Science & Philosophy: 1,2-dibromoethane to Adrenergic

Science Encyclopedia

Aardvark

Aardvarks are nocturnal, secretive, termite- and anteating mammals, and are one of Africa's strangest animals. Despite superficial appearances, aardvarks are not classified as true anteaters; they have no close relatives and are the only living species of the order Tubulidentata and family Orycteropodidae. Aardvarks are large piglike animals weighing from 88-143 lb (40-65 kg) and measuring …

2 minute read

Abacus

The abacus is an ancient calculating machine. This simple apparatus is about 5,000 years old and is thought to have originated in Babylon. As the concepts of zero and Arabic number notation became widespread, basic math functions became simpler, and the use of the abacus diminished. Most of the world employs adding machines, calculators, and computers for mathematical calculations, but today Japan…

3 minute read

Abrasives - How do abrasives work?

Abrasive materials are hard crystals that are either found in nature or manufactured. The most commonly used of such materials are aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, cubic boron nitride, and diamond. Other materials such as garnet, zirconia, glass, and even walnut shells are used for special applications. Abrasives are primarily used in metalworking because their grains can penetrate even the hardes…

5 minute read

Abscess

An abscess is a circumscribed collection of pus usually caused by microorganisms. Abscesses can occur anywhere in the body—in hard or soft tissue, organs or An amoebic abscess caused by Entameoba histolytica. Phototake (CN) /Phototake NYC. Reproduced by permission. confined spaces. Due to their fluid content, abscesses can assume various shapes. Their internal pressure can cause compr…

1 minute read

Absolute Music - Beethoven And German Influence, Crosscurrents: Program Music And Modernism, Late Twentieth-and Early Twenty-first-century Perspectives

"Absolute music" is an idea that took root in the writings of early German Romantics such as Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder (1773–1798), Ludwig Tieck (1773–1853), and E. T. A. Hoffmann (1776–1822) beginning at the turn of the nineteenth century, and came to dominate musical aesthetics over much of the next two centuries, frequently invoked to argue for music'…

2 minute read

Absolute Zero

Absolute zero, 0 Kelvin, -459.67° Fahrenheit, or -273.15° Celsius, is the minimum possible temperature: the state in which all motion of the particles in a substance has minimum motion. Equivalently, when the entropy of a substance has been reduced to zero, the substance is at absolute zero. Although the third law of thermodynamics declares that it is impossible to cool a substance …

4 minute read

Abyssal Plain

Abyssal plains are the vast, flat, sediment-covered areas of the deep ocean floor. They are the flattest, most featureless areas on the Earth, and have a slope of less than one foot of elevation difference for each thousand feet of distance. The lack of features is due to a thick blanket of sediment that covers most of the surface. These flat abyssal plains occur at depths of over 6,500 ft (1,980 …

2 minute read

Accelerators - Linear Accelerators, Circular Accelerators, Cyclotron Modifications, Applications

The term accelerators most commonly refers to particle accelerators, devices for increasing the velocity of subatomic particles such as protons, electrons, and positrons. Particle accelerators were originally invented for the purpose of studying the basic structure of matter, although they later found a number of practical applications. Particle accelerators can be subdivided into two large sub-gr…

1 minute read

Accretion Disk

An accretion disk is an astronomical term that refers to the rapidly spiraling matter that is in the process of falling into an astronomical object. In principle, any star could have an accretion disk, but in practice, accretion disks are often associated with highly collapsed stars such as black holes or neutron stars. The matter that serves as the base of the accretion disk can be obtained when …

2 minute read

Acetic Acid

In the form of vinegar, acetic acid is one of the earliest chemical compounds known to and used by humans. It is mentioned in the Bible as a condiment and was used even earlier in the manufacture of white lead and the extraction of mercury metal from its ores. The first reasonably precise chemical description of the acid was provided by the German natural philosopher Johann Rudolf Glauber in about…

2 minute read

Acetone

Acetone is a colorless, flammable, and volatile liquid with a characteristic odor that can be detected at very low concentrations. It is used in consumer goods such as nail polish remover, model airplane glue, lacquers, and paints. Industrially, it is used mainly as a solvent and an ingredient to make other chemicals. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry's (IUPAC) systemati…

1 minute read

Acetylcholine

Acetylcholine is a highly active neurotransmitter acting as a chemical connection between nerves (neu rons). Acetylcholine diffuses across the narrow gap between nerve cells, known as the synapse and thus, plays an important role in connecting nerves to each other. By the early 1900s, scientists had a reasonably clear idea of the anatomy of the nervous system. They knew that individual nerve cells…

3 minute read

Acetylsalicylic Acid - History, Mechanism of action, Adverse affects

Acetylsalicylic acid, commonly known as aspirin, is the most popular therapeutic drug in the world. It is an analgesic (pain-killing), antipyretic (fever-reducing), and anti-inflammatory sold without a prescription as tablets, capsules, powders, or suppositories. The drug reduces pain and fever, is believed to decrease the risk of heart attacks and strokes, and may deter colon cancer and help prev…

5 minute read

Acne

Acne, also called acne vulgaris, is a chronic inflammation of the sebaceous glands embedded in the skin. These glands secrete sebum, an oily lubricant. Although it may occur at any age, acne is most frequently associated with the maturation of young adult males. Part of the normal maturation process involves the production of—or altered expression of—hormones. During adolescence, hor…

3 minute read

Acorn Worm

Acorn worms are fragile tube worms that live in sand or mud burrows in the intertidal areas of the world's oceans. Acorn worms are members of the phylum Hemichordata, which includes two classes—the Enteropneusta (acorn worms) and the Pterobranchia (pterobranchs). Acorn worms, also known as tongue worms, belong to one of four genera, Balanoglossus, Glossobalanus, Ptychodera, and Sacco…

1 minute read

Acoustics - Vibrations Of A String, Vibrations Of An Air Column, Sound Production In General, Transmission Of Sound - Production of sound

Acoustics is the science that deals with the production, transmission, and reception of sound. Sound may be produced when a material body vibrates; it is transmitted only when there is some material body, called the medium, that can carry the vibrations away from the producing body; it is received when a third material body, attached to some indicating device, is set into vibratory motion by that …

1 minute read

Action Potential

Action potentials are the electrical pulses that allow the transmission of information within nerves. An action potential represents a change in electrical potential from the resting potential of the neuronal cell membrane, and involves a series of electrical and underlying chemical changes that travel down the length of a neural cell (neuron). The neural impulse is created by the controlled devel…

6 minute read

Activated Complex

The term activated complex refers to the molecular compound or compounds that exist in the highest energy state, or activated stage, during a chemical reaction. An activated complex acts as an intermediary between the reactants and the products of the reaction. A chemical reaction is the reorganization of atoms of chemically compatible and chemically reactive molecular compounds, called reactants.…

1 minute read

Active Galactic Nuclei

Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are perhaps the most violently energetic objects in the universe. AGNs are located at the centers of some galaxies—perhaps most galaxies—and emit a tremendous amount of energy, sometimes on the order of trillion times the output of the Sun. An AGN may outshine all the stars in its galaxy by a factor of 100. The energy of a typical AGN is generated in a v…

4 minute read

Acupressure

Acupressure is an ancient method of improving a person's health by applying pressure to specific sites on the body. Acupressure is similar to acupuncture, but does not break the skin. Instead, the acupressure practitioner relies on pressure invoked by fingertip or knuckle to accomplish his purpose. Like acupuncture, acupressure recognizes certain pressure points located along meridians that…

1 minute read

Acupuncture

Acupuncture is an ancient method of therapy that originated in China more than 2,000 years ago. It consists of inserting solid, hair-thin needles through the skin at very specific sites to achieve a cure of a disease or to relieve pain. Although it is not part of conventional medical treatment in most of the Western world, a 1998 consensus statement released by the National Institutes of Health (N…

7 minute read

ADA (Adenosine Deaminase) Deficiency - Treatments for ADA deficiency

ADA deficiency is an inherited condition that occurs in fewer than one in 100,000 live births worldwide. Individuals with ADA deficiency inherit defective ADA genes and are unable to produce the enzyme adenosine deaminase in their cells. The ADA gene consists of a single 32 kb locus containing 12 exons and is located on the long arm of chromosome 20. The enzyme adenosine deaminase is needed to bre…

5 minute read

Adaptation

An adaptation is any developmental, behavioral, physiological, or anatomical change in an organism that gives that organism a better chance to survive and reproduce. The word "adaptation" also refers to the fitting of a whole species, over time, to function in its particular environment, and to those specific features of a species that make it better-adapted. Adaptations acquired by …

2 minute read

Addiction - Chemical Addictions, The Nonchemical Addictions, The Addict, Treatment Of Addiction - Addictions

Addiction is a compulsion to engage in unhealthy or detrimental behavior. Human beings can become addicted to many forms of behaviors such as gambling, overeating, sex, or reckless behavior, but the term "addiction" is most commonly used to refer to a physiological state of dependence caused by the habitual use of drugs, alcohol, or other substances. Addiction is characterized by unc…

1 minute read

Adenosine Triphosphate

Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is often described as the body's "energy currency"—energy-producing metabolic ADP is formed during cellular respiration with energy released by the breakdown of glucose molecules. Illustration by Hans & Cassidy. Courtesy of Gale Group. reactions store their energy in the form of ATP, which can then drive energy-requiring synth…

2 minute read

Adhesive - Types Of Adhesive Bonding, Bonding Metals, Bonding Plastics, Bonding Wood - Bonding applications, Fabric and paper bonding

Adhesives bond two or more materials at their surface, and may be classified as structural or nonstructural. Structural adhesives can support heavy loads, while nonstructural adhesives cannot. Most adhesives exist in liquid, paste, or granular form, although film and fabric-backed tape varieties are also commercially available. Adhesives have been used since ancient times. The first adhesives were…

3 minute read

Adrenals

The adrenal glands are a pair of endocrine glands that sit atop the kidneys and that release their hormones directly into the bloodstream. The adrenals are flattened, somewhat triangular bodies that, like other endocrine glands, receive a rich blood supply. The phrenic (from the diaphragm) and renal (from the kidney) arteries send many small branches to the adrenals, while a single large adrenal v…

6 minute read