What can we learn from ants and plants?
That’s what IBMer Mauro Martino set out to answer in his award-winning data visualization, Network Earth. It explores nature’s interconnected relationships, and how they affect each other and our planet. By making the complex but important topics easier to visualize, we hope to help make more of them accessible to all.
TBH cleaning your car is a rather mundane task. But when you fill your head with some interesting physics the task actually gets rather pretty interesting. Here’s some good for thought on such an occasion :
The dust on your windshield might actually be from the Sahara desert
To understand how, lets start with some simple physics.
You basically take couple of balls, align them up and drop them to the ground. The ball at the top reaches the most highest due to the subsequent transfer of energy from the other balls.
Source Video : Physics Girl
Here is an exaggerated but amazing slow motion of the same energy transfer with a water balloon. Notice how the transfer of energy takes place between the water balloon and the tennis ball.
Source Video : Slow Mo Lab
Sandstorms/ Dust storms as you might be aware, are pretty common in the desert. . Dust storms arise when a gust front or other strong wind blows loose sand and dirt from a dry surface.
And this can cause something phenomenal to happen:
If the wind speed is sufficient then larger sand particles can propel finer ones high into the atmosphere. ( just like the stacked ball )
Then these fine particles are caught in the global wind pattern and are transported across the globe until they fall down to the earth as rain.
How cool is that ! Have a great day!
* Tracking saharan dust in 3D - NASA video
** All the World’s a Stage … for Dust - NASA article
** Wiki on Saltation
Platinum bars. Image: Sprott Money@Flickr
Platinum is one of the most valuable metals in the world. Precious and pretty, it’s probably best known for jewelry – and that is almost certainly its oldest use. But its value has become far greater than its decorative ability; today, platinum powers the world. From agriculture to the oil markets, energy to healthcare, we use platinum far more than we realise.
1. Keep the car running
Platinum is needed to make fuel for transport. Image: Pixabay
Platinum catalysts are crucial in the process that converts naphtha into petrol, diesel, and jet-engine fuel, which are all vital to the global economy. The emissions from those petroleum fuels, however, can be toxic, and platinum is also crucial in the worldwide push to reduce them through automotive catalytic converters. In fact, 2% of global platinum use in 2016 was in converting petroleum and 41% went into reducing emissions – a circle of platinum use that’s more impressive than a ring.
2. Feed the world
Nitric acid is a by-product of platinum which is used in fertilisers. Image: Pixabay
Another vital global sector that makes use of platinum catalysts is agriculture. Without synthetic fertilisers, we would not be able to produce nearly as much food as we need. Nitric acid is essential for producing those fertilisers and platinum is essential for producing nitric acid. Since 90% of the gauzes required for nitric acid are platinum, we may need to use more of it as we try to meet the global food challenge.
3. Good for your health
A pacemaker. Image: Steven Fruitsmaak@Wikimedia Commons
Platinum is extremely hard wearing, non-corrosive, and highly biocompatible, making it an excellent material to protect medical implants from acid corrosion in the human body. It is commonly used in pacemakers and stents. It is also used in chemotherapy, where platinum-based chemotherapeutic agents are used to treat up to 50% of cancer patients.
Keep reading
In this post, I would just like to highlight the fact an image can be represented in a matrix form and matrix transformations such as transpose, shearing, scaling, etc, from an image processing point of view are purely physical !
Check out this article from the klein project if this post interested you.
Have a great day!
* Interactive Felix the cat and matrix
The basic concept of a seatbelt is to protect you in an automobile collision by holding you in your seat. This prevents you from flying forward and colliding with the dashboard or windshield.
Many common seat belts design have something known as a centrifugal clutch. This arrangement has a weight attached to the end of a spool
When the spool rotates at a low speed, the weight is held through spring action and is allowed to spin freely.
But you must have noticed that if you try to pull the seat belt faster then it kinda gets stuck.
This is because as you rotate the spool faster, centrifugal force causes the weight to be pushed out and that stops the spool from rotating further.
This adds tension to your seat belt and holds you to your seat at the time of a crash.
Have a great day!
* Other seatbelt mechanisms
** Seatbelt physics
Elevated Bus That Drives Above Traffic Jams
Hi I made this app called PhysicsPedia. It contains all the theory and formulas of high school and college physics. Please have a look. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pp.nikit.phyprac2
Editor’s Note:
Thank you for your submission android-nikit and we did check the app out and it is really interesting and useful. If you are in high school, we recommend you give this one a try!
This Week in Chemistry: The world’s first nanocar race, and making a painkiller last longer using a metal-organic framework: https://goo.gl/TaS7HG
When most people think of glass, their mind probably jumps straight to windows. And perhaps they’ve heard that old myth - that glass is actually a liquid, not a solid.
So what is glass?
Well, you’ve probably seen something like this before:
The three common phases of matter - gas, liquid, and solid. But you’ll notice that the solid picture is labeled crystalline state. Most people consider glass to be a solid, but it doesn’t quite look like that.
Crystals have a well defined structure, exhibiting long-range order. Glass is what’s called an amorphous material, exhibiting only short-range order.
Basically, glass is a different kind of solid:
The quartz shown above is an example of a crystalline material. The molecules of glass on the other hand are disordered - yet still solid.
To create glass, the liquid melt has to be cooled fast enough to prevent the substance from crystallizing. This fast cooling locks the atoms or molecules in the disordered state that looks like the liquid phase.
Characterizing a substance as a glass also means that this glass transition is reversible.
While most glass is optically transparent, the properties depend on the composition of the glass. Most of what you see every day is soda-lime-silicate glass, but there are many different kinds of glasses, including sodium borosilicate glass (Pyrex), lead-oxide glass, and aluminosilicate glass.
Sources: x x