitted by /u/PraggyD
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Thursday, October 7, 2021

AskScience AMA Series: I'm Diego Pol, a paleontologist and Nat Geo Explorer. AMA about dinosaurs!

AskScience AMA Series: I'm Diego Pol, a paleontologist and Nat Geo Explorer. AMA about dinosaurs!


AskScience AMA Series: I'm Diego Pol, a paleontologist and Nat Geo Explorer. AMA about dinosaurs!

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 04:01 AM PDT

Hi! I'm Diego Pol, a paleontologist and National Geographic Explorer who studies dinosaurs and ancient crocs. For the last few years, I've been exploring and discovering dinosaurs in Patagonia, the southern tip of South America. I'm the head of the science department at the Egidio Feruglio paleontology museum in Patagonia, Argentina, and during the last ten years I've focused on the remarkable animal biodiversity of the dinosaur era preserved in Patagonia. My research team has recently discovered fossils of over 20 new species of dinosaurs, crocs, and other vertebrates, revealing new chapters in the history of Patagonia's past ecosystems.

You can read more about me here. And if you'd like to see me talk about dinosaurs, check out this video about dinosaur extinction and this one about the golden age of paleontology. I'll be on at 12pm ET (16 UT), AMA!

Proof!

Username: /u/nationalgeographic

submitted by /u/AskScienceModerator
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Why are there varying cooking safety temperatures among meats? Don't bacteria die at similar temperatures?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 02:20 PM PDT

Or do different types of bacteria with different death temperatures proliferate on different types of raw meats?

submitted by /u/februarysveryown
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What happened to the Milwaukee Protocol for rabies?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 05:43 AM PDT

The recent story of the man in Illinois who died of rabies after declining PEP reminded me of all of the hype surrounding the girl who was supposedly the first person to survive rabies back in 2004. After that I recall the MP being tried in a number of desperate cases but never having any success and many people were writing it off as a failure.

Doing some more digging it appears the MP had at least one more success story about ten years ago in California. This article makes it sound like the MP has saved about a dozen people although the majority of them had pretty bad neurological damage. It also appears that the success story from Texas that it cites actually involves someone who was not treated with the MP at all so its accuracy may be questionable.

All that makes me wonder, is the MP a red herring as some people have claimed or is it a legitimate way to try to save a patient in a desperate situation? Most human rabies cases are in poor countries where a treatment regimen like this isn't a viable option anyways but for the occasional kid who gets bitten by a bat in the US and doesn't get PEP is it worth trying?

submitted by /u/BasteAlpha
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Is there any scientific validity to the phrase "It's like riding a bicycle", meaning that knowledge is forever ingrained in your brain?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 02:48 AM PDT

If a concave lens and mirror are kept under water, the focal length of the mirror stays same but changes for the lens. Why is this so? Isn't the physical length the same no matter the medium?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 08:10 PM PDT

If you simplify the twin paradox, so that 2 frame of references are some distance away and getting closer to each other, if both of them start a timer at the same time, and when they both reach the same point, they broadcast the time they experienced, which clock would experience the least time?

Posted: 07 Oct 2021 02:52 AM PDT

And why wouldn't frame "A" say that the frame "B" experienced lesser time, due to seeing frame "B" moving towards them with a constant velocity, or the opposite?

submitted by /u/Gmaaay
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How are vaccines combined?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 07:46 PM PDT

Like, we have the MMR vaccine which is measles, mumps, rubella. The TDAP which is diptheria, pertussis, and tetanus. Are the combinations made based on diseases that are similar? Now there's a malaria jab - could that be combined with a covid jab? How about flu and covid - will we just get an annual combo jab for whatever is the forecast flu and covid strains?

submitted by /u/acceptitANDmoveon
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Is it risky to have the main mirror exposed on the James Webb telescope?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 05:30 PM PDT

Hubble's mirror is protected inside its hull. I know JWST is in a different kind of orbit, but isn't susceptible to space debris?

submitted by /u/BeKindToEachOther6
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Malaria - how does the vaccine work?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 12:07 PM PDT

Malaria is caused by a microscopic parasite that invades blood cells.

How does a vaccine work against something like this?

A vaccine trains the immune system - and as far as I understand, it is mostly "designed" to combat bacteria and viruses… but in general anything that is not of one's own body…

…but what is there to train against in the case of the Malaria parasite that resides within one's own blood cells?

submitted by /u/mad_marble_madness
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Is there a way to measure/evaluate the randomness of outcomes in a finite system?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 05:24 PM PDT

Let's say a six-sided die x is rolled n times and another six-sided die y is rolled n times. Is it possible to definitively compare the randomness of the outcomes of x vs y? Say x's outcomes were an equal number of occurrences for each face -- (10)(10)(10)(10)(10)(10) and y's outcomes were (17)(3)(9)(11)(8)(12). Was x more random because all outcomes happened to occur equally or was y just as (or more) random because any distribution of outcomes is random? How about if a third die z improbably skews to the extreme and produced (0)(60)(0)(0)(0)(0)? Is there a way to measure how random a series of outcomes was or are any series of occurrences inherently random?

submitted by /u/TheUpperHand
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How are such small features on integrated circuits made?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 07:11 AM PDT

Background: I used to be fascinated with lithography, the process of laying down features on ICs. But this was back in the day when 1 μ was considered the standard and manufacturers were exploring techniques to make "sub-micron" features. The techniques partly involved templates exposed to light, and light diffraction was the fundamental limitation.

Obviously we've continued to progress since then. How is it done these days? Is there a good article somewhere describing IC manufacture at a fairly technical level?

I remember that there was also a lot of interest in going 3-D. Everything then was laid down on a surface. If you could layer your components you could obviously pack a lot more in. Are they in fact routinely doing that?

This is partly prompted by looking at my iPhone and pondering how many different complex electronic devices are packed in there.

submitted by /u/MezzoScettico
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If opposite and equal forces cancel each other, why do you feel a pinch?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 06:18 PM PDT

Does having pneumonia vaccine have any impact on those who get COVID pneumonia?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 10:44 AM PDT

I'm curious about the under 65 group as I found a few studies focusing solely on those who were vaccinated against pneumonia and 65+ reducing covid symptoms in general but couldn't find anything regarding covid pneumonia specifically.

submitted by /u/remadeforme
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What units does E=mc^2 use? Can’t you just remove the c^2?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 10:02 AM PDT

Doesn't this equation only work if you choose two very specific units?

Say you choose some tiny unit of mass and huge unit of energy, like nanograms and terajoules or something, can't you just cancel out the c2 and be left with e=m?

Is the c2 just a redundancy to hammer in the point that a little bit of mass can create a LOT of energy?

submitted by /u/Liquos
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Wednesday, October 6, 2021

AskScience AMA Series: I am a medicinal chemist and pharmaceutical scientist at the University of Florida who is an expert on Kratom, which is currently under investigation as treatment for opioid withdrawal syndrome. AMA!

AskScience AMA Series: I am a medicinal chemist and pharmaceutical scientist at the University of Florida who is an expert on Kratom, which is currently under investigation as treatment for opioid withdrawal syndrome. AMA!


AskScience AMA Series: I am a medicinal chemist and pharmaceutical scientist at the University of Florida who is an expert on Kratom, which is currently under investigation as treatment for opioid withdrawal syndrome. AMA!

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 04:00 AM PDT

Hi Reddit! My name is Christopher McCurdy, and I am a broadly trained pharmaceutical scientist and pharmacist whose research focuses on the design, synthesis and development of drugs to treat pain and drug abuse. My work with novel sigma receptor ligands has led to possible medication development that could ease the effects of cocaine, methamphetamine and pain. I'll be answering your questions on how Kratom helps those with opioid withdrawal syndrome and anything about my career as a pharmaceutical scientist.

My research interests at the University of Florida are:

  • Anxiety
  • Drug abuse
  • Drug addiction
  • Natural products

More about me: I received my Ph.D. in Medicinal Chemistry in 1998 from the University of Georgia. Since then, I have served as President of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists and as a member the United States Pharmacopeial Convention. I also serve as an ad hoc member of the U.S. FDA Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee. Currently, I serve as director of the University of Florida's Clinical and Translational Science Institute Translational Drug Development Core that conducts bioanalysis, in vivo studies, human clinical trials, and more.

I will be on at 1 p.m. ET (17 UT) to answer your questions!

Username: /u/UFExplore

submitted by /u/AskScienceModerator
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How do microbiologists know whether the virus they discovered is a novel virus or not?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 01:34 AM PDT

How are viruses, such as covid and flu, cleared from long-lived cells like nerve and brain cells?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 03:22 AM PDT

My understanding is that the main immune defence against viral infected cells is killing those cells, obviously that doesn't work so well with brain and nerve cells. Apparently many viruses can infect nerve cells, including flu, but only some such as herpesviruses seem to form long term infections in these cells. How are the rest cleared out of these cells? Why aren't they able to keep replicating in nerve cells indefinitely?

submitted by /u/Rather_Dashing
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Ask Anything Wednesday - Economics, Political Science, Linguistics, Anthropology

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 07:00 AM PDT

Welcome to our weekly feature, Ask Anything Wednesday - this week we are focusing on Economics, Political Science, Linguistics, Anthropology

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!

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Does the spin of atoms have any effect on the macro scale?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 08:04 AM PDT

If I had a ball and I aligned all of the ball's atoms' spins to point in the same direction then would I notice something different about the ball compared to an ordinary ball which has atoms with random spin directions?

submitted by /u/PeeBeeTee
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Nitrogenated instead of carbonated water?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 05:09 AM PDT

I know that CO2 is added to water to carbonate it, which also produced carbonated acid, that gives it slightly stingy and acidic taste.

When N2O is used as a replacement for CO2, the bubbles should be much smaller and less prickly. I thought about the reaction that is happening when N2O is added to H2O and if I am correct, ammonium nitrate should form, since N2O + H2O = NH4NO3.

If this is right, won't instantly that decompose into Nitrc Acid and Ammonium hydroxide? (beacuse NH4NO3 + H2O = HNO3 + NH4OH) But this reaction is apparently also possible if we flip everything around, so HNO3 + NH4OH = NH4NO3.

So what will happen then if nitrous oxide is dissolved in water?

submitted by /u/goeff1212
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Is there evidence that our brains are physically storing memories?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 04:34 AM PDT

The usual analogy seems to be that our brains are like hard drives — with thoughts and memories stored physically inside our heads.

But is there any evidence that supports this view?

How do we know that they are not more like radio and television sets — tuning into signals that exist outside of us?

submitted by /u/nev4
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Do natural endorphins act quicker than morphine does? Why or why not?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 06:52 AM PDT

I am thinking that because morphine is a molecular mimic, it would not work as quickly as a natural endorphin, but I am unsure.

submitted by /u/WatchTheCloudsFloat
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How do scientists determine how many calories different activities burn? And how accurate are the estimates on exercise machines?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 12:23 PM PDT

So I kind of understand how they determine calorie content of food. My understanding is that they burn it and measure the heat and duration, and that gives them the basic estimate. But how do they figure out how many calories the human body burns?

submitted by /u/StupidQuestionAsker0
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Is it possible for a bacteria to have sections of a gram positive cell wall and a gram negative cell wall?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 06:18 AM PDT

Like they pick up a bit of dna from somewhere else and start making the wrong one, would the cell just fall apart?

submitted by /u/thunder-bug-
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Do Antibiotics Reduce Vaccine Efficacy (E.g. the Pfizer vaccine)?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 11:16 PM PDT

Is there any validity to the idea that light slows down in medium due to being absorbed and reemited by atoms in the medium?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 10:44 AM PDT

So I've been told several times that this common explanation of why light slows down in a medium is wrong because it implies that light should exit the medium in random directions which doesn't match observation. That's always made sense to me, but a few months ago I came across this article that uses a similar explanation but specifically makes the point that of course any model of light at a quantum level needs to reproduce classic effects when we'd expect to see them and claims that this version of the explanation does that.

The main difference between his explanation and the common but erroneous one is that he makes the point that we should think of each photo taking every possible path through the medium (I think that's the Feinman path integral formulation, but please correct me if I'm mistaken) and every atom absorbing and reemitting each photon, but he then says that ever individual atom has only a very small chance of doing this, but we'd expect it to happen at least some of the time because there are just so many atoms. But he just said that we should think of ALL the atoms doing it, so which is it? Do they all do it, or is it random and it somehow works out the that paths still cancel out properly so we get the observed path? Or is this explanation simply incorrect?

submitted by /u/dcfan105
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Can someone explain asymmetric organocatalysis in layman’s terms?

Posted: 06 Oct 2021 03:36 AM PDT

A New York Times article about the Nobel prize in Chemistry being awarded to Benjamin List and David W.C. MacMillan concludes with:

"'This concept for catalysis is as simple as it is ingenious, and the fact is that many people have wondered why we didn't think of it earlier,' said Johan Aqvist, chairman of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry."

What is the concept and why is it considered simple?

submitted by /u/ray_web
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Is there any data on side effects and the gap between first and second dose of mRNA vaccines?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 05:16 PM PDT

I assume a larger gap would create more side effects if the immune response is greater right? But I would like to see the data if anyone knows of any. Thanks

submitted by /u/oredbored
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How did the 3.8 billion year old Isua Greenstone Belt in Greenland survive plate tectonics?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 03:20 PM PDT

I have been reading about earliest signs of life on the Isua rock formation and another formation in Australia that is 3 and a half billion years old. How do these formations survive subduction and continents moving around over the history of the earth? I asked Google and rephrased the question a couple of times, but didn't get any relevant answers.

submitted by /u/curious_traveller
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If photons are quantum particle of electromagnetism, why are electric currents described as electrons flowing from one point to another?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 12:34 PM PDT

I am curious why electric currents seem to be about electrons moving, when the photon is the force carrying quanta of electromagnetism. Why isn't an electric current a beam of light? Is lightening a stream of electrons shedding photons that we see, or is it a stream of pure photons?

submitted by /u/Masterful_Moniker
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Does polypropylene contain phtalates? If they do, how are they released into the environment?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 04:56 PM PDT

Hi guys,

I haven't been able to find this information anywhere. I am curious as to whether or not polypropylene contains any phtalates, which can cause all kinds of problems in humans. I am getting into farming and am alarmed by the enormous plastic use, not just because of the microplastic issue and fact that they are going to sit in landfills for hundreds of years, but that they may be leaching chemicals into our soils and into our foodchain. Landscape fabric, and other tarps I think are made of this material. Do they contain this stuff and if so, how exactly would they be released into the soil?

submitted by /u/Snorkles1037
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What's the physical meaning of potential flow in fluid dynamics?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 12:29 PM PDT

So I'm actually taking an E&M class and learning the method of images. I was looking for YouTube videos on the topic and found this one which is actually about fluid dynamics. I didn't even know this method was also used in fluid dynamics and it's really neat seeing how the math of the E field is so similar to the math used to model fluid flow. However, they mention finding the velocity field of a fluid taking the gradient of the potential function. That's clearly analogous to finding the E field by taking the gradient of the voltage, but I have an idea for what voltage means physically -- it's the potential energy per unit charge w.r.t. some predefined reference. But what does this potential function mean physically in the context of fluid dynamics? I tried Googling it and found a bunch of stuff saying it's a flow with no rotation, but that's no help because that's just a mathematical property of gradient functions in general.

submitted by /u/dcfan105
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How come particle accelerator experiments take so long?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 12:14 PM PDT

Sort of a weird question...let me see if I can phrase it coherently.

I guess my question is how come experiments at colliders like the LHC take years to execute. As a naive amateur, I would think that you basically fire up the collider, shoot trillions and trillions and trillions of elementary particles at each other for a week, and that should give you enough data to analyze. But it seems like some experiments at the LHC are still ongoing, even 10 years later. Does it take 10 years to fire a sufficient number of elementary particles at each other? Again, as an amateur, it seems to me that if all a particle collider is doing is firing a sufficiently high number of them at each other at a sufficiently high energy, you'd run out of experiments to do within a month or two.

submitted by /u/canadave_nyc
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What is the most habitable celestial body besides Earth? If we had the technology, what would the best celestial body be to move to?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 10:34 AM PDT

This is obviously inspired by NASA and SpaceX wanting to get to Mars. SpaceX want to inhabit Mars but as it seems like a hellish place to live, what other celestial body's are out there that are closer to Earth.

There are so many factors here like does the body have a thick atmosphere, magnetic sphere, water and breathable air. Has there been study's of the many celestial objects we've observed to find out which one is the most Earth-like?

submitted by /u/REDDITKeeli
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Do Sequential Hermaphroditic Fish have 3 sex chromosomes?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 10:06 AM PDT

Hermphrodism is common in the fish world, but what I don't understand is how their DNA is structured to account for this. Do the males always contribute a Y chromosome while females always contribute an X? Or is it so diverse there is no blanket answer?

submitted by /u/EzPzLemon_Greezy
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What is the timeline for forming B cells?

Posted: 05 Oct 2021 07:22 PM PDT

I think it takes about 2 weeks for exposure to something novel and the development of B cells. What does on in between day 0 and day 14?

submitted by /u/WebullQuestion
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