Joan's Blog

January 30, 2012:

Group of Kids | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/people/wwworks/

They say we learn everything we really need to know in life while we are in kindergarten, things like sharing, working with others, taking turns. Well, now scientists at the University of Montreal and CHU Sainte-Justine found that how attentive kids are in kindergarten is a good predictor of how good an employee they will be when they are adults.

According to researcher Linda Pagani, children who work well with their classmates, who have good self-control, who know how to follow directions while they are in kindergarten are more likely to have the skills they need to succeed in the workplace.

So why is this important? Well, if teachers can identify those kids who don't show those skills early on, they can target more help to teach the students what they need to succeed later on. The sad question for researcher now is to find out if you don't learn those skills in kindergarten, are you in for problems as an adult?

It isn't a skill you learn in kindergarten, but scratching is certainly something we can enjoy. You know, when you have an itch and you get to scratch it, it can be bliss, or maybe not. How much bliss we get depends upon where the itch is.

Researchers at wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, NC reports the scratching an itch on your ankle feels better than do the same on your arm. Scientists are trying to understand how and why we itch in hopes of finding better ways to treat it.

Dr. Gil Yosipovitch and his team stroked the skin of 18 volunteers with the tiny hairs of a cowhage plant, a tropical plant. The scientists stoked the volunteers' ankles, forearms and backs. The volunteers then rated how itchy the sensation was and how good it felt to scratch it. It turned out the itching was the strongest on the back and ankle and the scratching relief was the least on the forearm. The scientists think the differences may have something to do with the way the sensory nerves are distributed throughout the body. You can read more about the itching study here and the kindergarten study here.

http://www.livescience.com/18202-itch-location-pleasure.html

http://www.livescience.com/18197-kindergarten-employee.html

Next week, we will let you know if the groundhog saw his shadow on Thursday. Happy Groundhogs Day!

January 23, 2012:

Clothes Line | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/people/pussnboots/One of my weekend chores is to wash clothes. You or your parents probably do the same thing. But washing clothes may someday soon be as easy as leaving your clothes out in the sun for a while.

The website, Kids Science News, reports that scientists are working on self-cleaning clothes. They have treated cotton fabric with a special chemical mixture that can dissolve stains and remove odors after just a few hours in the sun.

Just think how much water, energy and soap we would all save if we could just hang our dirty clothes up on a clothesline and let the sun do all the work.

The scientists have developed the fabric but they can't start selling it yet. They still need to test whether all the chemicals they put on the fabrics are safe for people's skin. So until they perfect their invention, you and I still need to do our laundry.

You can read more about self-cleaning clothes here.

Another fun study popped up on the BBC this week. Researchers in England interviewed 2000 parents with children between five and sixteen and found that two-thirds of parents have trouble answer kids' science questions. One fourth of the parents thought their kids knew more than they did about science and math than they did. Only one third of the parents did any research to answer their child's questions and worse about 20% either made up an answer or pretended an answer didn't exist.

So, next time you have a science question, maybe you AND your parents should check out the D4K facts and links to find out the answer.

Here is a list of the top questions that stumped the parents…

  • Why is the Moon sometimes out in the day?
  • Why is the sky blue?
  • Will we ever discover aliens?
  • How much does the earth weigh?
  • How do airplanes stay up?

You can find the answers to these questions here on the D4K website. And you will find our newest broadcast show where we answered questions about geology. Check it out here.

Oh, just in case you or your parents don't know…

  • The Moon is lit by the Sun. So when its orbit brings it to the right place, we can see it.
  • Light bounces off molecules in the air and some colors of light travel through air and dust better than others. Blue light gets bounced around the most. So we see a blue color.
  • Nobody knows the answer to this question but as technology advances, who knows what we will discover.
  • The earth technically weighs nothing, because it's falling around the sun.
  • The upward lift of a plane is created by its curved wings. The way air flows over and under the wing allows a plane to lift. Planes stay up as they have more upward lift than the downward pull of gravity.

You can read the entire article about the BBC study here. Have a great week!

January 09, 2012:

Formation of a blackholeHappy New Year! I am back from vacation and, as promised, present to you my 10 favorite science stories of 2011. They aren't numbered in any particular order. Some are very serious. Some are funny. I just want to remind you that science plays a very important part in all aspects of our lives. I have collected ideas from a number of magazines and other web sites. If you want to read more, check out the links below my list.

Number 10: IBM's "Watson" computer wins in Jeopardy- This story was important because it showed a major advancement in computers' artificial intelligence. It opens up new possibilities in remote health care and lots of other applications.

Number 9: Alien DNA found on Earth- Michio Kaku's list on ABC News had this story. All of the DNA on Earth is basically the same, just rearranged differently for different living things. But scientists found DNA in Mono Lake in California that had never been seen before. Arsenic, something poisonous to us, was one of this DNA's building blocks. Some scientists say this was just a mistake, but if it this find proves to be true, scientists will have to redefine what "life" is.

Number 8: No longer the first bird- In 1861, scientists found what they thought was the world's first bird, the archaeopteryx. But scientists in China have now linked it to a line of dinosaurs. Archaeopteryx had feathered wings but had the teeth and tail of a dinosaur. It was quite the sensation in the 1860's. As Paul Barrett a dinosaur researcher said, "Maybe Archaeopteryx wasn't on the direct ancestral line to birds but was part of an early experimentation in how to build a bird."

Number 7: End of an era- The Space Shuttle program came to an end in 2011. I will miss the cool video of the shuttle taking off and landing and the excuse to call on one of my favorite space shuttle specialist-Barbara Morgan.

Number 6: Blue lobster and we are not talking sad?- The biggest story for the Natural History Museum in London was the discovery of a striking blue live lobster.

Number 5: Menu for a black hole- Scientists actually got a picture of a black hole devouring a star. It is one of the most amazing pictures seen in 2011. Usually it is over in a flash, but this episode lasted long enough to get a good photo. Scientists say we may never see another shot like this again in our lifetimes.

Number 4: Faster than the speed of light- I was taught nothing could go faster than the speed of light, but maybe something can. This year, physicists in Geneva, Switzerland clocks some neutrinos exceeding the speed of light by 60 billionths of a second. That doesn't sound like much, but if true, and a second experiment confirmed it, it could cause a major shakeup in the science of physics.

Number 3: Kepler 22-b, Earth's twin?- Scientists discovered a planet orbiting around a sun 600 light years away that is the closest thing to another Earth as they have ever found. Kepler 22-b is about twice as big as Earth but it lies in the "Goldilocks zone," so Kepler is neither too hot nor too cold. Astronomers even think there may be water there. So, is their life there? That is a question yet to be answered.

Number 2: Japan's earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis- This major natural disaster taught us a lot about earthquakes and tsunamis and what we need to do to protect lives and property. We all learned more about nuclear power plants and hopefully, what we've learned will improve future plants.

Number 1: Wacky weather- Goodness, 2011 had some pretty crazy weather! Things like huge tornadoes, record heat, massive fires, and no snow. Global warming is one of the biggest threats to the Earth and to all of us.

For some "Top 10" lists, check out these links: Scientific American

Michip Kaku's (ABC News) Top 10 Science stories

The Guardian's Top 10 list

Popular Science

Natural History Museum in London

Discover magazine

So that's my list for 2011, let's see what is up for 2012. And while you are at it, be sure to send in your questions for our next upcoming live broadcast show. We are talking about geology! Email here and tune in January 17th at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac here on the Web site or on Idaho Public Television.

December 20, 2011:

While you may be thinking about all the great food you will eat this season, some scientists are thinking about maggots.

Maggots, the larva of a fly, the ones that you find on rotting, dead animals, play an important role in breaking down things like dead animals. It also turns out that they may be used in a quick way to clean wounds.

Some wounds are very difficult to heal. Doctors in France decided to try using maggots on these wounds. The men in the study were divided into two groups. One group had maggots used to remove dead and unhealthy tissue and one group underwent surgery.

After a week, the men who received maggot therapy had less dead tissue in their wounds than the men who underwent surgery. After two weeks, the maggots had lost their steam and there was no major difference between the two groups.

Still doctors thought there would be advantages to using maggots if you need a quick burst of healing. Scientists plan to do more tests to see if they could improve maggot therapy if they used more maggots and they want to know if increasing the number of critters would be more painful. Read more about the maggot study here.

I hope you all have a wonderful holiday season and a very exciting New Year. I am off next week, so I will be back January 2nd. I hope to list the top science stories of the year then, so stay tuned!

December 12, 2011:

Rat | Credit:  Image @Science/AAASHow do birds and planes fly? Find out tomorrow, Tuesday, December 13th. Our newest broadcast D4K show airs at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac. You can watch it on Idaho Public Television, on the live streaming here on the Web site, or you can watch the archived video stream afterwards. Send in your questions here.

I have two science stories of note for the week. Researchers have discovered that if you are an NBA player, you probably shouldn't go for that second 3-point shot. Dr. Yonatoan Loewenstein and Tai Neiman at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem studied more than 200,000 attempted shots from 291 leading players in the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the 2007-2008 and the 2008-2009 regular season.

They found that after a successful three-pointer, player were much more likely to take another three-point shot and were more likely to miss. Oddly, players who missed a three-point shot were more likely to score on their next attempt. So the success of one shot does not mean the odds improve for the next attempt. Learn more about it on the EurekAlert Web site.

That same Web site had another fun story. It turns out rats have honor. Inbal Ben-Ami Bartal of the University of Chicago wanted to see if rats had empathy. Empathy is the ability to understand the thoughts or feelings of someone else. Some primates have empathy, but many other animals don't.

The scientists trained rats to open a trap. They then put another rat in the trap and waited to see what the trained rat would do. It turns out that rats will help release their fellow cagemates, even when the rescuing rat receives no reward or treat. The rats didn't bother to open traps that were empty or had other objects in them. The scientists say that the fact that the rats were able to understand that their cagemates were upset about being in a trap AND were able to stay calm enough to open the trap shows rats have empathy. Rats, it turns out, also share. When the free rats were given access to a handful of chocolate chips, they first saved their trapped cagemates and then shared the chocolate with them.

I hope you have a friend with whom you can share some chocolate today! Enjoy your week and be sure to send in your questions for our flight show!

December 05, 2011:

The Kepler SystemDo you know someone who really likes to sleep in? Are you someone who would sleep well past the school bell if given a choice? Well, next time you oversleep and get to school late, you can try this excuse… your genes made you do it. Experts who studied more than 10,000 people across Europe found that people with the gene ABCC9 need about 30 minutes more sleep per night than those who don't have the gene. This gene is involved in how the cells in the body sense energy levels. Those people who have this gene need more than eight hours of sleep. Scientists say one in five Europeans have the gene. People need different amounts of sleep. According the article on this study from the BBC, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-15999489, former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher needed only about four hours of sleep a night while physicist Albert Einstein needed 11 hours of sleep a night. Scientists study how people sleep and how much sleep they need to learn how to help people who are having problems sleeping.

The BBC is also reporting that astronomers have confirmed the existence of an Earth-like planet about 600 light years away. Kepler 22-b is about 2.4 times the size of the earth and has a temperature of about 22C.

Kepler 22-b is in what scientists call the "goldilocks zone," an area in space close enough to a star but not too close. Learn more about exoplanets like Kepler 22-b on our exoplanet site or read more about this particular discovery here.

Our next broadcast show is a week early this month, December 13th. We moved it from our regular slot because of the school holidays. We will be answering your questions about flight, so send in your email today!

November 28, 2011:

Skeleton of a Giant BeaverLots of animals use sound to communicate. We talk. Birds sing. And now, paleontologist Caroline Rinaldi has discovered the ancient giant beavers made a very unusual sound.

These giant beavers vanished from North America about 10,000 years ago. They weighed more than 100 pounds and were the size of a black bear. Rinaldi was studying the giant beavers skull and found a long compartment that stretched from the front to the back. She believes that giant beavers would have sucked in air into the chamber and produced a loud sound. Rinaldi demonstrated the sound at a meeting of scientists. She held a model of a giant beaver's skill and blew into a tube. A plastic model of the giant beaver's skull reveals its hidden chamber. Scientists recently discovered the passageway makes a sound when air passes through it. Credit: Susan Milius The sound was described as "bleating." Why did they make these sounds? Scientists don't know and they can't study current day beavers. Modern beavers don't have the same odd chamber in their skull.

If you want to learn more about giant beavers, check out this article on the Science News for Kids Web site: http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/2011/11/the-secret-songs-of-giant-beavers/ One other fact of note from this article, the giant beaver would not have been the largest rodent running around 10,000 years ago. Larry Flynn, who studies ancient rodents at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University, says the giant beaver looked "puny" when compared to other large rodents alive at the time. Makes you think, huh? Giant bleating beavers that were puny compared to other rodents.

Have a great week!

November 21, 2011:

High Rez Moon MapNASA has released a photo that gives us a new way to look at the Moon. Check it out!

This map of the Moon is the sharpest ever elevation map of the Moon. The map shows troughs and bumps over most of the Moon's surface. Dr. Mark Robinson from Arizona State University says scientists can now figure out the slopes on the Moon's surface, figure out how the Moon's crust was deformed and better understand the Moon's volcanic features. Scientist can use all this information to better plan any future human or robotic missions to the Moon.

Scientists created the pictures from data that came from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft. Learn more about the photo and the LRO spacecraft here.

And why do I bring up the Moon today? Well, last week was our latest broadcast show and we answered questions about, you guessed it…the Moon! Check out the show, Web-only, the video short and all the facts, links, etc about the Moon here.

And for your Thanksgiving pleasure, here are five interesting facts about turkeys…

  1. Wild turkeys like to sleep in trees.
  2. Only male turkey gobble. Female turkeys cluck and chirp.
  3. Wild turkeys can fly up to 55 miles per hour (for short bursts).
  4. When frightened or excited, turkey blush. Their exposed skin on their heads and necks change from a pale pink or gray to red, white or blue.
  5. It isn't just the turkey meat that makes you sleepy after a big Thanksgiving meal. Turkey, like all meat, contains tryptophan, an amino acid that the body uses to make serotonin, a chemical in the brain that regulates sleep. When you combine turkey with all those carbohydrates (like stuffing, potatoes bread, pie and other sugary sweets), your body produces more insulin. That creates a chemical reaction in your blood that makes it easier for the tryptophan to get to your brain and make you sleepy. It is nothing to worry about, just the end result of a big, traditional Thanksgiving meal.
  6. If you want to learn more turkey facts, check out the list on Livescience and have a wonderful Thanksgiving!!

    November 07, 2011:

    funny eye glassesI know the weather where I live is getting colder and we had some snow this weekend, but I made it a point to get outside for a hike, even though it was chilly. Why? Well, spending time out-of-doors makes me feel better and it is better for you. You need to spend some time in nature to be healthy. And, as a new report suggests, spending time outdoors may help your eyesight.

    Researchers at the University of Cambridge found that for each additional hour spent outdoors each week, the risk of myopia is reduced by 2%. Myopia is the medical term for being shortsighted. Shortsighted means you can see things close up, but things far away are blurry. Scientists aren't sure why, but they think exposure to natural light and spending time looking at far off objects helps your eyes.

    According to the research by Dr. Justin Sherwin and his team, shortsighted children also spent about 3.7 hours less out-of-doors each week than children who aren't shortsighted. They aren't sure why and are doing more research.

    Now, if you are shortsighted, you aren't alone. In some parts of Asia, 80% of the population are shortsighted and it is much more common in the United States than it was 30 to 40 years ago. Still, just because it is common, doesn't mean you shouldn't do something about it. There are lots of good reasons to walk away from the TV and computer screen and pick up a Frisbee, grab a friend and go outside and play. If you want to learn more about this eye research, check out this article from the BBC.

    We are coming up on our next broadcast show next Tuesday, November 15th. We will be answering your questions about the Moon. Send in your questions here or plan to call in live. The show airs on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac on November 15, 2011, or you can watch the live stream here or watch the archived version of the live show, the Web-only show or the video short afterwards.

    So, get outside. Look up at the Moon and send me a question!

    October 31, 2011:

    Halloween CardHappy Halloween! This holiday has lots of traditions and lots of myths. So, instead of science news, let's look at a few of these spooky tidbits.

    • It is bad luck for a black cat to cross your path. MYTH!

    Poor black cats! Ever since the Dark Ages, black cats have been accused of bringing bad luck. Witches were thought to have used black cats as their "familiars" or that Satan turned himself into a black cat. So black cats and witches are seen as a frequent Halloween decoration. But there is no evidence that black cats are bad luck and, in fact, in Ireland, Scotland and England, it is considered good luck for a black cat to cross your path. So, be nice to cats, black or white or whatever.

    • The first Jack-O'-Lanterns were made out of turnips. TRUE!

    The Jack-O'-Lantern comes out of a Celtic tradition. The ancient Celts would care a lantern out of turnips and placed them on the street to help guide lost souls home when they wander on "All Hallows Eve." When large numbers of Irish families came to America in the 1800's, they brought this tradition with them. But since turnips were harder to find here, they used pumpkins as a substitute, hence today's Jack-O'-Lanterns were born.

    • Dressing up for Halloween and trick-or-treating are a fairly recent idea. FALSE!

    People have long thought that ghosts roamed the earth at Halloween. So they would dress up as a ghoul or ghost so as to trick the evil spirits into thinking you were one of them and therefore, the evil spirits would leave you alone. So Irish immigrants brought this tradition of dressing up with them in the early 1900's. Kids dressing up like we do today started in the late 1950's.

    The idea of giving candy comes out of another superstition. People thought that visiting ghosts would disguise themselves and knock on your door asking for money or food. If you turned them away empty-handed, then the evil spirit would curse or haunt you. So, when those ghosts and ghouls come to your door tonight, give them a treat and avoid the trick!

    My thanks to the folks at LiveScience for their help today. Read more about Halloween superstitions and traditions here.

    Have a great week and remember to brush your teeth. Dentists say eating candy on Halloween is okay, but remember to brush! And remember, chocolate is good for you!!! That's not scary at all.

    October 24, 2011:

    BrainsDo you get smarter as you get older? You certainly gain more experience but does your IQ go up? IQ stands for intelligence quotient and it is a test for your "relative intelligence" as determined by a standardized test. Most students have their IQ tested in grade school and until recently, scientists thought your IQ remained pretty much the same your whole life.

    But in a finding published in the journal Nature, Professor Cathy Price of the Wellcome Trust Center for Neuroimaging at University College, London and her team suggest that your IQ can change in your teen years.

    She and her team studied 19 boys and 14 girls. In 2004, they ran the kids, who were about 14-years-old at the time, through a combination of brain scans and verbal and non-verbal IQ tests. They repeated the tests when the students turned about 18 in 2008. They found that 39% of the teens showed an increase in their verbal IQ and 21% had a change in their spatial reasoning. They found that that increase in their IQ went along with an increase in parts of their brains.

    Why is this finding important? Well, kids get their IQ tested early in their lives and that score can kind of set their level of expectation. If a student gets a lower score, he/she might be put in remedial classes and not expected to do well. If he/she gets a higher score, he/she might get placed in a more challenging class. This study suggests that student can improve so educators need to be careful. As Professor Price said, "We have to be careful not to write off poorer performers at an early age when in fact their IQ may improve significantly given a few more years." You can read more about this study at the BBC's.

    October 17, 2011:

    Bone in the Hand It is almost Halloween and you are seeing skeletons everywhere. They may seem scary, but if you didn't have a skeleton you couldn't live. Our next broadcast show is all about skeletons and airs this week. So send in your questions now! The show airs at 2:00pm/1:00pm Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television or you can watch it here on the live streaming. Going to miss it? You can watch the archive version here on the site anytime afterwards.

    Taking care of your skeleton is one way to live a long life, so may be eating herring. But according to scientists studying the world's oldest human being, living a long time starts with having the right genes.

    Dutch researchers at the VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam studied the body of Hendrikje van Andel-Schipper. She died in 2004 at 115. She left her body to science so researchers could figure out why she lived so long and with all her mental capacity. According to an article on LiveScience, researchers looked at the woman's genes and discovered a group known to help prevent circulatory diseases, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. They are still studying her genes and hope that someday they may be able to find some way to help the rest of us live so long and so well. Could you live that long? Do you have to eat small fish every day like Andel-Schipper? Scientists are still studying it but they say one person in a billion may have that unique gene combination needed to live such a long life. And while it won't guarantee you will live to be 100, eating fish is a good idea too.

    Be sure to check out the skeleton web site and send in your questions.

    October 11, 2011:

    eLegsIf you are lucky enough to be walking around today, you can thank your bones. Our next D4K live broadcast show is Tuesday, October 18th is all about bones and we will be taking your questions. Send in a question about your skeleton today.

    The skeleton was in the science news recently. Actually, it is an exoskeleton that will allow paralyzed people to walk again. Some animals have their skeleton on the outside of their body. Humans have them on the inside. But scientists at Duke University are working a full body suit that a paralyzed person could wear and would help him/her to walk. They are working on a system that allows electrical messages from the brain to "tell" the suit to move. Those messages don't travel from the brain to the leg muscles in people with certain spinal cord injuries. If the scientists can find a way to send those brain signals, they can use technology to help those people walk again. Other suits have been developed to help paralyzed people move, but they use external computers to do the moving. One example is the eLEGS suit. The work at Duke University could make the suits more responsive. The scientists have set a goal for their work. They want to send a young quadriplegic striding out to midfield to open the 2014 World Cup. I wish them all the best luck! Read more about the work at Duke in this article form the Los Angeles Times and more about eLEGS in this blog from Discover magazine.

    October 05, 2011:

    Gravity

    Welcome October! This month's new broadcast show will be all about skeletons, that is the skeleton that is inside you. Send us a question about bones. The show airs Tuesday, October 18 at 2:00pm/1:00pm Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television and streamed live here on the web site.

    This photo came to my attention awhile back. It is so cool I thought I would share it with you. It comes from NASA and shows the effect of gravity on the Earth. Apparently gravity is not the same everywhere. This map show exaggerated highs and lows where the Earth's gravitation field is strong or weak. There is a low spot of the coast of India and a high spot in South Pacific Ocean. Scientists aren't sure why gravity changes across the Earth. It isn't based on the surface features of the land. According to NASA, scientists guess it may be due to structures deep under the ground. If you want to learn more about gravity, check out the gravity web site here.

    If you want to see NASA's Astronomy picture of the day, check out this link: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html

    Have a good week!

    September 27, 2011:

    Glowing CatGlow-in-the-dark cats and a new D4K broadcast show…just some of the science news I missed while I was out of the office. Sorry my blog is a bit behind the times, but here goes an update.

    Researchers at the Mayo Clinic have found a way to pass along a protective gene that fights AIDS, but it means the cats involved in the study glow in the dark. Researcher were studying feline immunodeficiency virus, a disease in cats similar to AIDS in humans. They inserted a gene into cats from a rhesus macaque. That rhesus gene to is known to fight the feline disease. But would they how to know if the new gene is taking hold in the cat? So researchers came up with an idea, inserted a glowing gene from a jellyfish along with the rhesus gene. The idea was that if one gene showed up, it meant the other gene was there too. Also, they could see if the genes were handed down from cat to her kittens. The experiment was a success. See for yourself! The cat glows green in the dark. Scientists eventually hope to learn how to use this use gene therapy to cure AIDS. Learn more in this article from the Washington Post.

    You can also learn more about sports physiology and see it in a new way. Check out the D4K Sport Physiology page! You can watch the 30-minute show on the new style front page. Just click and go. You can still watch the Web Only show and the video short on the Video page. We hope to eventually offer the ability to watch all of the video on a topic off of the front page. Let me know what you think of this new service.

    September 13, 2011:

    CaillouNext Tuesday, we begin our 13th season of D4K! We are taking your questions about sports physiology. Be sure to check out the news season's topics. Play a few new games. Pick up a new book to read and be sure to send in your question so you and your class will be eligible for prizes for your classroom.

    My favorite science news of the week deals with something that lives in a pineapple under the sea and a kid with an unusual name. According to the Associated Press, just watching nine minutes of "SpongeBob SquarePants" can cause short-term attention and learning problems in 4-year-olds. Researchers from the University of Virginia divided 60 4-year-olds into three groups. One group watched "SpongeBob," one group watched the PBS show "Caillou" and the third group colored pictures. After watching nine minutes, the kids took mental function tests. It turns out that the kids who watched SpongeBob scored an average of 12 points lower than the kids who watched "Caillou" or who colored pictures. In another test, the kids who watched "SpongeBob" were less able to wait for a treat, scoring lower on measures for self-control and impulsiveness. So what does this mean? University of Virginia psychology Professor Angeline Lillard said it shows fast-paced television programming (not just "SpongeBob) can have an impact on young children's attention span and that the problem can happen after very little exposure. In other words, not only do what young kids what matter, but also how much they watch.

    The folks from Nickelodeon say the study was too small and reminds folks that "SpongeBob" is aimed at kids 6-11 years of age. Now, I like "SpongeBob but I think this study shows it is a good idea for the parents of very young kids to limit their youngsters TV time and chose what they watch carefully. If you are the big brother or sister, you too may want to be careful about what you let your younger sibling watch.

    Now I haven't done any studies to prove it, but I think D4K is good for all ages, so check it out!

    Send your tweets or emails in for next week's show right away!

    August 30, 2011:

    planetWhen you think of a planet, you probably don't think of it as being made of a diamond, but that is just what astronomers have found. According to Reuters news service, scientists have found a planet made of carbon. Scientists say the planet is so dense that it must be crystalline, which means a good part of it is made of diamond.

    The planet is about 4,000 light years away and has slightly more mass than Jupiter. Scientists aren't sure what the surface of the planet actually looks like. I'd like to imagine something shiny like a diamond ring, but that seems unlikely.

    What is likely is that I will be continuing to eat chocolate. A new study of more than 100,000 people showed that those who eat chocolate on a regular basis reduce their relative risk for heart disease by one-third. Dr. Oscar H. Franco from the department of public health and primary care at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom and his colleagues found that people who at chocolate could cut their risk of heart disease by as much as 37% and their risk of stroke by 29%.

    Franco is unsure why eating chocolate is good for you. Chocolate contains flavonoids which have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-clotting effects and may relax blood vessels. It might also improve insulin sensitivity that could reduce your risk of diabetes.

    Now, chocolate has a lot of sugar and is high in calories, so you should eat it in moderation along with a diet full of fruits and vegetables. But if you like chocolate as much as I like chocolate, now you have another excuse to ask for another square. You can read more about this study here.
    Yum!

    We hope to have D4K's 13th season's Web site up this week. Check back soon!

    August 17, 2011:

    PlesiosaursWe are counting down to the launch of a new season for D4K with a whole bunch of new shows coming and more topics to explore. We have a great crew here who has been working all summer and it is now crunch time to get ready before school starts. Keep checking back for the big 2011-2012 season launch!

    The big science news this week is pretty big. Researchers report that a type of dinosaur may have given birth to a live baby rather than laying eggs. This is big because this is the only known fossil of this dinosaur mother and her unborn baby.

    According to a report by Daniela Hernandez in the Los Angeles Times, a fossil of a Plesiosaurs shows evidence of an unborn baby. Plesiosaurs were giant marine reptiles that lived in the oceans 75 million years ago. Scientists think that the Plesiosaurs must have spent a lot of energy taking care of these young and didn't have a lot of offspring at once, unlike animals like turtles and mice today. They also guess that Plesiosaurs may have lived in social groups to help protect their young, like whales and dolphins do today.

    When I was first in school, scientists thought dinosaurs laid eggs, didn't worry too much about their young and were related to reptiles. Then we discovered that some dinosaurs were really good parents and are more related to birds. With this discovery, we may someday find out the some dinosaurs were even more whale or mammal-like. Pretty amazing.

    August 01, 2011:

    Pointy HelmWe know that the signals that travel in the brain moves faster than we ourselves can move our bodies. Now scientists are trying to find a way to use those fast moving brain waves to make us safer drivers. Computer scientist Stefan Haufe of the Berlin Institute of Technology thinks someday you may use brain waves to run things like the brakes of your car.

    In research reported in the Journal of Neural Engineering, Haufe and his colleagues measured brain wave changes as participants drove in a car simulator. As the volunteers drove around at 60-miles-per-hour, a car in front of them would occasionally slam on its brakes. The volunteer would have to do the same or crash. The scientists found that, for most drivers, the lag time between the lead car stopping and the driver slamming on the brakes was about 700 milliseconds. But the researchers also found early indicators in brain waves in-between the time that the drivers wanted to brake and before their feet hit the pedals. They call these early indicators "neural signatures."

    So Haufe and his colleagues designed a system that could detect these neural signatures and send a message to the brake before the foot would move. Picking up brain waves speeded up braking response time by about 130 milliseconds. While that doesn't seem like much, when a car is traveling at 60 miles-per-hour, increasing the braking time shortened the car's stopping distance by about 3.7 meters or the length of a compact car. That could save lives.

    The downside? The system would incorrectly read brain waves a couple of times an hour. These false stops were really annoying. Also, it is unlikely drivers would always want to wear the uncomfortable and obtrusive EEG cap that reads brain waves. So, it may be awhile before you let just your brain drive you to school. On the other hand, you shouldn't drive without it either. ;) Read more about it in this article by Laura Sanders in ScienceNews.

    July 26, 2011:

    A bowl of chicken noodlesDo some foods remind you of home? I love my Mom's handmade chicken and noodles. Yum! Most all of us love what's called comfort food. It is the food we eat at family gatherings, special treats we eat at happy times. And, quite often, it is food higher in fat. It turns out that fatty foods may do more than remind us of happy times — the food might actually make us happy.

    Researcher Dr. Lukas Van Oudenhove reports that fatty foods cause emotional changes. Scientists took 12 volunteers and fed them either a solution with fatty acids or a saline solution through a feed tube. The volunteers didn't know if which solution they were getting. Then the researchers put the volunteers in a MRI machine, a machine that can track the brain's activity. The researchers then showed the volunteers sad and neutral music and facial expressions. When showed the sad material, the volunteers' mood fell, but the mood of those volunteers who were getting the fatty acids fell less.

    The scientists need to do more research to find out what it is about fatty foods that seems to comfort the brain so the person isn't quite so sad. They say it is important to find that link because a lot of people are "emotional eaters," that is they eat when they are unhappy. That can lead to obesity. If scientists can figure out that stomach-mind connection, they might help people lose weight. Read more about this study in an article by Randy Dotinga in HealthDay.

    Enjoy your week!

    July 18, 2011:

    Rear View of Endeavour's Landing | Photo by: Thomas Gardner | http://www.flickr.com/photos/undertow851/5813021065/Does your mother tell you to sit up straight? Well maybe you should listen. It might make things hurt less. Researchers at the University of Southern California and the University of Toronto report that poor posture not only leaves a bad impression, but it can also make you physically weaker.

    In a study published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, the scientists found that sitting up straight made people feel more powerful and were able to tolerate more pain. If you are in pain, they suggest you not roll up into a ball. Standing up straight and pushing out your chest gives you a sense of control and makes the pain seem like it hurts less. If your pain is more emotional than physical (somebody hurts your feelings), the scientists suggest sitting up straight or standing tall. Apparently it can make remembering that distressing memory less painful. Good posture, it seems, is not only good for your back, it is also good for your soul.

    This week marks the end of a major event in space science: the end of the Space Shuttle program. The US shuttle Atlantis is expected to land on Thursday morning in Florida ending NASA's 30-year re-usable space plane program. You can track Atlantis' progress at the NASA site here.

    This week, I will be talking with science teachers at the ISTEM conference at the College of Southern Idaho. Stop by and say hi!

    July 11, 2011:

    Look!  It's Winslo the bunny!I've got lots of short science news this week to pass on to you this week.

    First, this is Winslo. He is my pet bunny. He has popped up in a few D4K shows the past couple of years (Check out the CSI video short). Why do I mention him up today? Well, it is because Winslo make me better.

    Scientists report that pet owners are happier and healthier. Past studies have shown that people who are sick benefit from having a pet, but now even healthy people can improve their quality of life by adopting an animal.

    Researcher Allen McConnell of Miami University in Ohio surveyed 217 people to determine the difference in well being between pet owners and nonowners. They found that pet owners were happier, healthier and better adjusted. They even found that writing about your pet could lessen feelings of being excluded. Pets are good for you!

    While bees are not really pets, they do make your life better too. Bees are key pollinators and pollination is vital in the food growing process. Without bees, our food supply is in jeopardy. So, scientists are asking for your help to learn more about the health of bees where you live.

    San Francisco State University scientist Gretchen LeBuhn leads more than 100,000 citizen scientists in this project. Each individual participant planted a sunflower and makes two 15-minute observations each month. They count the number of times a bee lands on their sunflower and then they report that count on LeBuhn's website. She is asking everyone make a big effort to report the number of bees on July 16th, the "Great Bee Count Day." Scientists can learn a lot about the health of bees by tracking where they are and where they are not. If you are interesting in becoming a bee tracker, check out the Great Sunflower Project.

    If tracking bees isn't your thing, how about tracking the Space Shuttle? Check out the Space Shuttle tracker on this BBC site. You can see the position of the Space Shuttle, the International Space Station and the Hubble Space Telescope as they orbit the Earth. Cool!

    July 5, 2011:

    Shuttle Awaiting Launch | Creative commons: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jurvetson/1050733503/ by Steve JurvetsonThis week marks the last flight for NASA's Space Shuttle. The countdown begins Tuesday at 1:00pm (EDT) and the Shuttle is supposed to lift off on Friday. Since 1998, more than 25 crews have flown into space on the Space Shuttle and have helped build the International Space Station. If you want to learn more about the Space Shuttle, take a tour with Idaho's own Barbara Morgan. Click here to join Barbara as she answers students' questions and shows us around the Shuttle.

    Visit NASA's website to learn more about this last space shuttle launch. The end of the Space Shuttle isn't the end of NASA. The U.S. Space agency begins a new focus on deep space exploration.

    As for other science news this week, you know, I am a big fan of getting enough sleep. I had to get up early this morning and am not happy about it. We already know that you need to get enough sleep to do well in school and to not gain weight, but now scientists tell us that athletes can improve their performance by getting enough sleep.

    Research published in the journal "Sleep" says sleeping longer can improve physical performance. Scientist asked the Stanford men's basketball team to sleep for 10 hours a night for six weeks. The basketball players gave up caffeine and took naps during the day if their travel schedule prevented them from getting 10 hours at night. By the end of the study, the scientists and athletes were surprised. The extra sleep helped improve their shooting accuracy by 9%! The players were able to run faster and were playing better overall. This study suggests that if they want to be at their best, they need that shut-eye!

    Oh, just so you know, you can't skip on sleep and then get 10 hours of sleep just before the big game to get the benefit. You have to do it for several nights, even weeks before to make it work. Scientists say athletes should rank sleep as important as training and exercise to improve their game. The first suggestion is just start good sleep habits like going to bed at about the same time and getting up at about the same time. And if you want to play in the big leagues, try for those 10 hours of sleep. Read more about this study in this BBC news article.

    Have a great week!

    June 28, 2011:

    Fields of Science | Creative commons: http://www.flickr.com/photos/11304375@N07/2769519295/ by Image EditorAre girls less interested in science and math than boys? Not true!! There are lots of myths about girls and science and math. Here are a few.

    • Efforts to increase girls' interest in science risks turning off the interest of the boys in the class. Not True!! It turns out that educators who work to increase girls' interest in science also increase boys' interest in science.

    • Science and math teachers are no longer biased toward boy students. Sadly, Not True!!
      Research shows that many teachers still favor boys when teaching math and science, sending the message that girls are not as good as boys in math and science. Good math and science teachers need to deliberately take steps to make sure that girls and boys are treated equally.

    • When girls are not interested in science, there is not much parents can't do about it. Not True!! Parents can make a big difference when encouraging their daughters to pursue their interest in math and science and encouraging them when their interest lags.

    • Being good in math and science is something you are born with. Not True!! Research shows that some people are naturally better in math and science, but scientists also know that if you work hard and really stick with it, you too can be "good" in math or science, maybe even better than that naturally gifted student. Keeping at it and not giving up is a pretty good indicator of being a good scientist. You can learn more about girls and math and science in this article at LiveScience.

    June 20, 2011:

    Jules Verne re-entry in 2008.
    When I have garbage, I just dump it in the trash bin. But what do the folks at the International Space Station do? Well, this week, the astronauts will do their own version of "taking out the trash" and do it in the name of science.

    Late on Tuesday, Europe's space freighter, ATV-Johannes Kepler, is due to be jettisoned from the International Space Station. The freighter took up more than seven tons of fuel and other supplies and now has been stuffed with trash for its final, explosive return to Earth.

    The unmanned freighter and all its contents will fall toward Earth and will burn up as it enters the Earth's atmosphere. Scientists will film the freighter's re-entry and watch how things burn up. They are trying to understand the re-entry physics of spacecrafts. They hope this will help them learn how to build better heat shields and ways of protecting spacecrafts. They also want to learn what might survive the incredible heat of re-entry and how the objects will fall to earth. That will help scientists better predict fall patterns for other things that cross Earth's path.

    And where will the freighter fall? Scientists expect it to come down over an uninhabited part of the Pacific Ocean. Most of the freighter and the trash it carries will burn up in a huge fireball as it goes through the atmosphere, but there is a chance fragments will survive. So they have warned ships and planes to steer clear of the area just in case.

    Here is a link to an article about the experiment from the BBC. There is a short video of a previous freighter re-entry. That would give you an idea what this fireball will look like.

    And while you are thinking about the Earth and space, remember the Summer Solstice hits June 21st at 11:16 a.m. MDT. The Summer Solstice, for us in the Northern hemisphere, is the longest day and the shortest night of the year. This happens because the Earth is tilted on its axis as it moves around the Sun. As the Earth reaches this point in its orbit, the Northern hemisphere tilts toward the Sun. The Summer Solstice hits when the Earth's tilt is at its closest point to the Sun. After that, the Earth slowly starts to tilt away and the days will start getting shorter. Eventually, the Earth will get to the point in its orbit where the Northern hemisphere is tilted at the farther point away from the Sun. That point is known as the Winter Solstice, the shortest day of the year. It will happen on December 22, 2012.

    The Summer Solstice marks a great holiday, especially in ancient times. The Celts celebrated the first day of summer with dancing and bonfires and the Chinese marked the day by honoring Li, the Chinese Goddess of Light. Today, folks gather at spots like Stonehenge in England and celebrate as the ancient Druids once did. So I suggest you celebrate the Summer Solstice by going outside and enjoying the sunshine!

    June 13, 2011:

    Crop Dusting | Creative commons: http://www.flickr.com/photos/40769152@N00/2697444722/ by Jon Schladen
    An apple a day may keep the doctor away, but I think it is more important to wash that apple before eating it. In a report published this week, the apple topped the list of produce contaminated with the most pesticides. Pesticides are chemical farmers put on their produce to protect the crops from bugs or to help the product last longer.

    But pesticides can make people sick. Scientists are divided on how much pesticide exposure is okay. They don't know the long-term effects of small amounts of pesticide. It is something scientists are still studying, but regardless, it is important to be aware of what you are eating.

    Scientists at the Environmental Working Group tested a wide variety of produce and came up with their list of the most pesticide-contaminated list. Apples came out on top. 92% of apples had two or more pesticides. Onions had the least amount of contamination.

    Now, this is not an excuse not to eat your fruits and vegetables. The health benefits are too important to cross things like apples off your list, but there are some things you can do to reduce your exposure to pesticides. Buy organic fruits and vegetables. Organic fruits and vegetables are supposed to me grown without pesticides. You should also wash any fruits and vegetables you buy before you eat or cook them. After rinsing them with tap water, spray or soak them in a solution of one percent dish liquid and water. Finally rinse the produce under tap water to get rid of any traces of the dish liquid. If you want to learn more about this report, here is a link to the article in USA Today.

    For your information, here is the list of the most and least pesticide contaminated produce:

    The Most Contaminated
    1. Apples
    2. Celery
    3. Strawberries
    4. Peaches
    5. Spinach
    6. Nectarines (imported)
    7. Grapes (imported)
    8. Sweet bell peppers
    9. Potatoes
    10. Blueberries
    11. Lettuce
    12. Kale/Collard greens
    The Least Contaminated
    1. Onions
    2. Corn
    3. Pineapples
    4. Avocadoes
    5. Asparagus
    6. Sweet peas
    7. Mangoes
    8. Eggplant
    9. Cantaloupe (domestic)
    10. Kiwi
    11. Cabbage
    12. Watermelon
    13. Sweet potatoes
    14. Grapefruit
    15. Mushrooms

    June 06, 2011:

    Girls in front of math problems | Creative commons: http://www.flickr.com/photos/wwworks/3597217248/ by woodleywonderworksIf you have moved from second grade to third grade, congratulations. You won't just be changing classrooms. Your brain will change too. Neuroscientists, researcher who study the brain, report that recent third grade graduates use their brains in different ways than do second graders.

    Neuroscientist Vinod Menon of Stanford University and his colleagues asked 90 children, some who had just finished second grade and some who had just finished third grade, to do easy math problems (3+1=4) and hard math problems (8+5=13). While the students were doing the problems, the scientists were looking at the kids' brains with a functional MRI. This machine can see which parts of the brains are working as someone is doing a task.

    The team found that a third-grader's brain operates differently than a second grader's brain. Different parts of their brains were engaged when they did their math problems. Scientists aren't sure if this is just normal brain development, but they do think it has something to do with the math training third graders get in school. School, they say, changes the brain.

    So what does this mean? Well, they need to do more research, but scientists someday may be able to suggest the best ways of teaching math that match the brain development of each age group. If you want to learn more about this study, here is an article from the web site ScienceNews.

    We have another bout of rain and wind coming this week, but we are getting off easy compared to western explorers Lewis and Clark. Scientists think Lewis and Clark ran into one of the worst wind and rainstorms in the last two centuries. In November 1805, they wrote about a storm that blew down all the trees around them. Scientists today studied the rings in the wood of the area's Sitka spruce trees, one that had survived the 1805 storm and were still alive today. They have concluded that the storm Lewis and Clark described was one of the worst storms in the region for 200 years. You can learn more about other aspect of the science of Lewis and Clark here.

    Have a good week!

    May 23, 2011:

    Baby Snakes hatching from eggs.Hey, I'm back! Since I last posted, we had our final broadcast show for the 2010-2011 school year. We took questions all about snakes. Check out the video here or go to the snake site.

    Do you take music lessons? While you may not be thrilled about piano lessons or practicing your violin now, you may find those music lessons will be a big help with your brain when you are older.

    A new study finds that older adults who studied music as kids did better on cognitive tests than did the adults who did not have a childhood musical education. The folks in the study were 60 to 83 years old. One group had no musical training. The other group had started playing pianos or other instruments when they were about 10-years-old. None were professional musicians.

    According to researcher Brenda Hanna-Pladdy from the University of Kansas, all of the participants were tested for verbal functioning, memory and attention. The people who had studied music the longest did best on the tests. Those who had no musical training did the worst. Whether the person continued playing music into old age didn't matter. What apparently made the difference was studying music as a kid. Why? Researchers think that studying music makes your brain fitter and better able to withstand aging.

    So next time your parents or teachers bug you to study music, it is not just because they want you to learn to play beautifully, they are actually doing you and your brain a favor.

    By the way, since my last posting, D4K picked up an Idaho Press Club award. Congratulations to the D4K Web staff for winning first place as the best special purpose TV Web site in the state. I know they are great people, but it nice that our peers think they do great work!

    April 25, 2011:

    Labidosaurus fossil (R Reisz)Did you brush your teeth this morning? Have you ever had a cavity? Only the luckiest among us escape getting a cavity at least once in their lifetimes and it turns out one reptile wasn't among the lucky few. Scientists have found evidence of the world's oldest toothache. The Labidosarus hamatus was one of the first land-living reptiles. It was alive about 275 million years ago. For millions of years, if these reptiles lost a tooth, it would grow in another one to replace it. But because the Labidosarus hamatus lived on land instead of sometimes in the water, it had evolved teeth that were sort of like the kind you and I have. We have teeth that fit together to improve our ability to grind our food and we get basically one durable set of teeth that are designed to withstand the pressures of our diet.

    Labidosarus hamatus apparently also had something else in common with humans, bacteria that caused cavities. Robert Reisz and colleagues from the University of Toronto Mississauga did a special x-ray of the jaw of the Labidosarus hamatus and found evidence of a long-lasting bacterial infection, a lost tooth and an abscess. This toothache predates the previous earliest-known example of tooth decay. I've had an abscess and it is no fun! But unlike the Labidosarus hamatus, I have a great dentist. You can meet him and learn more about teeth in this video short or read more about the world's oldest abscess in this article from the BBC.

    Be sure to check out our most recent broadcast show, earthquakes. You can watch the 30-minute show, the shorter Web only program or the video short. Check out the earthquakes Web site too. We have one more broadcast show this school year. We will be taking your questions about snakes! Tune in for that on May 17th. And until then, brush your teeth!!

    April 18, 2011:

    What does an Earthquake sound like? Well, here is a link to the NOAA Vents program that has microphones underwater. This recording captured the sounds of the March 11th earthquake in Japan.

    If you want to learn more about earthquakes, email in a question or call in live Tuesday, April 19th. Our next live broadcast show airs at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television or you can watch the live stream here on the Web site or watch the archive version of the show, the Web Only, and the video short afterwards.

    In other science news, researchers out of the University of California, Davis say some dinosaurs loved the nightlife. The scientists looked at the shapes of some dinosaurs' eyes and decided that these particular ones could see in dim light and were most likely to have been active at night. Lars Schmitz and Ryosuke Motani looked at all kinds of animals to find out more about their eye structures and then compared those structures to dinosaurs. They looked at dinosaurs from the Mesozoic era and found that flying animals like birds and pterosaurs were probably daytime creatures, herbivores (those animals including dinosaurs that eat plants) hung out both day and night and carnivores (those that eat meat) were more likely to be night creatures. This challenges what scientists originally thought-that dinosaurs were only active during the day. So be glad that when the sun goes down tonight, you don't have to worry about some meat-eating dinosaur roaming your neighborhood!

    Be sure to send in your questions for tomorrow's show on earthquakes and tune in for the show.

    April 13, 2011:

    Earthquake locationsOur newest broadcast show airs next week and we are taking your questions about earthquakes. Earthquakes happen all the time. Most are too small for us to feel. Here is a picture of all earthquakes from April 13th at about 1:00pm Mt. You can go to this link to find a more current list.

    Scientists use a tool called a seismograph to record the strength and duration of earthquakes. Here is a link to the seismograph at Moose Lake, Idaho. That is near Yellowstone. You can see that there was a small quake this week.

    Do you have a question about earthquakes? Well send in an email here or call in live on Tuesday, April 19th at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac. You can watch the show on Idaho Public Television or live streamed here on the Web site or you can watch the archived version of the broadcast show, the Web Only and the earthquake video short here afterwards. But be sure to send in your questions so you can be entered in our prize contest.

    April 05, 2011:

    Wrapped Gifts | Photo by Steven Depolo - http://www.flickr.com/people/stevendepolo/Welcome back from Spring Break! I had a great week touring Civil War battlefields with my family. This year is the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War. I hope you are enjoying the Ken Burns documentary on the Civil War that airs on Idahoptv each night this week. It is a must see for everyone.

    I really like learning about science and history. It makes me happy. What makes you happy? Is it money? Well scientists say money can buy happiness, but only if you spend your money in the right way. Psychologist Elizabeth Dunn of the University of British Columbia and her colleagues have come with eight principles for spending money to be happy. Here are four of her recommendations:

    1. Buy more experiences, not goods. She suggests spending your money to travel, to take a class, to do things rather than just buying things.
    2. Spend on others. Helping others is a great way to make you feel good. You don't have to spend a lot, just make it a regular habit.
    3. Focus purchases on small pleasures. Sometimes that small bite of chocolate or a single flower is just the right thing to make me happy.
    4. Pay attention to purchases that make others happy. You can do a lot for others when you buy things. Consider others' feelings and you may end up happier too.

    Speaking of gifts, it turns out the gift givers like getting presents they have specifically hinted for more than a gift that is unexpected. I guess I always thought it was better to really find something special for a person rather than just pick something off their Amazon gift list, but psychologists say otherwise.

    Harvard economist Francesca Gino and Stanford business professor Francis Flynn report that gift givers assume all gifts, either those we have hinted for or those we are surprised by, would be equally valued by the person who gets the gift. Not true. People like to get what they have hinted for and cash is always appreciated. Hum. I find that news kind of sad, but I guess I will get over it. My birthday is coming up next month and I need to start dropping hints! You can learn more about both of these stories at the Science News Web site.

    Hope your week goes well. We are working on our next broadcast show this week. That program will be about earthquakes, so send in your questions now!

    March 21, 2011:

    Messenger Images

    Spring! Yes, winter is officially over and spring has sprung. Spring, of course, happens with the sun crossed the Earth's equator and the day and night are approximately the same length. This all happens because the Earth rotates on its axis and it rotates around the sun. Twice a year, the sun crossed over the equator, marking the beginning of spring or fall. Now we are heading for spring and summer and the southern hemisphere is heading for fall and winter.

    The Earth is not the only planet that has seasons. Mars has extreme seasons shifts. Each of Jupiter's seasons last three years. Saturn's "seasons' last seven, Uranus' last twenty and Neptune's whopping 40 years. On the other hand, Venus has fairly constant weather so its "seasons" last about 55 days. And poor Mercury has such an elliptical orbit and the fact that it rotates on its axis three timed during two of its years, means it is hard to tell when one season begins and one season ends.

    Mercury is in the science news this week. NASA's Messenger spacecraft made it into orbit around Mercury on Friday. Scientists were pretty excited because it took a lot to get the probe there. Messenger had to fly past earth once, Venus twice and Mercury itself three times, just to get to the right speed and on the right path to get into orbit. And the probe itself had to be specially designed to stand extremely high temperatures.

    And what does Messenger hope to find there? According to an article from the BBC, despite temperatures that can reach more than 800° F, there may be water or ice in craters at the poles of Mercury. Those parts of the planet are in a permanent shadow. Mercury is also so dense for its size that two-thirds of the plant is made of an iron-metal composition and it is apparently shrinking. Scientists hope to learn why. In general, astronomers say, Mercury may be our best guide to what some of the new planets we are finding outside our solar system are really like and this probe should give us lots more information.

    BTW, next week is Spring Break for me, so I will be on vacation. Look for a new science blog posting April 4th. In the meantime, check out the D4K planets site to learn more about Mercury and the rest of the solar system and enjoy the start of spring!

    March 14, 2011:

    Today is National Nap Day. Little kids sometime don't like taking naps, but scientists say there are lots of benefits to napping. Here are a few:

    • People who nap at least 30 minutes three times a week lower their heart attack risk by 37%
    • NASA sleep researchers say a 26-minute nap can improve your performance by up to 34%
    • The New York Times reports widespread napping among NBA players

    Boston University Professor William Anthony and his wife Camille came up with the idea for a National Nap Day in 1999 to follow our change to Daylight Savings Time. We all lost an hour of sleep when we moved our clocks ahead. Kids especially don't usually get enough sleep. So, remember a short afternoon nap can give you the energy to finish your day strong.

    A pie with the Pi symbol cut into the top crust [Credit: aatheory.com/archives/13008/]There is another national day today. Today is National Pi day, that is Pi (the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter), not pie (apple, cherry, pumpkin). The value of Pi is shortened to 3.14, and since today's date is 3/14/11, we call it Pi day. Here is a great article from NOVA if you want to learn a bit more about Pi: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/archimedes/pi.html

    One more reason to rejoice . . . We have new broadcast D4K show tomorrow! We will be taking your questions about Urban Wildlife. Tune in at 2:00/1:00p.m. MT/PT to watch here on the D4K website or on Idaho Public Television. You can watch the archived version of the 30-minute program, the Web-only show and our video short here afterwards.

    But for now, get yourself a piece of real pie, email in a question, and then grab a nap. What a great way to celebrate the day!

    February 28, 2011:

    HELLO!Do you speak a second language? Scientists believe it is easier to learn a second language before you turn 10-years-old. They now also think knowing a second language may give you a mental step up.

    In an article in the Los Angeles Times, neuroscience researchers say being bilingual, or knowing more than one language, can have a positive effect on the brain. At the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Ellen Biaystok, a psychology professor at York University, explained the being bilingual improves the brain's ability to juggle information. They found that bilingual children are better at multi-tasking and that adults who speak more than one language do a better job deciding what information is more important when they find themselves in a confusing situation. They also found that being bilingual helps ward off early symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, an illness that effect the brain and a person's ability to think and remember.

    Why? Well, say you know English and Spanish. When you walk into a room, you can name items in that room in either language depending upon whom you are talking to. Your brain has to be able to jump between the two languages. The scientists think that this back-and-forth between languages exercises your brain. It works your "executive control functions," that is the part of the brain that helps you focus and helps you hold multiple bits of information while you are solving a problem.

    So this is another good reason to learn a foreign language. If a foreign language isn't offered at your school, talk with your parents. Maybe there is an alternative, like a community education class, or maybe a friend speaks another language and would be willing to teach you. I took several years of German and I am now learning American Sign Language. It is really cool to express yourself in totally different ways!

    February 22, 2011:

    Sheep eating hay.Sheep are smarter than you'd think. That's what scientists at the University of Cambridge in England say about Welsh sheep. They were studying the creatures as part of their research into Huntington's disease, a genetically inherited condition that affects muscles and eventually the brain.

    The scientist, including Professor Jenny Morton, put a group of Welsh sheep through a number of tests to measure their intelligence. In one test, she tried to see how long it would take the sheep to figure out that the food always came in the same colored bucket. She then put the food in a different colored bucket and saw how long it took the sheep to notice the change and always go to the new bucket. It turns out it took the sheep the same amount of time as it take monkey and rodents in similar tests.

    SheepShe also put the sheep through tests to see if they were able to find their way around by forming memories of their environment. She believes sheep can keep a mental map of their surroundings in their head and may even be able to play ahead. The sheep scored as well as some humans did on similar tests. Also, scientists believe sheep can remember and indentify faces. Now all these skills may seem pretty simple, but actually being able to do all that takes a lot of brain power, more than many other mammals have.

    So, if your siblings say you are as dumb as a sheep, you can say, "Why thank you." If you want to learn more about the study, check out this story on the BBC Web site.

    February 7, 2011:

    Punxsutawney PhilPunxsutawney Phil didn't see his shadow last Tuesday so, according to legend, we are in for an early spring. 2011 is the 125th anniversary of Groundhog's Day. Groundhog's Day is a blend of ancient Christian and Roman customs that came to America from Germany.

    As tradition holds, Punxsutawney Phil emerges from his burrow on Feb 2nd. If he sees his shadow, we all can expect six more weeks of winter. If he doesn't, we can look for an early spring. This year, no shadow!

    And how accurate is Phil? Well, he is right about 40% of the time. And Phil is not the only animal that humans think predicts the weather. Sharks will swim to deeper depths just before a storm. Birds and bees will return to their nests and hives before it rains. So, start watching the animals in your back yard and see if they are giving you a clue about tomorrow's weather. If you want to learn more about Punxsutawney Phil, check out this article from National Geographic Society.

    Speaking of animals making predictions, Japanese researchers report they have trained a dog to detect bowel cancer.

    The 8-year-old Labrador retriever sniffed 306 samples of people's breath and stool (poop). When the dog detected cancer, she sat down. She identified 91% of the cancerous breath samples and 97% of the cancerous stool samples. She also ignored 99% of the cancer-free breath and stool samples. That means the dog was probably more accurate than most medical diagnostic tests. And what was her reward for finding this life threatening disease? A game of "chase the tennis ball."

    It is unlikely that dogs will replace standard medical tests to detect cancer. It takes a lot of money and time to train these dogs. But these results suggest that there is something the dogs can smell that current tests miss. So scientists can take a lesson from their four-footed friends and look for ways to improve their cancer diagnostic methods. Learn more about cancer detecting dogs here at LiveScience.

    Our newest broadcast show is next Tuesday, February 15th. We will be taking your questions about force and motion. You can email them here or you can call in live during the show. Check it out on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00p.m Mt/Pac or here on the D4K web site. You can always watch the archive of the broadcast show or the Web Extra afterwards. Remember, when you send in a question, you and your class will be eligible for our prize contest. So send in questions today!

    Have a good week!

    January 31, 2011:

    Snow in South Park (3).| Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/kamshots/ (CC 2.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)According to the old poem, girls are "sugar and spice and everything nice." Well, always being that neat and tidy might be putting girls at risk for asthma, allergies and other autoimmune diseases.

    The link between increased hygiene and sanitation and higher rates of autoimmune disease is clear. And scientists know women get these diseases more than men, but no one knows why. But Oregon State philosopher Sharyn Clough has an idea. In a study being published in Social Science & Medicine, Clough suggests that maybe women get these disease more often men because girls are generally kept from getting dirty more than boys.

    On the EurekAlert Web site, Clough said that girls tend to play indoors and in clothes that aren't suppose to get dirty. Parents more often supervise girls' playtime, which means they are staying cleaner. According to Clough, that means there is a significant difference in the types and amount of germs boy and girls are exposed to over their lifetimes and that might explain some of the difference we find between diseases in men and women.

    Clough isn't suggesting girls, or boys for that matter, should eat dirt, but she does think that parents shouldn't be afraid to let girls get messy. In fact, studies show it is a good idea for everyone to get outside more often. So, even though it is a bit cold out there, don't let that stop you from spending some time outside (properly dressed of course). And when summer comes, enjoy the out-of-doors and don't worry if you get messy now and then. It may mean you will be a healthier adult! If you want to learn more about the importance of the out-of-doors and your health, check out the "Be Outside" Web site.

    This week, have a good Ground Hogs Day, a Happy Chinese New Year and a good Year of the Rabbit. My bunny Winslo is pretty excited about it!

    January 24, 2011:

    In case you missed it, check out our latest broadcast show on the brain. It was a fun program and there is lots of information at the brain web site.

    There was lots of science news about friends this week. It turns out you may have more in common with your friends than what classes you take. Researchers at the University of California, San Diego report that you and your friends may have similar genes. A gene is a basic unit of heredity in a living organism. Genes contain the information to build and maintain an cell and to pass along traits to offspring. Researchers tested six types of genes and found that in one case people with a type of DRD2 gene tend to stick together. They also found that people with a type of CYP2A6 gene became friends with people with a different type of the CYP2A6 gene.

    What does this all mean? Hard to say. Scientists have long debated how much me are influenced by the environment and how much we are programmed by our genes. But here's another friend study you might find interesting...

    Researchers at the University of Oregon found that boys and girls in middle school whose friends pay attention to the rules and are pro-social do better in their schoolwork than students whose friends have problems with authority. The scientists probably could have guessed that was the case, but one of their other findings was a surprise. Girls who struggle academically in sixth grade had a harder time academically later if their best friends were already doing well in school. Scientists think girls who hang out with other girls who are doing better in school can get discouraged and not too well, which makes them more discouraged and not do well. Conversely, for girls who are already doing well, hanging out with other girls who are doing well makes their schoolwork better.

    So, whether it is your genes or your academic achievement that influences your choice of friends, scientists are pretty sure that the friends you make when you are in middle school or junior high can be the most influential of your life.

    BTW, a shout out to my best friend in junior high, Julia! She was a smart girl then and is an even more brilliant woman today.

    Have a good week!

    January 10, 2011:

    Kathryn Gray
    Never say kids can't be great scientists. A 10-year-old Canadian girl is the youngest person to discover a supernova. Kathryn Gray was studying imagines that had been sent to her father. Her dad, Paul Gray, is an amateur astronomer.

    To find a supernova, you need to look at old images of star fields and then compare them to new pictures. Kathryn's Dad had helped her out a bit by ruling out things like asteroids in the new photos. Kathryn was studying the new photos when she pointed to the screen and asked her dad if this spot was one. It turns out, it was.

    Kathryn had discovered a supernova in the galaxy UGC 3378. It is about 240 million light years away in the constellation of Camelopardalis. A supernova happens when a star dies and explodes. Scientists study supernovas because these explosions make most of the chemical elements that went into the making of the Earth and other planets. Supernovas can also be used to help estimate the size and age of the universe.

    Kathryn's discovery was verified by independent astronomers and then officially registered her find. It is called Supernova 2010it. You can see a comment from Kathryn on the BBC's Website here. Thanks to AP for the use of Kathryn's picture.

    Our newest D4K broadcast show is next Tuesday, January 14th. We will be answering your questions about the Brain. Tune in via Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac or watch here live or check out the archived show afterwards. Remember, when you send in a question, either via email or by calling in, you and your class are entered into a drawing for DVDs and other prizes. Check out the Brain web site and then send in a question here.

    January 3, 2011:

    Macro of Bubble Wrap | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/heypaul/
    Happy New Year! I hope you enjoyed ringing in 2011. Before you put 2010 behind you, here is a chance to look back at some of my favorite science blog postings of the year. Enjoy the best D4K blog postings of 2010:

    Jan 25th: The 50th anniversary of the invention of bubble wrap.
    Feb 16th: Scientists at the University of Florida in Gainesville discover how to grow a rose that smells like root beer.
    Mar 1st: An earthquake in Chile was so strong that it moved the Earth off its axis and shortens the day by one millionth of a second.
    Apr 12th: Nine-year-old Matthew Berger discovers the collarbone of what scientists think may have come from a new species of human ancestors who lived two million years ago.
    Oct 4th: Doctors have found that people who use their laptop computers on the laps should change their ways. The heat from laptops can cause "toasted skin syndrome."
    Oct 4th: Scientists found what they call a "Goldilocks" planet. Gliese 581g is 120 trillion miles away and may be in a habitable zone capable of sustaining life.
    Nov 10th: A new species of lizard was found in a Vietnamese restaurant.
    Nov. 29th: Physicists learn why cats are neater drinkers than dogs. It has to do with the way a cat curls its tongue and how quickly it laps with its tongue. Cats just understand physics better than dogs.
    Dec 21st: North Americans had a chance to see a lunar eclipse on the winter solstice, the first time since the 1600's.

    I am not the only one who creates top stories lists. Here are a few other lists you might find interesting:

    Scientific American has its top 10 science stories.

    You can listen to NPR's Top Science Stories of 2010 here.

    Or here are the top weird science stories of 2010 according to Popular Mechanics.

    Each week, I hunt for the best science stories for kids and post them here on my blog. Enjoy looking back at 2010 and I invite you to continue checking out my blog in 2011. Happy New Year!

    December 27, 2010:

    University of Glasgow small Christmas card to scale

    Merry Christmas! Hope you had a happy celebration kicking off the Christmas season, if you are so inclined. One of the nicest ways to show you are thinking of your family and friends this time of year is to send a Christmas card. Scientists at the University of Glasgow have sent all of us a very special card…one so small it could fit on the surface of a postage stamp 8,276 times!

    The smallest Christmas card was made by nanotechnologists. These are scientists who create things on the very smallest of scales. Their Christmas card shows a Christmas tree and is etched on a tiny piece of glass. It is 200 micro-meters wide by 290 micro-meters tall. Just to give you an idea of how small that is, a human hair is about 100 micro-meters wide that is not the length of your hair but the width. So, put two strands of your hair, side by side, and that is about how wide this Christmas card is. Pretty small!

    So why would you want a Christmas card this small? Well, the scientists did it to show just how well they can make things on this small a scale. This type of technology can be used to make better computers, cameras and lots of other things. You can read more about this accomplishment here.

    Next week, I will look at the top science stories of 2010. Be sure to pop back and check out my blog. Hope you all enjoy a Happy New Year celebration too!

    December 21, 2010:

    I delayed this week's blog entry so I could include photos of last night's lunar eclipse. It was cool! A lunar eclipse happens when the full Moon passes through Earth's shadow from the sun. Last night's eclipse was special because it also happened on the winter solstice. The winter solstice happens when the Earth is the farthest away from the sun in its annual orbit. It is also the shortest day in the year for us folks in the Northern Hemisphere. We haven't had both of these events happen since the 1600's.

    Lunar EclipseHere are my photos of the eclipse when it about a fourth of the way through and of when the Moon was covered by Earth's shadow. That's called the "umbra." Lunar Eclipse

    If you missed it, you can watch this wonderful timelapse video from Talking Science.

     

    And since we have two such significant cosmic events happening together, here is a bit of trivia about them both.

    Lunar Eclipse:

    • The red color of the Moon in umbra is caused by the bending rays of the sun and enhanced or diminished by pollutants in the air.
    • According to legend, Columbus and his sailors were saved by a lunar eclipse. He and his crew were stranded in what is now Jamaica without supplies. Columbus had a book that told him an eclipse would happen and told the native leaders that if they did not help his men, he would make the Moon disappear. As the Moon disappeared, the people begged him to restore it and gave him as much food as he and his men needed.
    • There will be two total lunar eclipses in 2011, one on June 15, 2011 and one December 10, 2011. We in America will not be able to see either of them. We will be able to see our next total eclipse on April 15, 2014.

    The Winter Solstice:

    • While December 21st is considered the winter solstice, the precise time the Earth is the farthest away from the sun will be 4:38 p.m. (MT).
    • The Winter Solstice is associated with the ancient Roman fest of Saturnalia and is also considered the prime Pagan holiday. Because this is the darkest time of the year, many cultures celebrated this day with fires and parties. In 46 B.C., the solstice was on December 25th on the calendar set by Julius Caesar in Rome, so that became the fixed date for Roman winter celebrations. Later, Christians established December 25th as Christmas, the day they celebrate the birth of Jesus.
    • On the Winter Solstice in Boise, we will have 8 hours and 55 minutes of daylight, 3 seconds less than yesterday. Thankfully, the days will start getting longer on the 22nd!

    Photo of Saturn by Cassini Probe

    December 13, 2010:

     

    It may be a case of murder! For a long time, scientists have wondered how Saturn got its rings. Saturn has those colorful distinctive rings that are made up of ice, dust and rocks, some pieces as large as a house. Now a new theory suggests the Saturn itself may be the culprit.

    Astronomer Robin Canup from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado has a new theory about how Saturn's rings formed. She thinks that billions of years ago, when Saturn's moons were forming, there was a large disk of hydrogen gas circling the planet. That large disk pulled these moons toward Saturn. According to Canup, Saturn stripped the ice away from the huge moons while it was still fairly far away, so the ice got trapped in a ring around the planet. Now, over time, the ice in the outer rings formed some of Saturn's tiny inner moons. Call it cosmic recycling. You can learn more about Canup's theory here.

    Also, remember there is a complete lunar eclipse on the 22nd! Check out last week's blog entry for more.

    Our newest broadcast show airs Tuesday, December 14th. We will be taking your questions about owls. Call in live or email here. You can watch the show on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac or you can watch the live streaming here on the Web site. If you miss it, check out the archived version of the broadcast show, the Web Only, or the video short here on the Web site later. Enjoy!

    November 29, 2010:

    Photo of Cutta Cutta

    When a dog drinks, it can make a mess. But when a cat drinks, its face stays dry. Why? Well, scientists have studied how these animals drink and discovered that cats are better at using physics to drink than dogs are.

    Dogs drink by curling their tongues and scooping up water. Cats curl their tongues too but they don't scoop. Pedro Reis, a physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his colleagues Roman Stocker and Micaeia Pilotto studied Stocker's cat, Cutta Cutta, while it drank. They filmed Cutta Cutta and then slowed the video down. What they found is Cutta Cutta curls the tip of its tongue under, into the shape of the letter "J". When the tip of its tongue just barely touched the surface of the milk, the cat pulled its tongue back into its mouth really fast, about 1.75 miles per hour. Now, here is when the physics comes into play. Because the cat's tongue is smooth and some of the milk attaches to its surface and because the tongue is moving so fast, the liquid follows the tongue back into the cat's mouth. Gravity pulls the milk back down in a fraction of a second but before it falls, the cat closes its mouth around the column of milk and drinks. Cutta Cutta's tongue flicks out at the rate of 3.5 times every second. That's fast! So cats don't get wet because the liquid gets trapped inside its mouth. Pretty neat! Learn more about this study at the Science News for Kids Web site here.

    Hope you had a good Thanksgiving and are enjoying Advent. Our next broadcast D4K show is coming up a week earlier than usual. Too many students are out of school during our regular third-Thursday-of-the-month time slot, so we rescheduled the show for December 14th. Same time though. What us at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac. We will be talking about owls, so send in your questions here.

    Stay warm and have fun in school!

    November 23, 2010:

    Barn Owl in Flight - Photograph by Dazzie D (http://www.flickr.com/people/dazzied/)

    What do you think makes someone attractive? If you were an owl, it might be spots, but only if you are a girl owl. If you are a boy owl, it would be the lack of spots that girl owls would find appealing.

    Researchers from the University of Lausanne in Switzerland followed barn owls over several molting periods. What they found is that adult female owls with larger spots on their feathers bred earlier in the season and laid larger eggs. But the scientists also found that male barn owls with larger spots on their feathers were less successful at finding mates. So, spots on girls, good. Spots on boys, not so good.

    Why? Scientists think the spots scattered on the feathers are a sign of better genes in females owlsbut not in males. Better genes mean the chicks are likely to survive better. You can find out more about owls here on the Web site. Check out the owls facts and links here. You can read more about this study here.

    So long as we are talking about birds, here are my top 10 favorite Turkey Facts:

    1. The American Indian name for turkey was "firkee."
    2. Wild turkeys can glide as far as a mile without flapping their wings. They can fly for short distances up to 55 miles per hour. Wild turkeys can run 18 miles per hour.
    3. Turkey's heads change colors when they get excited.
    4. Gobbling turkeys can be heard a mile away on a quiet day.
    5. As male turkeys get older, they fight a lot.
    6. Turkeys do not see well at night but they can see movement almost a hundred yards away.
    7. A baby turkey is called a "poult."
    8. In the 1700s in England, turkeys were walked to market in herds. They wore booties to protect their feet.
    9. Turkeys have heart attacks. When the air force was conducting test runs and breaking the sound barrier, fields of turkeys would drop dead.
    10. Ben Franklin thought the turkey not the eagle should be America's national bird.

    Have a great Thanksgiving!

    November 10, 2010:

    Leiolepis ngovantrii - Photograph by Lee Grismer

    Be careful what you eat. It may be a new species of lizards. A Vietnamese researcher was at dinner when he noticed others eating an oddly looking lizard. He sent pictures to a pair of U.S. herpetologists who thought they had found a new all-female lizard species.

    Reptiles can clone themselves though a process called parthenogensis. Female boa constrictors and Komodo dragons have been known to give birth without any contributions from males. Still, it is uncommon and the researchers thought this lizard was a new hybrid. They were very excited to find out and flew to Vietnam.

    But when they arrived at the restaurant, they found out that the owner had already served all of his lizards to other diners. Tragedy was averted when the researchers learned that this all-female, self-cloning lizard was commonly found in other restaurants and in the wild. Find out more about these lizards at National Geographic or at Live Science

    Our next broadcast show is next week. We will be taking your questions about CSI: Forensic Science. Check out the CSI web site and then send in your questions. Tune in on Tuesday, November 16th at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac or watch the show, the Web Only and the video short afterwards right here on the D4K Web site. Remember, when you submit a question, you and your class will have a chance to win DVDs and other prizes. I'll hope to hear you call-in or see your emailed questions next week.

    November 04, 2010:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/49879584@N00/4496589012/Sorry this week's entry has been delayed. It is election week and that is always an overwhelming time. My job was to crunch numbers and believe me, it was a shock, which, as it turns out, may have been a good thing. It turns out mild electrical shocks to the brain stimulate math skills.

    Now this falls under the DO NOT DO THIS AT HOME category of science news items. Scientists at the University of Oxford in England have discovered that stimulating the brain with a weak electrical current can improve a person's math skills for up to six months. They designed this treatment to help people who have moderate to severe "numerical disabilities" or who have lost their number skills because of a stroke or brain disease.

    In this study, researcher applied a weak electrical current to the parietal lobe, the part of the brain important for understanding numbers, to the brain of five university students. These students were tested as average in numerical understanding, that is they were about average in math skills. The students were asked to memorize nine symbols they have never seen before while they received the brain stimulation. The students did this over six days. That's a long time to get your brain jolted.

    Anyway, the scientists then tested the students and found that they did better and that they continued to better for six months. Now scientists have also found you can also cause people to lose their ability to do math with electrical stimulation, so you have to know what you are doing. But this is an interesting way to possibly help people who are having serious trouble even understanding the math behind a food label. You can read more about this study by clicking on this LiveScience.com article.

    Our next D4K broadcast show is coming up on November 16th. We will be taking your questions about CSI: The Science of Forensics. Email your questions in now!

    October 25, 2010:

    Can your dog recognize you?

    What did you have for lunch today? School officials are trying to get kids to eat healthier foods. Some schools have banned things like cookies, but science has a better suggestion. A new Cornell University study suggests simple changes to how lunchrooms are set up and how they sell food is a smarter way to encourage students to eat better. Here are some of their ideas:

    • Move fruit to a colorful bowl placed in front of the cash register. Doing that increase the sales of fruit by 100%.
    • Move the chocolate milk behind the white milk. That act lead sales of plain milk to increase.
    • Move ice cream treats into a closed freezer with a solid door so students don't see them clearly. That act lead sales of ice cream to drop.
    • Create "healthy express" checkout lines for students buying healthy food. Doing that doubled the sale of healthy sandwiches.
    • Have cafeteria workers ask each child if they would like a salad. Asking that question increased sales by a third.

    You don't have to wait for the adults to make these changes. You can suggest them yourselves. Eating healthy is every student's right.

    Okay, here is a science story on not-so-serious a topic, do dogs recognize their owners?

    The answer is yes. Dogs apparently can identify their owners' faces. Scientist Paolo Mongillo from the University of Padua in Italy studied dogs while they watched two people walk back and forth, one their owner and one a stranger. The dogs watched their owners more than the strangers. But, there is a catch. The researchers did find the when the owner covers his/her face with a paper bag, the dog paid less attention. Dogs apparently need to see your face to identify you.

    Learn more about the dogs and face study from the BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_9115000/9115668.stm
    And learn more about smarter lunchrooms here: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-10/cfb-msl102210.php

    Have a good week!

    October 18, 2010:

    Exo-planets

    Our newest broadcast show airs this week and we are taking your questions about exoplanets. Exoplanets are planets that orbit stars other than the Sun. We have a leading scientist from NASA's Goddard Space Center so it should be a really interesting program. Students can email me their questions here or they can call in live on Tuesday at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac by dialing 1-800-973-9800.

    As for science news for the week, two stories caught my eye. They will both make your Mom happy.

    It turns out chocolate milk is better for helping your body recover from a work out than drinks like Gatorade or PowerAde and much better than drinks like Red Bull. The scientists from the University of Connecticut had runner work out for at least 45 minutes a day for two weeks. Some drank milk. Others drank sports drinks. The scientist took blood and breath samples from all the runners and found that chocolate milk we better at rebuilding muscles. It should be noted that chocolate milk did better than plain, white milk, probably because of the little extra sugar. Now, the study was funded by the National Dairy Council so take the results with a grain of salt. ("Taking a grain of salt" with something is a saying that means you should have a little doubt about what is said until it is proven true.) Still, milk is good for you for lots of reasons so next time you exercise, grab some chocolate milk. It can't hurt and it may be just what your muscles need.

    The other story comes from Kent State University and it explains why quizzes do more than just test what we have memorized. The process of taking a quiz helps us remember the material better.

    Scientist Mary Pyc and Katherine Rawson thinks quizzes help us remember things better because we use mental hints when we study for tests more than when we are just reviewing the day's lessons.

    The researchers asked 100 college students to study 48 pairs of words in Swahili and English. While they were studying these word-pairs, the students were asked to come up with clues to help them remember. Some of the students were given a quiz halfway through the process while everyone was given a final test. The students who had a quiz did better on the final test. And the students who came up with clues to help them remember the word-pairs did better than the students who didn't come up with many clues. You can find out more about this research in the October 15, 2010 issue of journal Science.

    So here is what you need to do this week, figure out clues to help you study for that quiz so you will do better on your next test, drink chocolate milk after exercising, and send in questions for this week's Dialogue program about exoplanets. Not a bad to do list!

    October 04, 2010:

    Exo-planets

    Not too hot...
    Not too cold...
    Just right!

    We all know that quote from the story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. It also describes the perfect place for a planet if you want to find life. The Earth is just the right distance from the Sun so that we can all live comfortably. Mars and Venus are either too close or too far from the Sun for Earth-like creatures to live.

    Now scientists report they have found a "Goldilocks" planet orbiting a nearby star. Gliese 581g is the name of this planet. It is about 120 trillion miles away. Scientists say the planet is in a "habitable zone," that is it is not too far or not to close to its sun. That means water on that planet would be liquid rather than frozen (or vapor). You need water for Earth-like creatures to live. It as an atmosphere and the surface temperature ranges from -24 to 10 degrees. While we have a 24-hour day, that is the Earth rotates once every 24 hours, Gliese 581g rotates once every 37 days. That means one face of the planet always faces the sun and the other side is always in the dark. If we wanted to go visit Gliese 581g, we had better do a lot of packing. Scientists say it would take 200 years using a special rocket that can travel at 1/10th the speed of light.

    Do you want to know more about Gliese and exoplanets? You are in luck. On our next D4K show, we will be talking with Leading Planetary Scientist Marc Kuchner. He will join us from the Goddard Space Center. Send in your questions now!

    Planet XOne other note of interest in this week's science news...

    If you use your laptop computer on your laptop, you should change your ways. Doctors have found that the heat from laptop can lead to "toasted skin syndrome." Exposing your skin to that much heat for long periods of time can damage the skin on your lap. So use a pad designed for laptops or put your laptop on a desk. The only toast you need in your life is the kind you eat with jam.

    Have a great week!

    September 27, 2010:

    GravityWelcome to another season of D4K! We had our first broadcast show of the season last week. We answered questions about gravity. Check out the shows Web site, as well as the full show, video short, and web extra.

    My favorite science news of the week indicates you might want to play a few more video games. Researchers report that people who play action video games are better at making quick and accurate decisions than those who don't play such games. A story in the September 14th issue of Current Biology says gamers make these decisions based on what they see and understand around them. The improvement is seen only in those playing action games not from strategy or role-playing games.

    Researchers compared the skills of action gamers versus non-games by presenting both groups with some simple decision-making experiments. The people were shown are series of dots and then were asked to indentify the main direction the dots were moving. The researchers then changed the number and direction of the dots. They found gamers were able to decide more quickly and more accurately. They also found that when non-gamers play action games for more than 50 hours, their decision-making skills improved.

    Now this is not a recommendation to go out and play "shoot 'em up games." Other studies have shown that playing violent games can contribute to violent behavior and playing games instead of getting exercise or making friends is not good either. But, this is an interesting study that means games do have some value and do have some positive effects. Now, I leave it up to you to figure out how to sell the idea of playing these games to your parents. Here is the link to the whole article from EurekAlert: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-09/cp-avg090710.php

    By the way, if games are your interest, take some time to check out the D4K game area. They are fun computer games of which even your teachers would approve.

    September 24, 2010:

    Watermelon drop | Photo by Tim TowerOne week! Our twelfth season of D4K begins with our next live broadcast show on Tuesday, September 21st. We will be taking your questions about gravity. We shot some video for the gravity show the other day. Here is a picture of what happens when you drop watermelon and cantaloupe off a two-story building. Why did we drop watermelon and cantaloupe off a two-story building? You will have to tune in to find out. You can find the show on Idaho Public Television on September 21st at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt or here on the D4K website live-streamed or archived afterwards. Have a question? Email it here. If you send in a question, you and your class will be eligible for a drawing to win prizes for your classroom.

    According to the science news this week, someday when you go to the doctor for a routine visit, you might get something more than your height and weight checked. You might get a brain scan. Scientists have developed a way to track growth and development in children by looking at a special photograph of the brain called an MRI. MRI stands for magnetic resonance imaging. It takes a picture of the brain and shows how it is functioning. Scientists from Washington University in St. Louis did scans on hundreds of people 7 to 30 years of age. They developed a mathematical formula and can now look at the brains of healthy kids and see how those kids' brains are developing and if the kids' brains are where they should be at their age.

    The study shows that young children have lots of short-range connections in the brain while adults have fewer long-range connections. By looking at the number of short-range connections, doctors can see how a child's brain is developing into an adult's brain. The scans can also tell doctors if the child is at risk for autism or mental illness. So next time you go to see the doctors, tell your brain to look at the camera and smile!

    Be sure to send in your questions about gravity!

    August 24, 2010:

    D4K 10th AnniversaryOkay, we are counting down to the launch of the 12th season of D4K. As promised, here is a preview of the schedule of shows for the season:

    Date Topic
    September 21st Gravity
    October 19th Exoplanets
    November 16th CSI
    December 14th Owls
    January 18th The Brain
    February 15th Force and Motion
    March 15th Urban Wildlife
    April 19th Earthquakes
    May 17th Snakes

    What do you think? Let me know. Send me an email!

    Start thinking about your questions and send them in.

    August 16, 2010:

    One of the things I love about summer vacation is sleeping-in. I am really a night owl, so I like to stay up and enjoy the stars and sleep in a bit in the mornings. But with school starting, my sleeping-in days are almost over. How about you? Are you ready for getting up the mornings? Are your parents?

    The key to getting a good night’s sleep, according to a William Kohler, the medical director of the Florida Sleep Institute is to put away your cell phone, gaming system, TV and computer. Studies have found that teens that use technology late into the night have trouble staying awake and alert the next day.

    Research given at SLEEP 2010, a meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, indicates that having a regular bedtime is also a good way to get enough sleep. That means keeping that normal bedtime and wake up time on the weekends too. Staying up late and sleeping-in on weekends can disrupt your sleep patterns the rest of the week.

    So, scientists suggest about an hour before bedtime, you should shut off all electronics. Go through your regular bedtime routine, doing things like brushing your teeth and reading a book and then turn the lights out. Keep your bedroom dark (no TV) and below 75 degrees. Get up at about the same time every day and try to get the proper amount of sleep for your age group. Five-year-olds should get 11 hours of sleep. Nine-year-olds need 10 hours of sleep and 14-year-olds need about 9 hours of sleep.

    Why do you need all that sleep? Studies show that kids who do not get enough sleep don’t learn as well, don’t have as good a reaction time which can impact how well they play sports and can become overweight, which leads to all sorts of health problems. Getting enough sleep is really important.

    So, if you’ve been going to bed really late (like me), research suggests starting a couple of weeks before school and going to bed a little earlier each night and getting up at your new school year time schedule. It takes a few days to reset your body clock so you can fall asleep earlier and get up earlier. If you want to learn more about getting your sleep cycle ready for school, check out this article on EurkAlert.

    We are almost ready for our 12th season of D4K. Next week, I will post the topics for the coming school year. If you aren’t already in school, enjoy these last few days of summer vacation!

    August 09, 2010:

    First graders learning | Photo by Woodley Wonderworks (http://www.flickr.com/photos/wwworks/)If you are in first grade this year, guess what? Your personality now is a strong predictor of what you will be like as an adult. Scientists studied 2400 first to sixth graders. They looked for four personality traits: Was the student talkative, impulsive, did he/she cope well with new situations, did he/she minimize her behavior? They tracked the kids over 40 years. What the scientist found was surprising. They say our personalities stay pretty much the same from childhood to adulthood.

    Talkative students grew up to be smart adults who like to control situations. Children who were not very fluent speaking grew up to be adults who seek advice and may give up when faced with problems. Children who coped well turned into adults who are cheerful and show an interest in “intellectual matters.” Students who were impulsive as kids became talkative adults who tended to speak loudly. And children who tended to put down their accomplishments became insecure adults.

    Does this mean you will always be the way you were as a first grader? Not necessarily. This is just one study, but it is an indication that it is tough to change. If you want to learn more, here is a link to the original article about this study on LiveScience.com.

    I had a few requests for the link to site where you could watch live streaming video of Molly the Owl and her eggs. Here is the link: http://www.ustream.tv/theowlbox
    If you want to learn more about Owls, be sure to also check out the Owl Web site Enjoy!

    August 02, 2010:

    Joan with her brother, her father, and her grandfatherFamily is very important. Here is a picture of my brother, my father, my grandfather and me. Do you have a brother or sister? Do you get along? I hope so, because having a good relationship with your sibling could help you be healthier.

    Researchers at Brigham Young University studied 395 families from Seattle with two or more children. They found that siblings who have a good relationship have a positive influence on one another, no matter how old they are, what their genders are, or how far apart in they are in age. Having a good sibling relationship seems to promote traits like kindness and generosity.

    On the other hand, siblings who have a difficult relationship are more likely to have trouble with relationships with other people.

    The researchers believe that siblings have a unique influence over each other and that influence is stronger in a two-parent family. They also found one other thing. Having a sister prevents depression more than having a brother. They think this is because girls are better at talking about problems and are more likely to take on a caregiver role.

    Scientist Laura Padila-Walker suggests parents should do what they can to help their children get along. You might think about that too next time you pick a fight with your brother or sister. Having a good relationship is one of the best things you can do for your own health.

    July 26, 2010:

    A boy reading a book | http://www.flickr.com/photos/marcsamsom/3303868143/ by Marc  SamsomHave you read a good book lately? If not, you should. Researchers have found that students who read books over the summer significantly improve their reading abilities while student who don’t lose reading skills. Researchers Richard Allington and Anne McGill-Franzen from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville followed first and second graders for three years. Each summer, some of the kids picked their own books to read while others didn’t read much or anything at all. Allington and McGill-Franzen followed the students and tested their reading skills each year.

    They found that the kids who read over the summer gained a month of reading skills and those kids who didn’t actually lost three to four months of reading development. Allington said, “This creates a three to four month gap every year. Every two or three years the kids who don't read in the summer fall a year behind the kids who do.”

    Allington and McGill-Franzen also found that summer reading might be as effective as summer school in improving a student’s reading skill level and is cheaper. It didn’t matter so much what the kids read and the reading itself.

    So click here if you want to learn more about the ScienceDaily article on the reading research. And be sure to read some books this summer. Your local public library is a great place to start.

    July 19, 2010:

    A mouse eating cheese | http://www.flickr.com/photos/mush2274/2294738950/Yum! I smell something good coming out of the kitchen down the hall. Do you find yourself sniffing the air when cookies are in the oven? How about sniffing the air at the local pizza parlor? How about sniffing your brother’s breath? Don’t say yuck too fast.

    If you were a mouse that is exactly what you would do. You would find out what’s good to eat by smelling the breath of your nearest mouse buddy.

    Scientists Steven Munger of the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore and his colleagues report that rodents’ breath sends out an “eat this” message. The chemical released by a mouse’s breath sends a message to the brains of the other mice in its nest that lets the others know there is food nearby that is safe to eat.

    Munger was quoted in the Sciencenews.org article saying, “one mouse is saying, ’My friend here just ate some food that smells like this – and he’s still breathing, he’s alive — so it must be safe.'”

    We humans generally are attracted by food we see, but mice live in the dark so they have learned how to find safe food by smell. Scientist found that this chemical released by mice in their breath is how other mice learn what is safe and what isn’t safe to eat.

    Now go enjoy a healthy snack and don’t forget to breathe on someone!

    July 12, 2010:

    Child Sleeping | http://www.flickr.com/photos/george_eastman_house/3122868843/Are you enjoying sleeping in over summer break? I did. I never liked getting up at 6 a.m. or 7 a.m. to be at school by 7:45 a.m. I think I do better if I can sleep a little later. And apparently, I was right. New research backs up other studies that say teenagers should start school a bit later. Sleeping a little longer is exactly what teenagers need to improve their performance.

    A study out of Providence, Rhode Island says that starting school a half an hour later improved teenagers’ mood, health and alertness. During the winter term, officials delayed the start time at St. George’s school by 30 minutes to 8:30 a.m. As a result, they found that students slept an additional 45 minutes each night. The scientists also found students were less depressed and were more motivated. The teachers reported a 36% drop in the number of absences or tardiness and the school’s health office note a big drop in the number of student visits.

    According to Dr. Judy Owens, a sleep expert and author of this study, teenagers need about nine hours of sleep each night. But Owens says most teens have a hard time falling asleep before 11 p.m. due to biological changes in their circadian rhythms, or their body’s natural clock. Scientists showed that moving the start time of the school day by just a half an hour gave kids a chance to sleep a little longer and that made a big difference in the lives and attitudes. You can learn more about this study at the EurekAlert Web site.

    FYI, here is a chart* listing how much sleep each age group needs:

    Newborns (0-2 months) 12-18 hours
    Infants (3 to 11 months) 14-15 hours
    Toddlers (1-3 years) 12-14 hours
    Preschoolers (3-5 years) 11-13 hours
    School-age children (5-10 years) 10-11 hours
    Teens (10-17) 8.5-9.25 hours
    Adults 7-9 hours
    *According to the National Sleep Foundation

    So enjoy sleeping in this summer and try to get the right amount of sleep, even when school starts up again.

    June 28, 2010:

    Timezones | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/zooboing/ (CC 2.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)

    Hello. I am on vacation with my family, but I ran across this bit of news and thought I would pass it along.

    First a little background… Different parts of the world are in different time zones. The continental United States has four time zones. That means when it is noon in Washington D.C., it is 11:00 a.m. in Chicago and 10:00 a.m. in Boise and 9:00 a.m. in Seattle. When you travel through time zones, your body’s internal clocks get thrown off of it normal schedule. For example, when I go to visit family in Washington D.C., at 11:00 p.m. they are ready to go to bed, but my body thinks it is only 9:00 p.m. and I’m not sleepy. Eventually, you and your internal clock catch up to the local time and that feeling of not being in sync with the time you are in is called jet lag.

    Scientists have now discovered that the body’s reaction to jet lag isn’t as simple as they once thought. It turns out that you don’t just have one internal clock that gets off when you travel. A report from Gregor Eichele of the Max Planck Institute of Biophysical Chemistry in Gottingen, Germany says every organ in your body keeps time with its own separate clock. Your brain tries to synchronize, or get all of those separate clocks to run at the same time, but some organs are slower to switch over than others. What does this mean? Well here is the example from the livescience.com article on the study. Say you travel to Paris from Boise. Your brain adjusts to the 8 hour time difference in about a day, but your pancreas may be stuck on New York time (3 hours difference) and your kidneys are some where in between (say 5 hours off). So what does all this mean for you? Well, you may get an upset stomach or feel tired. Eventually all of your body’s clocks will come together, but doctors suggest it takes a day per hour time difference to get back on track. So if you are going to Paris from Boise, it will take more than a week to get your body entirely back in sync.

    So why is this important? Well, people whose jobs involve a lot of travel could get their internal clocks out of whack and over time, that could cause health problems. Scientists in the study used a drug that blocked the adrenal glands. These glands work with the brain to regulate the body’s master clock. The drug helped the mice in the study deal with jet lag by allowing organs to begin the process of resetting their internal clocks. But, the scientists say they don’t know enough about the consequences of this drug on humans, so they say they will have to do more tests. So for now, when you cross time zones, give your kidneys some time to catch up with your brain. I’ll let you know how many time zones I cross on my vacation when I return!

    June 14, 2010:

    Cloud Hole
    We have had a lot of rain around here lately. That is a bit usual. It is apparently due to storms in the Pacific or maybe, just maybe, it is due to jets.

    Meteorologists have determined that jet airplanes climbing up or coming down in the atmosphere can cause snow or rain to develop. They can also leave odd-shaped holes in clouds. Here is an example of a photograph of a hole-punched cloud from Alan Sealls, chief meteorologist at WKRG-TV.

    Now, clouds are made up of water droplets. When the water gets cold enough, it falls to Earth as rain or snow. Otherwise, it just hangs out in the cloud. But scientists have learned that when a plane flies through a cloud and when the water droplets in that cloud are at about five degrees, the plane can make it rain or snow. The plane further cools the air behind the propellers or it cools the air that flows over the jet wings and with that extra bit of cold, the water droplets freeze and fall to Earth.

    So how much rain or snow can a plane cause? Researchers point to a snowstorm in Denver in 2007. Using flight records and weather records, they were able to find a plane going through a cloud followed by a snowstorm that was 20 miles long and 2.5 miles wide. The storm went on for 20 minutes and dropped two inches of snow on the ground.

    This type of plane-caused rain or snow is more common here in the Pacific Northwest and in Western Europe because the right kind of clouds seem to form in these spots more often.

    So next time it rains or snows, look for those funny hole-punched clouds. You may be able to blame the weather on an airplane. If you want to learn more, check out this article at Livescience.com.

    June 07, 2010:

    D4K's 2009 Emmy - D4K 10th AnniversaryI am happy to announce that D4K won an Emmy this past weekend! Yipee! It was pretty thrilling to accept the award on behalf of the amazing D4K team. The award was for our 10th anniversary show, so it recognized a decade worth of work. Here is a partial list of those who help make D4K possible: Joan Cartan-Hansen, Al Hagenlock, Sue Nass, Jay Krajic, Dave Thomason, Marc Morris, Kris Freeland, Rick Penticoff, Stephanie Dickey, Peggy Hurd, John Britschgi, Dan Ward, James Roethig, Mike Studor, Ken Segota, Dave Thomason, Kevin Rank, Lisa Sommer, Jeff Tucker and Bruce Reichert. I want to give a special thanks to the kids who star in our D4K videos, the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation and the kids and teachers who watch and send in questions. You guys rock!

    Let’s hear the applause!

    June 01, 2010:

    Hope you all had a nice Memorial Day. I took the day off and spent some time in Stanley. What a pretty place! Now, onto the science news for the week…

    What is fair? That is a tough question. Should everyone share equally? How about luck or effort? What role do those factors have in deciding what is fair? Well, apparently what you consider “fair” changes as you get older. Ingvid Almas and her colleagues played a money exchange game with students in fifth to 13th grade. The fifth graders were more likely to divide up the money equally, but the older students thought individual achievement more important in how they divided up the funds. Researchers think that older students have had more experience with achievement-based activities like sports and therefore are more likely to divide up money based on work or merit rather than sharing equally. So think about that research next time your younger brother or sister says it isn’t fair that you get more allowance or cake or whatever. If you want to learn more about this research, check out the May 28, 2010 issue of Science.

    If you are looking for more information about the oil spill in the Gulf, here is news of a great new web site. The University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science created this site to look at the spill and its impact on the ocean. Check it out here.

    If this is your last week of school, congratulations! I’ll still be here each week with a new blog posting so keep coming back. There are lots of things to look at here on the D4K Web site, so spend some of your summer vacation with us! See you next week!

    P.S. D4K has been nominated for an Emmy and we will find out Saturday if we have won. So keep your fingers crossed for us. I’ll report either way next week.

    May 25, 2010:

    Child Reading | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/komunews/ (CC 2.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)
    How many books do you have in your house? Researchers have confirmed that children who grow up in households with lots of books do better in school than those who grow up without books. This “book benefit” was true in countries all over the world.

    Study researcher Mariah Evans, a sociologist at the University of Nevada, Reno collected data from 73,249 people in 27 countries. She found that having a 500-book library in a home increased a child’s education by 3.2 years on average.

    So what does this mean? Well, the researchers looked at a bunch of factors like how much education do the parents have, what does the father do for a living, what is the country’s GNP (a factor in how good that country’s economy is) and other similar things. What they found is that a child from an average home living in a household with one book would probably make it though 8th or 9th grade. Children from an average home living in a household with 500 books would probably go beyond high school.

    The “book benefit” was bigger for kids in China (6.6 years) than for kids in the United States (2.4 years), but having books made a difference regardless of how well educated your parents are or where you live.

    If you have books in your home, it is a good sign that you and your parents probably understand the importance of reading. Reading lots of different kinds of books can open up whole new worlds. We have reading lists for most of our science topics, so look at the lists and pick out a book to read. Can’t afford to buy the book? Go to your local public library. Libraries are awesome! They are free and you are never too young to get a library card. If you want to learn more about the “book benefit” study, click here and read on!

    May 17, 2010:

    A river in the Idaho wilderness

    Our last new broadcast D4K show of this school year is Tuesday, May 18th. We will be taking your questions about Rivers. Be sure to tune in via Idaho Public Television or here on the Web site. The show is live at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac or you can watch the archive show, Web only program and the River’s video short shortly afterwards.

    Send in your question so you and your class will have a chance to win stuff for your classroom.

    My favorite science story of the week has to do with pee. Yes, pee. It turns out that mice are scared when they smell pee left behind by cats, but get mad and fight if they smell pee from other mice. Why? Well scientists from Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla California Lab have found a protein in urine that seems to freak mice out.

    Researcher Lisa Stowers knew animals’ brains are hardwired to recognize predators. But even though several generation of lab mice have never even seen a cat, they still quake with fear when they smell cat pee. Stowers wanted to find out what it was in cat pee that scared the mice. She also wanted to know if pee from other creatures scared mice too. She and her colleagues found a protein molecule that apparently signals danger to mice. They also found that mice make a similar protein molecule in their own pee. When mice smell that mice pee protein, they get very aggressive. And what about other animals? Mice aren’t frightened by rabbit pee and the researchers aren’t sure if snakes make this type of protein in their pee.

    The scientists involved are also looking at what part of the nose mice use to spell this special protein. One mouse without the ability to smell these proteins curled up next to an anesthetized ran, an animal that would have normally freaked out any sensible mice. So there is something in the pee and something in the nose that works together to help mice figure out who is a friend and who is an enemy. Learn more about this experiment here.

    And be sure to send in your questions!

    May 7, 2010:

    Kids washing their hands and shinging shoes. | http://www.flickr.com/photos/nationaalarchief/3916314384/

    We adults always tell you to wash your hands. We know that washing hands helps get rid of germs so you don’t get sick or so you don’t pass your germs onto others. But scientists now report that washing your hands may also help you live with a tough decision. Scientist know there is a psychological link between feeling like you are doing the right thing, or feeling morally clean, and actually being physically clean. They have also found that when people are in a clean environment, they are more likely to behave correctly and generously. So Spike Lee, a doctoral student at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor decided to see how washing hands might make a difference in what someone thinks about making a decision.

    Lee had 40 college students make a list of their top 10 CDs. The students were then allowed to choose between their fifth and sixth-rank choice and keep the one they picked. Right afterwards, the students either washed their hands with soap or looked at soap. The students then re-ranked their top CDs. What do you think happened?

    Well, it turns out that the students who didn’t wash their hands ranked the CD they picked higher in the second round than they did in the first and ranked the selection they rejected even lower. It seems that physically washing their hands helped them feel better about their choice. Those who did wash their hands re-ranked their CD list the same.

    What does this mean? Well, the scientists aren’t quite sure. Sometimes, when we make a decision, we go back and forth about it and, when we make a decision, feel more strongly about our choice just to make sure we don’t have any regrets. But Lee thinks that washing your hands is like wiping your brain’s slate clean from any second thoughts you may have about your decision. The scientists suggest that maybe a bit of physical cleaning may help humans be better prepared to learn new information and accept choices. After you wash your hands, you can read more about this study.

    Our last new broadcast show of this school year airs next week, May 18th. Send in your questions about rivers and tune in! The show airs at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer or you can watch the archived version later here on the D4K Web site. Remember, when you send in a question, you and your class are entered into a drawing for stuff for your classroom.

    May 3, 2010:

    Walking above the water. | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/yafut/ (CC 2.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)

    Feeling blue? Take a walk outside. Scientists from England report that exercising outdoors helps improve your mood. Researchers found that the biggest effect was seen after just five minutes and that the positive health effects of outdoor exercise were stronger in young people. We have talked about this idea before here on the blog. In fact, we did a whole program on the importance of getting into the out-of-doors. Check out our “Be Outside” site.

    There was one new thing in this report. The researchers also found that the positive health effects of exercising outside were bigger if the area in which you exercised contained water, like a river or a lake. They also found that it didn’t seem to matter what kind of exercise you did. You just need to get outside. So, take five minutes today and walk outside! Here is the article from the BBC if you would like to learn more.

    Speaking of rivers, our next live broadcast show will be all about rivers. That program airs on Idaho Public Television or on this web site on May 18th. Send in your questions now!

    April 27, 2010:

    Child Sleeping | http://www.flickr.com/photos/george_eastman_house/3122868843/Need to study for a test? Get some sleep and dream. It turns out that sleeping and dreaming can help us learn, even if you just take a nap. Researchers at Harvard Medical School studied 99 people. The people were first taught to make their way through a maze on a computer. Half were then allowed to nap for two hours. The other half stayed awake. Later, all 99 retook the maze test. It turns out those who said they dreamed about the maze did much better than those who just slept and they did much better than those who didn’t sleep. Sleeping and dreaming allows our brain to sort though information and help make sense out of it. Senior Researcher Robert Stickgold says for every two hours we are awake, the brain needs an hour of sleep to process the all that information, so we all really need 8 hours of sleep. So, if you have a test coming up, study and then get some sleep. And by the way, most doctors say kids need a bit more than 8 hours of sleep to help them grow. If you want to learn more about this research, check out this article from LiveScience.

    Our next D4K broadcast show will be all about rivers. Be sure to send in your questions today!

    April 19, 2010:

    Tyrannobdella rexSend in your questions about salmon! We have our next broadcast show on Tuesday, April 20th. Check it out at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television or here on the D4K Web site or watch the archive version after the live show.

    I have a couple of interesting notes for this week’s entry. One is really gross and one is quite nice. Okay, gross first.

    Researchers have found a new species of leech, one that like to live up noses. Oh man!

    A leech is a blood-sucking creature that lives off a host. This one is called Tyrannobdella rex or tyrant leech king.

    Tyrannobdella rex mouthIt was first found in the nose of girl bathing in a river in Peru in 2007. It took a few years to determine that it was a new species. The Tyrannobdella rex has one jaw with eight very large teeth. It lives in the Amazon so we are pretty safe here in Idaho. Still, gross!!! You can learn more about it from the BBC.

    The good news to report today is that some Idaho science teachers were recognized as GIANTS. Lt. Governor Brad Little gave four outstanding teachers the Governor’s Industry Award for Notable Teaching in Science (GIANTS) awards. This year’s winners are Kuna High School teacher Angela Hemmingway; Edward Katz of Bonners Ferry High School; Jennifer Martin of Homedale Middle School; and Ponderosa Elementary School (Post Falls) teacher Karlicia Minto Berry. Each received a $2000 prize. Honorable Mention awards of $500 each were presented to two additional teachers: Dennis Kimberling of Lakeland Junior High School (Rathdrum) and Liberty Elementary School (Boise) teacher Chris Taylor.

    Speaking of awards, D4K picked up an Emmy nomination this weekend. Congrats to all the D4K crew! We find out if we win the statuette on June 5th.

    April 12, 2010:

    Matthew Berger with fossilThink a kid can’t make a big scientific discovery? Think again. Nine-year-old Matthew Berger was helping his father Professor Lee Berger of South Africa’s University of Witwatersrand on a fossil-hunting expedition. Matthew found what turned out to be a collarbone of what may be a new species of our human ancestors who lived nearly two million years ago.

    Eventually, the researcher found 130 bones belonging to a nine-year-old boy and an adult female. The new species called Australopithecus sediba, which means southern ape, spring. These are the most complete bones of any early human ancestor ever found.

    Why is this find so important? Well, some scientists think Sediba, as it is called, may be the “missing link,” the species between ape-men and the first ancient humans. The scientists say Sediba walked upright (on two feet) but had long arms more like an ape. It had a human–like pelvis and a brain about a third the size of modern humans. The discovers think the woman and boy fell together along with several animals into a deep cave and died there.australopithecus sediba skull oblique view

    Not every scientist agrees that Sediba is the “missing link,” but they do feel this is a significant find. Not bad for a nine-year old! You can learn more about the find at the National Geographic web site and from this article from the Daily Mail.

    Next week, we will have our next live broadcast show. We will be taking your questions about Salmon. Be sure to email in your questions or call in live during the show. Everyone who does will be entered into our drawing for stuff for your classroom.

    April 6, 2010:

    Nicholas Copernicus - Portrait, 1580, Torun Old Town City Hall | Credit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Nikolaus_Kopernikus.jpgHey, there is a new element on the periodic table. Well, it is sort of new. Scientists in America and Germany have been fighting over the rights to name the element 112 since 1996. The International group that decides who get the naming rights is the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. That group decided that the German scientists get to name the element and they decided to call it copernicium after the astronomer Nicholas Copernicus. Copernicus was the first scientist to decide that the planets revolve around the sun rather than the earth.

    As reported in an article in the LA Times, Copernicium is a heavier relative of zinc cadmium and mercury. It is an element number of 112 and its symbol is Cn. If you want to learn more about elements and the periodic table, check out this video short from our chemistry show.

    Scientists don’t discover new elements very often and getting to name a new find is a big deal. The IUPAC has not yet resolved competing claims over the discovery of elements 113 through 118, so there are more names and more battles ahead. I think it is nice they decided to honor Copernicus, a scientist that didn’t get much attention in his day, but one who made major contributions to science. You can learn about his efforts in this video short.

    Hope you had a good spring break.

    March 23, 2010:

    Text Message | Credit: Ken Banks, kiwanja.net
    Do you text? More and more kids do. A study by the Nielsen Research firm found the average teen sends 3,146 text messages a month. That’s a lot of typing on a very small keyboard. That much typing is leading to another interesting trend. More kids are being diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome. Carpel tunnel syndrome causes pain, weakness, tingling and numbness in the wrists and hands. If you’ve been texting a lot, typing a lot, or playing video games for a long time, you may notice these symptoms. If you do, put down your phone, take your hands off the keyboard and put away the controller, and give your wrists a break. Carpal tunnel syndrome is no fun. You have to wear braces on your hands and maybe have surgery. If you want to learn what happened to one teen texter, check out this article on ABC news.

    Last week, I wrote about efforts to save endangered species. Zoo Boise is part of a greater effort to save endangered animals. You can learn more about that effort by checking out the interview we did with Zoo Boise director Steve Burns here.

    My other favorite science story of the week deals with bacteria and thieves. Scientists have found that everyone’s hands carry a unique blend of bacteria or microscopic creatures. Researchers at the University of Colorado now report that they can test the bacteria left on a keyboard and can tell if a particular person had actually used it. It may be kind of a test for a new type of fingerprint! Researchers don’t yet know how unique each human’s microbiome, a special mixture of bacteria, is but maybe sometime in the future, CSI investigators will ask for a suspects fingerprint AND his bacteria profile. If you want to learn more, here is a link to the article on Science News.

    Spring Break starts for me next week, so I will post again on April 5th. Enjoy your April Fools Day! No Joke! :-)

    March 15, 2010:

    The Food Chain
    Our newest D4K show is Tuesday, March 16th. We will be taking your questions about the Food Chain. Check it out over-the-air on Idaho Public Television or via live streaming here on the D4K Web site at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac. You can watch it anytime afterwards here on the Web site.

    There is some bad news this week for tigers. Scientist says we humans are doing a bad job at protecting these amazing creatures. 20 years ago, there were 100,000 tigers in Asia. Today there are only 3,200 left in the wild. Tigers are killed for their skin and parts of their body that are used in traditional medicine.

    United Nations official are meeting this week to decide what to do to save tigers, elephants, polar bears and Atlantic bluefin. These animals are all in danger of extinction.

    Is there something you can do to protect these animals? I will find out more and report next week. Between now and then, please check out the newest D4K show and send in your questions!

    March 8, 2010:

    Alarm Clock | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/laffy4k/ (CC 2.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)
    We lose an hour of sleep on Sunday, March 14th as daylight savings time begins. That may not seem like a big deal, but it really can throw people for a loop. We all have an internal clock in our brain. It runs on almost a 24-hour schedule and it is called a circadian rhythm. This rhythm helps you wake up, decide when you eat and when you fall asleep.

    When your internal clock and the clock on your school wall or on your cell phone don’t match, your system gets thrown off. If you have traveled to a different time zone, you may have experienced this feeling. It’s called jet lag.

    Teens often have a bigger problem than adults getting their internal clock to match the actual time. Because of biological changes, teens have trouble falling asleep as early as they used to and sleep later in the morning. That can mean they are late to school or have trouble staying awake in class. So what can teens do?

    Well, scientists have long known that how much light you get and when you get it plays a role in how your internal clock runs. Recently, they discovered that the human eye has two separate light sensing systems. One allows us to see. The other tells our body if it is day or night. It does this by detecting the type of light it sees. Blue light, like the light from a blue sky, is best for helping humans become less sleepy and more alert. On the other hand, watching TV or staring at a computer screen later at night can keep you awake longer and throw off your sleep cycle. It seems that getting sun in the morning and less light at night is a good way to help match your body’s rhythms with the Earth’s natural 24-hour cycle of light and dark.

    If you are having trouble syncing your internal clock with the rest of the world, scientists have some ideas. They suggest going to bed at your regular time, but getting up a little bit earlier each morning. Eventually, you will start getting sleepy earlier too. Scientists also suggest limiting the amount of time you spend in front of the TV and the computer later in the evening. Spend some quite time reading instead. If you are having trouble waking up, spend 10-15 minutes outside in the sunshine. A mid-morning break is good time to get some daylight.

    That brings me back to day light savings time. The time change means it will be darker in the morning for a while, making it tougher to get that early morning sunshine. Until the days get longer, you may need to make an extra effort to get a little daylight earlier in the day and limit evening TV and computer time. If you want to learn more about a blue light and circadian rhythm experiment, check out this article on Science News for Kids.

    Our next live broadcast show is next week. Check it out on March 16th at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac. Send in your questions about the food chain and you and your class may win our prize box.

    March 1, 2010:

    Child Reading | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/komunews/ (CC 2.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)
    Lots of science news this week… The earthquake in Chile was so big that it caused the day to be shorter. The earthquake was so powerful that it moved the Earth off its axis into a new position and increased the speed of our planet’s rotation. The change is permanent, but don’t worry too much. It only shortened the day by one millionth of a second.

    There was one other scientific report that caught my attention this week. It seems that reading to a child is essential in helping that child learn English. The same study also reported that reading at home to a child before he or she goes to school isn’t as important to children in Finland and China. Children in those countries seem to go on to learn to read regardless of how much reading was done with them at home.

    English has a lot of inconsistencies. Letters can have more than one sound each. According to the University of Alberta (Canada) Professor George Georgiou, having someone read to a child, letting that child play with magnetic letters on the refrigerator, creating a rich word environment at home will make a big difference in how well that child learns to read. Watching programs like Sesame Street helps too.

    Did your parents read to you? Do you read to your younger brothers and sisters? It doesn’t have to be an adult reading to a child. Make time to read to someone younger. You could be helping them on the path to being a good reader too! If you want something good to read, check out the links and facts on any of the subjects here on the D4K site. There are also reading lists for many of the topics, so that makes it easier to find a good book to share.

    The next D4K broadcast show will be on March 16th. We will be taking your questions about the food chain. Send a question in today.

    February 23, 2010:

    February is National Heart Health Awareness Month. There are lots of things you can do to protect your heart. Exercise. Eat right. Be positive. Yes, a good attitude can help you live longer. A study from Canada shows that people who scored highest on a five-point scale measuring joy, happiness, excitement, enthusiasm and contentment were the least likely to have heart disease. Researchers aren’t sure why having a good attitude would protect your heart, but they suggest that everyone should do something that brings them joy everyday, even if it is just for a few minutes. Researchers also know that people who are generally happy and positive have stronger immune systems and less diabetes, so another good reason to find some joy.

    It would make me happy if you would check out our most recent D4K broadcast show on Body Wastes. Yes, spread the joy and learn more about poop, pee and earwax. Check out the Web site here and watch the show, Web-only and video short .

    I am starting to collect ideas for next season, so if you have a suggestion, send me an email. Have a happy and positive week!

    February 16, 2010:

    Roses | Credit: Kevin Rank
    A rose by any other name would smell as sweet. That is a famous phrase from playwright William Shakespeare. But would it still be true if the rose smelled like root beer? Scientist David Clark from the University of Florida in Gainesville has discovered the way to grow a rose that smells like root beer or a petunia that smells like wintergreen. For years, rose growers have been breeding roses, trying to improve the shape, color and heartiness of the flower, but in the process, they lost some of the rose’s beautiful scent. Clark and his team were trying to solve another problem when they ran across the genes that give petunias their scent. They think that with more research, they can start breeding roses with more scent or with different scents. They might even be able to create fruit that smell and taste even better. It is a ways off, but someday you may be able to give your valentine a dozen roses in your favorite smell. Read more about it here.

    Tuesday, we will air our next broadcast show on, gasp, body waste: poop, pee, snot, vomit, mucus, all those things your body gets rid of. Send in a question. The show airs live at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television or watch the show live here on your computer or check out the archive version afterwards . The Idaho Statesman and Holly Anderson did a nice article on the show. You can read it here.

    I celebrate Fat Tuesday on the 16th this year too. So, check out the D4K show and then enjoy some jazz or pancakes, whichever way you choose to commemorate the day.

    February 8, 2010:

    Pluto turning Red
    As promised, I am reporting that Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow. As legend has it, we should expect six more weeks of winter. So if you are looking for signs of spring, you may have to look at the dwarf planet Pluto. The BBC reports that scientists are seeing signs of a sort-of spring there.

    NASA scientists looked at pictures taken by the Hubble Telescope and report that the dwarf planet is turning redder. They have also found that Pluto’s northern hemisphere is getting brighter. Scientists think this due to a warming of Pluto’s surface. Ultraviolet radiation from the sun is warming up the methane gas on Pluto, leaving behind a red deposit. Also, scientists guess that ice is melting on Pluto’s sunlit pole and re-freezing on the other pole.

    So why is Pluto warming up? Well, Pluto, like the Earth, moves a bit closer to the sun as it travels around the galaxy. When the Earth moves closer, we get spring and summer. When Pluto gets closer, it apparently turns redder. Spring doesn’t come very often to Pluto. While the Earth travels around the sun in approximately one year, Pluto takes 248 years to travel around the sun. And remember, warmer on Pluto is a relative term. The average temperature of Pluto is between -396°F to -378°F. Brrr.

    The other science news-of-note this week comes from Cornell University. Scientists there think they have found a way to let people walk on walls. They hope to come up with a way of making shoes and gloves that would stick and unstick to walls. Paul Steen, a professor of chemical and bimolecular engineering, and his associate Michael Vogel, invented a palm-sized devise that uses water surface tension as an adhesive bond. Watch out Spiderman. Read more about it here.

    If you or your teacher have an idea for a great science project, the Idaho National Laboratory may be able to help. Folks at the INL are accepting applications for two $10,000 2010 Extreme Classroom Makeover grants and for a few 2010 INL STEM Mini grants. For more information, check out the INL Web site.

    Our newest D4K broadcast show is next week. We will be taking your questions about body waste. Send in your questions today or call in live. The show airs at 2:00/1:00 p.m Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television or here on the D4K Web site. You can also watch the show after it airs here on the Web site. Not sure what question to ask? Check out the Body Waste site.

    February 1, 2010:

    Punxsutawney Phil
    What color were dinosaurs? It isn’t an easy question to answer. Paleontologists, the scientist who study dinosaurs, had first guessed that dinosaurs looked like modern amphibians. They thought dinosaurs were mostly green and brown so the creature would blend in with trees and grasses. But in the end, it was really just a guess. Now, scientists think at least one dinosaur had the same coloring as a ginger cat.

    SinosauropteryxThere is a chemical called melanin that gives our hair color. Dinosaurs had melanin too, but it was really hard to find melanin in dinosaur fossil remains. But teams of scientists from China and the United Kingdom (England) have found some melanin in the remains of a dinosaur called a Sinosauropteryx. The Sinosauropteryx lived about 125 million years ago. The scientists were able to use a powerful microscope and found some melanin in the remains of the dinosaur’s feathers. This dinosaur was a meat eater and about the size of a turkey. The scientists think it had feathers running along its head and back and was ginger colored with a striped tail. This is the first time scientists have found evidence of the color of feathers in dinosaurs. It supports the theory that some dinosaurs evolved into birds. Learn more in this BBC article.

    Remember Tuesday is Groundhog Day. According to legend, if Punxsutawney Phil comes out his hole and sees his shadow, we are in for six more weeks of winter. How accurate is Phil? He apparently sees his shadow 80 percent of the time. The National Weather Service predicts cloudy skis and snow in the town of Punxsutawney tomorrow, so maybe this is the year Phil won’t see his shadow. On Tuesday, do your own experiment. Step outside and look for your shadow. See if your prediction matches Phil’s.

    January 25, 2010:

    Macro of Bubble Wrap | Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/heypaul/
    This week marks the 50th anniversary of the invention of bubble wrap. Yes, that cool stuff that you use to wrap items when you ship them, stuff that is even more fun to pop. Inventors Marc Chavannes and Al Fielding first designed it as textured wallpaper. Bubble wrap is basically just air sealed between plastic sheets, but it is so much fun to pop! If you want to celebrate Bubble Wrap Appreciation Day, here is a link to virtual bubble wrap. Warning: This is a commercial site!

    If you want to share your bubble wrap experience or your favorite D4K video, you can tweet someone new to the Internet. The astronauts on the International Space Station received a special software upgrade last week and they can now get onto the Internet all by themselves. Before this, they had to send an email to the ground where someone else had to put it into their Twitter account. Now, they can surf net in privacy and send their tweets directly. It isn’t as easy an accomplishment as it sounds. According to a NASA press release, the crew in space can view the desktop of a computer on the ground using a specially designed onboard laptop. If you want to follow their twitter feed, here is the address: http://twitter.com/NASA_Astronauts Be thankful you don’t have to route your internet access through outer space!

    January 18, 2010:

    Kids and Nutrition | Credit:Tim Tower
    Have a question about nutrition? Check out the newest D4K Broadcast show. It airs Tuesday, January 19th at 2:00/1:00p.m. Mt/Pac. Send in your questions now! If you miss the live broadcast, you can watch it on the D4K Web site. Go to the Nutrition page and look for the link. It should be available Tuesday late afternoon.

    I’ve been doing a lot of work on next month’s show recently. In February, we will be taking your questions about body wastes. And I’m not the only one thinking about poop and pee these days. NASA is need of a plumber. Engineers find that astronauts’ urine is clogging the International Space Station’s water recycling system. That system turns urine into clean drinking water.

    International Space StationIt turns out that astronauts’ urine has a lot of calcium in it. Calcium is a mineral found in your body in places like your bones and teeth. Scientists aren’t sure if astronauts are losing calcium from their bones because they are living in a zero gravity environment and they don’t know if that is why the calcium is building up in their urine.

    Regardless, the engineers at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama are trying to figure out how to fix the clog and prevent future problems. They need to do it soon. They want to send the replacement parts and repair instructions with the astronauts flying the shuttle Endeavour on or around February 7th.

    I bet that house call is expensive! Still, when you gotta go, you gotta go.

    You go send in questions about nutrition and check out that new show and start thinking of body waste questions for February.

    January 12, 2010:

    How Myopia Works | Michael Emarth/FDAMost of us have trouble seeing into the future. Many of us have trouble seeing across the street. I am, like lots of you, nearsighted. That means I can see things close up but have trouble seeing things far away. I’m not alone. The number of people who are nearsighted has gone way up. In the early 1970’s, 25% of those between 12 and 54 years-of-age were nearsighted. Today, almost 42% of that same age group is myopic or nearsighted. Why the big increase? Well, it may have to do with how much time you spend outdoors as a kid.

    Susan Vitale, an epidemiologist at the National Eye Institute studied the causes of nearsightedness. Genes play a role. If your parents are nearsighted, there is a chance you will be too. But it also turns out that if you don’t get outside much, the chances you will become myopic by the 8th grade are about 60%. As reported by NPR, scientist Susan Vitale said, “If children engage in over 14 hours per week of outdoor activity, their chances of becoming nearsighted were only about 20%.” That’s a big difference.

    The study also found that one of those things we always thought caused nearsightedness probably doesn’t. Vitale reports that the amount of near-work didn’t seem to influence whether or not kids become nearsighted. Near-work would include reading a book, working on a computer, playing video games or watching TV.

    And it apparently isn’t the exercise you get when you go outdoors that makes the difference. Kids who exercised inside didn’t benefit from the lower risk of nearsightedness like the kids who went outside.

    But why would that be? Why does being outside improve or protect vision. Maybe it is the additional amount of light? The scientists don’t yet know, but they are still investigating. Meanwhile, there are lots of other benefits about being outside. Check out our “Be Outside” Web site.

    Our newest broadcast show is coming up next Tuesday, January 19th. We will be taking your questions about nutrition. Send your questions in today (link). And check out the show on Idaho Public Television or on the D4K Web site at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac or watch the archived streaming here on the D4K Web site shortly afterwards.

    January 05, 2010:

    The new Solar System. Credit: International Astronomical UnionHappy New Year! I hope you had a great holiday. The world may have gotten a year older, but, according to science, the solar system got a little younger. Scientists from Arizona State University report that the solar system is a million years younger than previously thought. That puts the solar system’s age at 4.567 billion years old. While one million is a pretty big number, it really is pretty small compared to 4.567 billion. Still, a million is a million. Learn more about how scientists figure out the age of the solar system at the Science News Web site.

    Did you stay up for New Year’s Eve or is midnight your regular bed time? If you or your siblings are teens, perhaps you should think about going to bed earlier. Scientists at Columbia University have found that teenagers who make a habit of staying up past midnight have an increased risk of depression. Teens who go to bed by 10:00 p.m. or earlier can improve their mental health. Scientists say it is equally important to get enough sleep. Teen who got five hours of sleep or less were 71% more likely to be depressed. Lack of sleep is also linked to obesity, type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure. So make a New Year’s resolution to get to bed earlier and to get enough sleep!
    Check out the article about this getting enough sleep in the LA Times.

    Have a great first week of 2010! Go Broncos!

    December 29, 2009:

    D4K 10th AnniversaryHappy New Year! As promised, here is my list of the top science stories of 2009. Now, this isn’t a list of just the biggest stories, though some are pretty big. I have also included stories that made my blog just because they were fun and some stories that you might not have heard of before. Here goes, in no particular order:
    1. Water found on the Moon: It took an explosion to do it, but water on the moon could aid future space travel. (Link to Oct 13th blog) Nice that it happened the same year as the 40th anniversary of human’s landing on the Moon.
    2. "Ardi" discovered: Ardipithecus ramidus was 110-pound female that walked around what is now Ethiopia 4.4 million years ago. She is probably the last common link we have with chimps.
    3. The oldest object in the universe discovered: A 10 second burst of gamma rays lead scientists to find GRB 090423, a star in the constellation Leo that explodes 13 billion years ago.
    4. Spanking is bad for your brain: A study of hundreds of 2 - 9 year-olds shows that the more a child is spanked the lower his or her IQ score is compared to others their age.
    5. Dinosaurs may have been wiped out by toxic algae: Most scientists think dinosaurs were wiped out by as asteroid hitting the earth and the aftermath of such an impact, but some researchers think poisonous algae may have also helped kill them off. Find out more about Dinosaurs here: http://idahoptv.org/dialogue4kids/season10/dinosaurs/
    6. Late-sleepers are more alert then early-risers: I am NOT a morning person and it turns out, this is a good thing. A study of the attention spans of people who get up at the crack of dawn and those of us who are night owls shows that late- sleepers were more focused than early-risers. They tested both groups 1.5 hours and 10.5 hours after getting up. Both groups tested the same at 1.5 hours but the night owls did better 10.5 hours later. Take that all you morning people!
    7. Astronauts and their ground colleagues fix the Hubble Telescope: Pretty amazing efforts to save a major scientific tool and a nice way to celebrate the 400 anniversary of the telescope. Check out our Astronomy show for more information.
    8. Most children lack vitamin D: Studies show 70% of U.S. children do not have sufficient levels of vitamin D in their systems. Scientists say that may be due to a poor diet and not enough sunshine. So, drink your milk, not pop and get outside more often. Check out our Be Outside video and site!
    9. Astronomers, scientists who study the stars, have found a giant dust cloud in the center of the Milky Way and they think it might taste like raspberries. Yup, raspberries.
    10. D4K celebrated its 10th Anniversary in March. You can watch our anniversary show here. We started our 11th season in September and look forward to many seasons to come. Enjoy your 2010 and be sure to come back each week and check out my blog! Happy New Year!

    December 22, 2009:

    Sinornithosaurus | Credit : National Academy of SciencesHappy Holidays! Most of you are out of school and enjoying a few days off of school. Science, however, doesn’t take the day off. And this week, there is news of a cool new dinosaur. Sinornithosaurus was discovered in what is now north-east China. What is really different about this dinosaur is that it had venomous fangs! This bird-like dinosaur had teeth that reminded scientists of rear-fanged snakes. The Sinornithosaurus’ bite was probably not deadly in and of itself, but the poison probably caused the dinosaur’s pray to go into shock, slowing the prey down so Sinornithosaurus could catch it. Here is a link to the BBC’s article if you’d like to learn more.

    If you are looking for something to do on Christmas Eve, how about tracking Santa? The North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) track Santa’s progress. NORAD uses four high-tech systems to track Santa and you can follow along on their Web site. For example, I didn’t know Rudolph’s nose gives off an infrared signature that NORAD’s satellites can track. Check it out here.

    One more thing, we here at D4K got an early Christmas present. We won a CINE Golden Eagle. This is an international award recognizing outstanding non-theatrical programming. Our Anniversary show was recognized along side “Arthur” and three other national programs. Pretty cool! It wouldn’t happen without your support so thank you for watching the videos and checking out my blog. Have a happy holiday season and check back next week for my picks for the top science stories of 2009.

    Ho Ho Ho!

    December 14, 2009:

    Check out this week’s new D4K broadcast show.  On Tuesday, at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac, you can ask a leading NASA scientist all about the Hubble Telescope and astronomy.  Send in your questions (link) or call in live.  If you can’t watch the live show here on the Web site or on Idaho Public Television, be sure to come back and look at the archived show or the Web Extra.

    Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) | Credit : NASAIn science news this week, astronomers will soon have a new telescope to see into the very darkest parts of space.  The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) blasted off into space today.  This telescope is designed to look at infrared light.  It can target things even Hubble can’t see.  The cool thing about this telescope, and I do mean cool, is that the instruments are surrounded by a core of super-cold hydrogen.  The mirror and other parts of the telescope need to be protected from the heat generated by the telescope’s electronics, so it can detect the faintest things like brown dwarfs.  Scientists think the WISE will be able to double or triple the number of star-like object known within 25 light years of Earth.

    The BBC also has a great clip of a very smart octopus that has figured out how to use a coconut shell as a home.  Scientists thought only a few creatures knew how to make a tool and the octopus wasn’t on their list.  But now, there is video evidence of a smart octopus making a tool. In this case, grabbing a coconut, sucking out the mud, and flipping it over to use it for shelter qualifies as making a tool.  The video is a kick to watch so check it out here (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8408233.stm)

    I’ll be looking for your questions about astronomy!

     

    December 07, 2009:

    Hubble Image | Credit : NASAIf you are interested in chemistry, I invite you to attend the Holiday Chemistry Demo show Monday at BSU’s Jordan Ballroom.  It is a free event featuring Dr. Pickelstein, a guest on our recent Chemistry show.  If you can’t make it to Boise or read this after the 7th, check out our Chemistry show to see Dr. Pickelstein in action.

    We are closing in on our next D4K broadcast program.  Tune in on Tuesday, December 15th and learn more about the Hubble Telescope.  Dr. Kenneth Carpenter, a lead scientist on the Hubble Telescope Project will be joining us to answer your questions.  The Hubble telescope was recently upgraded and its new wide field camera is producing some amazing pictures.

    Hubble Image 2 | Credit : NASAHere’s some Hubble trivia, thanks to the folks at the BBC

    • Hubble fixed the age of the Universe at 13.7 billion years old.
    • Hubble was able to help scientists learn that the Universe is accelerating, or moving out faster, because it could see faint supernovae.
    • Hubble gave us the first direct measurement of the three-dimensional distribution of dark matter.
    • Hubble has shown us that black holes live in the center of most galaxies.

    Do you have questions about Hubble?  Watch our show next week on Idaho Public Television on Tuesday, December 15th at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac or watch it here on your computer live or later here via video streaming.  Send in your questions about Hubble or astronomy in general here today!   We’ll try to answer them next week.

     

    November 30, 2009:

    Ear | Credit : Travis IsaacsDid you know you hear with your skin as well as your ears? Scientists have known for a long time that you use your eyes to help understand what people are saying, but now they know that you use your skin too.

    When we say the letters “p,” “t” and “k,” we let out a puff of air. Try it. Scientists wondered if others feel that air when you say words with those letters. We probably don’t notice the puff of air, but there are lots of sensors in the skin that could pick up the pressure and send a signal to our brains. So scientists at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver wanted to find out if air blown on the back of a neck would help people hear sound better.

    They had 66 participants blindfolded and then had them listen to recorded sounds of “pa” and “ba” or “ta” and “da.” The researchers also sent light bursts of air on the participants’ skin, either their hand, neck or in their ears. The puffs of air were lighter than you would expect from a normal conversation and most of the participants said they weren’t aware when the air puffs happened.

    It turns out that people were better able to tell a “pa” from a “da” when there was a puff of air. Researcher Bryan Glick said that even a puff of air on someone’s ankle helped him or her “hear” better.

    So, why is this important? Well, scientists hope they might be able to use this research to improve hearing aids for the hard-of-hearing. New hearing aids may have the ability to produce a puff of air on the wearer’s neck to help that person better understand sounds. That’s pretty cool! If you want to learn more about this study, check out the report in Scientific American.

    Hope you had a good Thanksgiving and are enjoying this holiday season. If you have some spare time, be sure to send in a question for our next D4K broadcast show. We will be talking about astronomy. Send in a question now!

    November 20, 2009:

    Turkey | Credit : Alan Vernon - http://flickr.com/alanvernon/Happy Thanksgiving week! In honor of this holiday, I present some turkey trivia.

    • The American Indian name for the turkey was “firkee.”
    • The wild turkey is native to Northern Mexico and the Eastern United States.
    • Wild turkeys lived in North American 10 million years ago.
    • The largest turkey was 86 pounds.
    • Male turkeys, called toms, gobble. Female turkeys, called hens, click or cluck.
    • Turkeys hear very well but don’t see well at night.
    • Wild turkey can fly, for short distances, at 55 miles per hour. They can run at 18 miles per hour.
    • In the seventeen hundreds in England, farmers would walk their turkeys to market. They would put booties on the turkeys’ feet to protect them.
    • Astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin Alden ate turkey in foil packets for their first meal on the Moon.
    • Apollo meal pack. | Credit : History.nasa.gov - http://history.nasa.gov/SP-368/s6ch1.htm

    Want to learn more turkey trivia? Check out this Turkey Facts Web site. Have a great Thanksgiving and enjoy some turkey!

    November 20, 2009:

    NASA Spacecraft | Credit : NASAWe almost had an explosion on the D4K set this week. We had our new broadcast show on Tuesday, all about chemistry. One of our guests, Dr. Picklestein, was planning an experiment that would have shot liquid nitrogen up in the air. The problem is we have studio lights up in the rafters, so he did something else instead. Why do you think shooting liquid nitrogen into lights would be bad? Anyway, check out the experiment he did do. Click here to watch it.

    If you want to see some actual explosions, Dr. Picklestein, a.k.a. Dr. Henry Charlier, invites everyone to the BSU Holiday Chemistry Demo Show on Monday, December 7th. The demonstrations begin at 6:30p.m.with several hands-on activities to follow. The event is free and will be at the BSU Special Events Center. Check it out!

    I do have one update for you. In October, NASA sent a rocket to the moon. It smashed into the planet and then the scientists looked at the dust and dirt the rocket kicked up to see if there was any evidence of water on the moon. Well, NASA scientists now report that is water there. They think that the water, which is now ice, has built up over billions of years. This is good news for future explorers who may be able use the water on the moon on their way toward mars.

    November 10, 2009:

    Icecream Sunday. | Credit : Biyu - http://www.flickr.com/plain_queen/One week until our next broadcast D4K!  We will be taking your questions about chemistry.  This is the first time that we’ve talked about chemistry on D4K.  Our guests are planning some surprises, so be sure to tune in either on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac or watch it here live.  You can also watch the archive version here later that day. Send in your questions now.

    Chemists are making science news this week.  Researchers at the University of Missouri have discovered ways to make ice cream healthier.  They are adding nutrients like fiber and pro-biotics.  It is tricky because you don’t want to change the creamy goodness of ice cream.  Chemists there have found that flavors like chocolate are easier to work with because they are strong and can cover up some of the taste of the additives.  What the scientists don’t know is if people will pay more for ice cream with added nutritional benefits or if they will be mad about science messing with their comfort food. What do you think?

    We will be talking about nutrition in our January show, but there are great facts and links already available on the nutrition site. If you are curious, check it out.

    I’m looking forward to seeing your questions and learning more.

    November 02, 2009:

    Folded sediments with basalt. | Credit : Matt KohnToday is El Dia de los Muertos or All Souls’ Day or the Day of the Dead.    I remember my Dad, Fred Cartan, who was a scientist, on this day. 

    My Dad would have appreciated these pictures.  Matt Kohn, Associate Professor of Geology at BSU and one of the guests on our recent Geology show gave these pictures to me. These pictures are examples of the forces nature uses to shape rocks.  They are pretty cool.

    Sheared sediments. | Credit : Matt KohnWe have a new site on the D4K web page.  Be sure to check out the new “Games” page. This is our first jump into educational games, so try some and let me know what you think.  We plan to redesign the page next season based, in part, on your feedback.

    As for science news this week, here is one interesting study noted in EurekAlert.   I present it  in honor of the World Series.  Zhong-Lin Lu, a professor of cognitive neuroscience at the University of Southern California, USC alumni Emily Knight and Robert Ennis and Arthur Shapiro, associate professor of psychology at American University answered the question of whose curveball breaks harder—that of the Yankees’ AJ Burnett or the Phillies’ Cole Hamels.  It turns out that the answer is neither one.

    Folded sediments India. | Credit : Matt KohnThe scientists developed a simple visual demonstration that suggests a curveball’s break may be just a trick of the eye.  It seems that the batter thinks there is a break in the ball’s path when he is forced to switch between his peripheral vision and his central vision during a swing.  Their demonstration won the Best Visual Illusion of the Year prize earlier this year.  You can see it for your self here: http://illusioncontest.neuralcorrelate.com/2009/the-break-of-the-curveball/

    Our next broadcast show is coming up on November 17thSend in your questions about chemistry.


    October 26, 2009:

    Spider macro | Credit : Thomas ShahanBoo! Did I scare you? Probably not, but many people seem to be scared by something. If you are so scared by something that it becomes a problem in your life, your fear is called a phobia. So in honor of Halloween, here is a list of the top 10 things that really scare people, according to the folks at LiveScience.

    10.  The dentist (I like my dentist, Dr. Bruce. You can see him in the
           video short, All about Teeth)
    9.    Dogs
    8.    Fear of flying in an airplane
    7.    Thunder and lightening.  (Okay, I can go along with this one!)
    6.    The dark
    5.    Heights
    4.    Speaking in front of other people
    3.    Confining spaces
    2.    Spiders
    and the number one thing that scares people . . . Snakes!

    How does this list compare to what scares you?

    My favorite scientific study this week isn’t scary at all.  It deals with being clean.  It turns out the cleanliness fosters morality.  So, what does that mean?  Well, researchers set up a game.  Players were given $12, which they were told came from someone they didn’t know in another room.  That player had to decide how much money to keep and how much to return to the other person.  That second person trusted the first player to divide it fairly.

    The researchers sprayed one room with a common window cleaner and left another room unscented.  The players who were in the room with the cleaner gave back on average $5.33 to their unknown partners.  The players in the unscented room gave back on average only $2.81.  None of the players said they noticed any scent.  So why did the players in the clean room give back more? 

    Researchers know that smells can play a role in whether an experience is a good or bad one. Now they think that a clean smell might inspire you to do the right thing. So, clean your room and you might get a nice reaction from your Mom. If you want to read more about it, here is the link to the article in LiveScience.

    If you haven’t seen it yet, check out last week’s new broadcast show on bird migration. Be sure to send in your question for our November show. We will be talking about Chemistry. More about that next week!


    October 13, 2009:

    Happy day after Columbus Day!  Sorry the blog was delayed, but I took the day off and did some exploring on my own.  I’m not the only one still exploring.  NASA is looking for water on the moon. This past week, they fired a rocket into the face of the moon, hoping to find traces of water in the dust and debris that the explosion would throw up into the air.  If you want to watch the impact, check out the NASA TV coverage. Did they find any water?  The short answer is they don’t think so, but it will really take a couple of weeks before they can confirm exactly what they did find.  I will report when I hear.

    One other bit of news caught my eye. Scientists from Oxford University in England report that juggling increases brain power.  It turns out that learning a complex task, like juggling three balls in the air, can increase the white matter in your brain by 5%.

    Your brain has white matter and gray matter.  Gray matter is made up of nerve cell bodies.  White matter is made up of long, thin, string-like filaments that carry electrical signals in the brain. They are called gray matter and white matter because that’s what they actually look like. 

    Scientists have known that we can increase gray matter in our brain by learning, but this is the first time they have proved you can also increase your white matter.  That is important because it could lead to better treatments for diseases like multiple sclerosis.

    In this study, 24 people were given brain scans and then divided into two groups. One group spent six weeks learning to juggle.  The other didn’t.  At the end of the experiment, everyone had another brain scan.  Scientists found a 5% increase in the brains of the jugglers in the part of the brain that we use to reach for objects in our peripheral or side vision.  It didn’t seem to matter how well the volunteers learned to juggle, as long as they trained.  Scientists think that juggling isn’t the only way to grow white matter.  They believe you can probably increase your brain power by learning any complex task.  Cool. Here’s a link to the BBC article if you want more information.

    Joan and friendWe are getting ready for next week’s broadcast show.  We will be taking your questions about bird migration. Watch the show and meet my new friend.  Be sure to also send in your questions.


    October 05, 2009:

    How many times do you have to shuffle a deck of cards to make sure that deck is really shuffled?  It turns out it took mathematics and magic to learn the answer.

    Persi Diaconis was interested in answering this question.  When he was 14, he started life as a professional magician doing card tricks.  Eventually, he realized to answer his questions, he would have to study math and he became a mathematician at Stanford University.  Much of his research is about shuffling cards and probability, the study of chance.

    So after years of studying and with the help of some major computers, Diaconis and his friend Dave Bayer of Columbia University came up with the answer:  seven.  Say you pick a card, the three of hearts, and put it back on top of the deck. After the first shuffle, the computer could identify patterns in the cards and find your three of hearts out of order.  Bayer describes it this way.  “Shuffling cards is like mixing a marble pound cake. For a while, there are clear streaks of black and white. Then, all of a sudden, it turns brown.”  For cards, it would take seven shuffles before the patterns get so mixed up that a computer would have trouble identifying your specific card.  If you are playing Old Maid, where the suits of cards (the hearts, diamonds, clubs and spades) don’t matter, you only have to shuffle it four times.

    So if you are playing cards this week, shuffle seven time for a really well mixed up deck.

    I’m working on our next broadcast show.  On October 20th, we will be taking your questions about bird migration.  If you are wondering what to ask, check out the Bird Migration web site and send in an email.

    September 28, 2009:

    Khorat big-mouthed frog.  Credit:  Thomas Ziegler/WWFThe World Wildlife Fund reported the identification of a whole bunch of new species. Scientists found 100 new plants, 28 new types of fish, 18 new reptiles, 14 new amphibians, 2 new mammals and a new bird. How about that? All of the species were found within the Greater Mekong region of Southeast Asia. That area includes Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan. My favorite is the Khorat big-mouthed frog. The frog has fangs that stick out from its bottom jawbone. It waits for its prey in streams, eating other frogs and insects. It has been found in three remote locations in Thailand.

    The WWF report also says all of these species and many more are in danger from climate change. Rising seas may push more saltwater into the area threatening all of these species. Climate change threatens moose in Minnesota and even species here in Idaho. Ask the scientists about how climate change affects birds on our next live broadcast show. Send in a question today!

    Scientists in San Diego this week released another interesting report not about frogs but about spanking. University of New Hampshire professor Murray Straus reports that being spanked as a child that child’s IQ. The IQ is a test of intelligence. Straus says children in the United States who were spanked had lower IQs than those who were not spanked, lowered by as much as five points. That is a big difference. Straus says the same is true of children all over the world. “The more spanking, the greater the slower the development of a child’s mental development,” according to the Professor. He and his study team think that children who are spanked are under stress and it is hard to learn when you are stressed out. What do you think? You can read more about the study from and ABC report.

    Have a good week!

    September 21, 2009:

    The tiny T. Rex from China.  Credit:  Todd MarshallHappy first day of Fall. This year, the autumnal equinox hits on September 22nd at 3:18 p.m. MT. We will have 12 hours of daylight and dark and the days will be getting shorter until December 21st, the shortest day of the year.

    The biggest science news this week came out of China. Scientists there found a small dinosaur fossil that looks like a miniature T-Rex. This three feet tall dinosaur called Raptorex kriegsteini came along about 35 million years earlier than the T-Rex, but it looks just like its bigger cousin.

    Paleontologists, scientists who study dinosaurs, used to think T-Rex’s features, like its puny arms, evolved because of its huge size. But this smaller version has the same build, just in much smaller proportions. The Raptorex was about nine feet long and weighed about 150 pounds. T-Rex’s grew 90 times that size.

    Toothpaste is like lava...Dr. Paul Sereno, a scientist with the University who studied the new fossil, thinks that the Raptorex’s and T-Rex’s small arms are a trade off for the creatures’ big heads. The bigger the head got, the smaller the arms got so the dinosaur would be able to maintain its balance. To learn more, click on this article from the American Association for the Advancement of Science and thanks to Todd Marshall for the drawings.

    We also had our first broadcast show of the 2009-2010 school year. If you haven’t had a chance to see our Geology show, video short or Web only show, click here and check them out.

    September 8, 2009:

    Runners starting to run.  How do they go so fast? Credit: Stefano Mortellaro
    So, have you ever been told you had an athlete’s body? Some argue that they can tell what kind of sport you should play just by the look of your body. Sprinters, those athletes that run fast, short races are usually smaller. Smaller runners would use less energy because they have less body mass to pull along.

    But then how do you explain Olympic winner Usain Bolt? He recently set the world’s record in the 100 and 200-meter race and Bolt is six-feet-five inches tall!

    Scientists went to work trying to figure out how such a tall guy can run so fast. And they think it may have something to do with the way he flexes toward his shin when he runs. According to an article in the LA Times, Corey Hart, an exercise physiologist with the Physio Performance Lab in Boise suggests that Bolt doesn’t put his heel too close to the ground when he runs. That’s called dorsiflexion. Sprinters, he says, run on their forefeet. But another scientist, Dan Cipriani, from San Diego State University thinks the key to Bolt’s speed is due to the movement of his shins away from his feet or the opposite of dorsiflexion. That happens when Bolt takes off.

    Whatever it is, be it how he flexes his foot or something in his genes, Bolt proves that old saying: you can judge a book by its cover. Don’t let someone limit you to one sport just because “you’re built for it.”

    This week we celebrate a mathematical miracle. Wednesday is 09/09/09. This is the last time for more than a century that we will see a triple single digit day. Dates like this play an important role in some cultures. In China, 09/09/09 is big. The number 9 is a positive thing. According to legend, the Emperor’s Forbidden Palace has 9,999 rooms. But in Japan, the number 9 is associated with bad things. Many Japanese hotels do not even have a room number with a 9 in it. Me? I associate 9/9/9 with something wonderful. September 9th is my Mom’s birthday. Happy Birthday Mom!

    One more date to note-September 15th. That’s the premier of this season’s broadcast shows for D4K. Send in your questions now (link) for our Geology show and check out the program live on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac or watch it here on the Web site live or anytime afterwards. Remember, when you send in a question, you and your class will have a chance to win stuff for your classroom.

    August 31, 2009:

    Macro of a snake.  Photographer's reflection in the eye. Credit: Kevin Rank
    I am not a big fan of snakes. I realize they have their place in the ecosystem, but they are just not my thing. And maybe, science explains why. Girls apparently learn to dislike snakes before their first birthday.

    Jenny getting water dumped on her.According to “Science News,” researchers have discovered that infant girls but not infant boys learn to link the sight of a snake or spider to the frightened reaction of others by about 11 months of age. Bites from poisonous snakes were a real danger to prehistoric women, so researchers think that we may have inherited this discomfort with snakes. Another scientist thinks girls learn how to read other people’s facial expression before boys. If that is the case, girls would link a dislike of snakes sooner than boys would by reading their parents’ faces.

    How about you? Do you like snakes?

    Oh, sorry for not posting a note last week. We have been shooting video for the upcoming season. Here are a few pictures of what we have been up to…

    Start the count down for the new season of D4K. Our first broadcast show of the season is September 15th!

    Spraying Coke and Mentos

    August 17, 2009:

    Flamingo standing on one leg. Credit:  NPL/Nick Garbutt Why do flamingoes stand on one leg? Researchers Matthew Anderson and Sarah Williams from Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia have finally come up with an answer to that question and it wasn’t the answer many scientists thought it would be.

    Researchers originally thought flamingoes stand on one leg because it helps them use less energy when they take off to fly or because it helps them balance better in the wind. But both theories turned out to be wrong. Instead, they found that flamingoes stand on one leg to help regulate their body temperature. Flamingoes stand in water for long periods of time and they lose less body heat with just one foot down. Simply, keeping one foot up keeps them warmer.

    Also, it seems like flamingoes don’t prefer standing on one foot over another. Apparently, flamingoes are not right or left-footed. They will just change which leg they stand on to keep the other leg from getting too cold.

    Now that is important. Not preferring one leg over the other was an important discovery for Anderson and Williams. That’s because these researchers were also trying to find out if flamingoes favor one side of their body over the other, in the same way we humans are left-handed or right-handed.

    While flamingoes are not right or left-footed, they apparently do favor right side sleeping. When flamingoes rest, they curl up. Some placed their heads on the right side of their body and some on their left side. Anderson and Williams watched captive Caribbean flamingoes at the Philadelphia Zoo and learned that most flamingoes prefer to sleep with their heads to the right. They also found that those flamingoes that sleep with their heads to the left seem to get into trouble with the other flamingoes more often. Anderson and Williams think that being right-side sleepers may be a way flamingoes form social groups. Look for a flamingo sleeping to the left and you may have found a rebel or a bully. Do you think being left or right-handed makes a difference in who your friends are? Now that would be an interesting research question!

    August 10, 2009:

    Border Collie surrounded by flowers  - Credit:  Bev Sykes
    I have reported in previous entries that dogs don’t feel guilt… at least they don’t even though we humans think they do.  While they might not feel guilt, dogs do have emotions and they may be as smart as your toddler brother or sister.

    As reported in LiveScience.com, the average dog is as smart as the average 2-year-old.  Stanley Coren, a dog expert and professor emeritus at the University of British Columbia tested a number of dogs.  He found that the average dog can learn 165 words, about what a 2-year-old knows.  He says the really smart dogs can learn 250 words.

    Coren says dogs are better than some 3 and 4-year olds at basic arithmetic and have spatial problem-solving skills (that is dogs are good at figuring out how to open that latch and get at a good treat).  And while dogs might not feel guilt, they do show the basic emotions of happiness, anger and disgust.  Yes, your dog might not like it when you do something you shouldn’t.

    And just what are the smartest breeds?  Here’s this list:

    1. Border collies
    2. Poodles
    3. German shepherds
    4. Golden retrievers
    5. Dobermans
    6. Shetland sheepdogs
    7. Labrador retrievers

    And who is at the bottom?  Many of the hounds, like the basset hound and the bulldog, beagle and basenji.  Why?  Well Coren says the dogs on the bottom are older breeds.  They were trained to find things (such as tonight’s dinner).  These dogs may have more instinctive intelligence, that is the ability to do what they were bred to do rather than play with us humans. Coren says the smartest dogs have been bred to respond to humans. So that would give them an advantage in a test to respond to human signals.

    Winslow the BunnyThat is not to say the dogs on the bottom of the list aren’t great dogs.  Beagles were on the list of top 10 most popular dogs in 2008. Coren thinks that’s because they are sweet and sociable.

    What do you think?  How smart is your dog?  Smarter than my rabbit?  Not more cute.  Here’s Winslo’s latest picture.  Have a great week.


    August 3, 2009:

    Kids come out, summer has arrived.  Credit: Josh Pesavento
    Did you get outside this weekend?  Spend some time in the sun?  No?  Well, you may not be getting enough vitamin D.  Researchers report that about 70 percent of U.S. children have low levels of vitamin D.  If you don’t have enough vitamin D, you are at risk of bone and heart disease, especially later in life.

    So, how do you get enough vitamin D?  You can drink milk fortified with vitamin D and eat foods rich in vitamin D.  The American Academy of Pediatrics suggests a vitamin D supplement.  But perhaps the best thing you can do is get outside!  Our bodies make vitamin D when exposed to sunshine.  You should be outside 15 to 20 minutes a day.  Now, I sunburn easily, so I suggest using sunscreen if you are going to be outside more than that…but it is important to get outside.

    Also, drink water if you are going to be out in the heat!

    One other scientific study of note starting today... British psychologist Richard Wiseman is inviting people in England to participate in a five-day study to improve their happiness level.  He is hoping thousands of people will help.  Participants will be randomly assigned to one of four groups.  People in each group will rate their mood and then watch a video describing one of four ways to boost happiness and use that technique for the week.  They start today and will finish by Friday.  By the end of the week, the participants will rate the mood again and see if the happiness suggestion worked.  Researchers hope to figure out which of the various happiness suggestions work best.

    Here are some suggestions for things to do to make you happier…

    1. Meet up with friends you haven’t seen for awhile
    2. Watch a funny television show or film
    3. Exercise 30 minutes, three times a week
    4. Cut your television watching by half
    5. Buy experiences, not goods.  Go to a concert, moving, museum or new restaurant
    6. Create novel challenges, Start a new hobby, join a new organization, learn a new skill.
    7. Go for a 20-minute walk in the sun (helps with vitamin D!)
    8. Spend 10 minutes listening to relaxing music
    9. Pet a dog (or in my case, a rabbit)
    10. Stop watching or reading the news.

    Winslow the BunnyWhich activities do you think will make people happier?  Professor Wiseman says he will release the results of his experiment next week and I will try to report the results here. In the meantime, I am going home to pet Winslo!


    July 27, 2009:

    Toucan in a tree  Credit: Thiago Filadelpho via ScienceSo, have you found a way to beat this summer’s heat? If not, ask a toucan. Scientists reported this week that toucans use their beaks to help regulate their body heat.

    Researchers have long wondered why toucans have such big bills. After all, the beak makes up about a third of the bird’s entire body length. Some thought the bill might be used to attract mates or used in defense. But Glenn Tattersall of Brock University in Ontario, Canada and his team had a different idea.

    Thermal Toucan image Credit: Glenn TattersallThey found that a toucan’s beak contains lots of blood vessels. Using a special type of photography that detects heat, called infrared thermal imaging, Tattersall found that toucans use the blood veins in their bills to help get rid of extra heat when it is hot and keep heat in when it is cold. Birds, by the way, don’t sweat so they would need something to help them regulate their body temperature.

    Scientists say that toucans may still use their bills for other reasons too, like showing off for females, but they think that having your own radiator/beak to keep you the right temperature is pretty, well, cool.

    July 20, 2009:

    American Flag on the moon, Credit : NASAToday is an important anniversary for space travel. 40 years ago, the first humans stepped on the Moon. Be sure to check out the Web site WeChooseThe Moon.org. There you can listen to a real time re-creation of the Apollo 11 mission with great animation. I have the widget on my desktop to remind me to check the site at key moments.

    The science blogs were all a flutter about news that moths use sonar to escape bats, but I liked the story finding cats do control humans. Anyone who owns a cat already knows this, but it is nice science confirms it.

    It turns out that cats learn that if they make a purring sound combined with a high-pitched meow when they are hungry, their owners will feed them. Cats have learned that general meowing doesn’t get as good a response from human. So they are more likely to use this special purr-cry to get you to do something.

    Happy Kitten Credit : Kevin RankWhy not just a regular meow? It turns out the sound of a cat crying is similar to the sound of a baby crying. Humans have an instinct to answer a baby’s cry. So we are programmed to answer a cat’s cry too. But humans are also likely to toss a meowing cat out the door if its cry is too annoying. So cats have learned that this special cry-purr is better for getting what they want.

    So just how did scientists test this theory? They had cat owners record the sounds their cats made when the cats wanted food and when the cats didn’t. The researchers then played the cries to 50 subjects, not all of whom owned cats. The humans rated that special purr-cry as more urgent than a regular purr. That means the special cat purr-cry would be more likely to make you get out of your chair and find your cat its favorite treat.

    So, if you are feeling at bit used at the moment, consider one other fact. Only cats that have a one-on-one relationship with their owners make this sound. They have to know you and like you, to manipulate you.

    July 14, 2009:

    Picture taken on the moon, Credit : NASAIt has been 40 years since Apollo 11 made its historic journey to the moon. I wasn’t very old at the time, but I do remember the excitement of watching Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, the first human to do so. It was cool! Back then, we followed the whole journey on television. Now, you have the chance to follow that journey in real time, just like it happened 40 years ago, on your computer.

     

    Foot print on the moon, Credit : NASAStarting Thursday, July 16th at 9:32 a.m. (Eastern time), the Web site, WeChoseTheMoon.org will recreate the entire mission. They will replay the video and audio building up to the landing on the moon on July 20th. They will have special animation and lots of fun information about the Apollo 11 mission. You can follow the astronauts as they head to the moon on the Web site or on a special Twitter feed. There is even a cool widget for your Facebook or desktop to help you keep track of the mission. The John F Kennedy Library and Museum sponsors the site. President Kennedy was the first to challenge us to reach for the moon. So take some time this summer and reach for the moon yourself. If you want to learn more about the moon, check out the Moon section here on the D4K site.

    July 7, 2009:

    New Australian dinosaurs: Australovenator wintonesis, Banjo - Witonotitan watts, Clancy - Diamantinasaurus matildae, Matilda
    Happy Belated 4th of July! Hope you had a great holiday. Be sure to check out the fireworks section of this D4K site to learn more about the science behind making fireworks.

    My favorite science news this week comes out of Australia. Paleontologists there have discovered three new dinosaur species. I love their nicknames too. They were named after characters in Australia’s famous song, “Waltzing Matilda.” The first is carnivore, a meat eater, named Australovenator wintonensis. Its nickname is Banjo, named after Banjo Patterson who wrote “Waltzing Matilda” in Winton in 1885. Banjo, not the songwriter, was a scary dinosaur. He could run fast and had three sharp claws on each foot.

    The next two are plant-eating sauropods and were among the largest animals to ever walk on Earth. Witonotitan watts, better known as Clancy, was a tall slender animal. Diamantinasaurus matildae or Matilda was shorter and more rounded.

    Matilda and Banjo were found in a 98-million-year-old pond known as a billabong. Scientists think Matilda might have been Banjo’s last lunch.

    If you want to learn more about dinosaurs, there is lots of information on this D4K site.

    FYI, the American Association for the Advancement of Science put out a list of new science books for summer reading. Here is the link: http://www.eurekalert.org/features/kids/2009-06/aaft-a1s062909.php. Head to your local library and find something fun to read.

    June 26, 2009:

    Racing Pigeons returning to their loft. (Credit: Jason Pratt)So, what do pigeons think about? A New York Times article reports that scientists are working on answering that question. Scientists think that homing pigeons use landmarks, the earth’s magnetic fields and the position of the sun to find their way home, but they really don’t know exactly how homing pigeons find their way. They wondered if pigeons think about their route, or do they travel just by instinct, without much thought.

    The scientists implanted very tiny electric EKGs into the brains of homing pigeons. An EKG is a machine that can track brain waves. Scientists think that when the EKG machine shows mid-range frequencies, the brain is thinking about something it sees. When the brain shows high-frequencies, scientists believe the brain is really thinking about something complicated. That is called cognitive activity. The scientists also put little global positioning systems on the pigeons so they could match the brain activity to right spot.

    So then, the scientists let these special pigeons fly starting over water, which has few landmarks. Not much brain activity. But when the birds flew over land, landmarks they would recognize, their brains started registering those mid-range and high-frequency brain waves. So it seems that pigeons can recognize landmarks and understand what they see.

    One other thing surprised the scientists. Their EKG readings showed the pigeons had an increase in brain waves at two places the scientists hadn’t expected. They went back to those spots and found a couple of wild pigeon colonies. It seems pigeons think about more than just landmarks.

    Have a great week and a happy 4th of July!

    June 22, 2009:

    Our closest celestial neighbor, The MoonAre boys better than girls at math? The former President of Harvard University got into big trouble for saying that he thought men were innately better at math than women. Others argued that men aren’t naturally better at math. They said women are not encouraged to do well in math when they are girls, so they don’t do as well when they grow up. Neither side had any proof for their belief, so a couple of scientists decided to do a little research and find out which side was right.

    They looked at math test scores. Researchers looked at how many boys and how many girls scored at very top of the tests. Then they looked those students who scored in the middle. They also looked at how those scores changed over time.

    At the high end of the scale, they found that girls are catching up with boys. And they found no difference in general between the number of girls and boys who scored in the middle. It seems that boys don’t have more of a natural talent for math than girls do. What does makes a difference is how well you are encouraged to learn and enjoy math, whether you are a girl or a boy. Teachers and schools need to get rid of the idea that boys are better suited to do math and do more to encourage girls to like the subject.

    One other big story in the science this week, we are heading to the Moon again. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter was launched last week. It will take pictures of the Moon with the hopes of finding new landing sites. After it does that, the Orbiter will crash part of its rocket into the surface of the moon. Scientists will look at the dust and dirt the crash throws into that air. They hope to find out what lies beneath the surface of the Moon, maybe even find some water. Cool, huh.

    Hope you had a good Father’s Day and a good first day of summer!

    June 15, 2009:

    Is this a guilty dog?  (Credit: iStockphoto/Mark Coffey and Science Daily)So, have you ever caught your dog doing something it shouldn’t and seen a ‘guilty look’ come across its face? Bad dog. Bad dog. But science now suggests that you, not your dog, has something to feel guilty about.

    Researchers at Barnard College in New York took a set of dogs and owners. Owners left their dogs in a room after telling them not eat a tasty treat. Some dogs got the goodies, some didn’t. Then the researchers told some of the owners that their dogs ate the treats even when the dogs had not. Those owners then gave their pets a talking to and reported the dogs had a guilty look. So it seems that it didn’t matter if the dog had eaten the treat or not. If the owners thought the dog was guilty, the owners reported a guilty look on the dog’s face. Researchers concluded that the “guilty look” is a result of the owner’s behavior and not the dogs.

    Why is this important? Well, it shows we humans sometimes think animals pick up human traits. This is called anthropomorphism. So, if you are going to study animal behavior, like does a dog feel guilt, you have to be sure you aren’t just seeing something that really isn’t there.

    Is this true of other pets? I don’t know. What do you think?

    Just a couple other bits of science news for the week… The World Health Organization has declared a pandemic of the swine flu. That means there are enough cases spreading all over the world that health officials may need to take new steps to deal with it. So far, the swine flu isn’t too severe. It is no fun to catch, but isn’t as life threatening as other forms of the flu. That is good news. Still, when flu season rolls back around next fall and winter, it will be a good idea to follow basic health rules: Wash your hands. Cough into your elbow. And, if you feel sick enough, stay home.

    And scientists report that gray hair is a sign of stress. Tell that to your parents!

    June 8, 2009:

    Person in a house, or house around a person? Credit: Image courtesy the University of TorontoI have two bits of science news this week that involve your sight. Have you ever heard the phrase “seeing the world through rose-colored glasses”? They say if you see the world through rose-colored glasses, you see the positive side of things. Sometimes it means you aren’t seeing things the way they really are. Well, scientists report this week that that people who are in a positive mood actually see better.

    University of Toronto researchers gave two sets of people, one set in a good mood and one set in a bad mood, an image to look at that had a face in the center surrounded by “place” images, such as a house. The people were asked to focus on the person and tell whether it was a man or a woman. Then they were asked to describe the place around the face. Folks in a good mood were able to describe the place image, while the people who were in a bad mood couldn’t do it as well. It seems there was a change in the brain that allowed positive people to see more of the details.

    Now scientists say there is a good and a bad side to this finding. The positive people were able to see the whole picture, but they weren’t able to focus on one thing quite as much. Someone in a bad mood might be able to block out other things and focus on that single task more easily. Of course, they might miss details they need to do the job. It is an interesting challenge. Is it better to focus or see big picture?

    Speaking of focus, many of us wear glasses or contacts so we can see better. Some kids may not like wearing glasses because they think it makes them look ugly. But a new study says they are wrong. A survey of children between 6 and 10 reports that children think other kids who wear glasses are smarter and more honest. So, if you need glasses, wear them with pride, even if they are rose-colored!

    June 1, 2009:

    Playing a LituusHave you ever played a Lituus? No, it is not the latest video game. It is an 8 and a half-foot long trumpet-like instrument. People stopped using them about 300 years ago. Unfortunately, that also meant people stopped making them too. Today, We don’t really know what a Lituus looked or sounded like. So researchers at Edinburgh University decided to try to make one. They looked at old paintings of musical instruments like the Lituus and then used computer software to figure out what it might have sounded like. They eventually built two copies and turned them over to musicians to try them out. They are kind of tough to play and have a unique sound. Bach, a famous classical composer, used a Lituus in some of his work because of the instruments haunting sound. And thanks to science, we can all hear Bach’s work as he originally composed it. Cool.

    May 26, 2009:

    Dad applying suncreen-[Credit Diana Morgan]Hope you had a great Memorial Day holiday. Did you get out in the sun? Did you use sunscreen? Odds are against it and that, according to scientists, is not good. A survey from the Consumer Reports National Research Center reports that 31 percent of Americans never use sunscreen and 69 percent use it only occasionally. You should be using sunscreen on your face and neck every day!

    The sun puts out UVB rays. Those rays can damage your skin. You notice it as sunburn. Over time, damaged skin can develop skin cancer. But sunscreen protects your skin from UVB rays. Scientists say it is especially important for young people to protect their skin as studies have links bad sunburns when you are young to skin cancer when you are old. Scientists also say it is important to get out in the sun every day because it helps your body. So get out in the sun, but take my advice and use sunscreen!

    And enjoy your last few days of school and keep checking back here over the summer. Watch some videos from shows you haven’t seen. Send me an email. We won’t have another live show until September, but the D4K Web site is always here to explore and I’ll blog each week about fun science news.

    May 19, 2009:

    Peregrin on nestBirds of Prey are fascinating to watch. Check out these links to watch a family of Peregrine falcons who have made their home at the top of the One Capital Center in downtown Boise.

    WindowsMedia Icon Fiberpipe's live feed. | WindowsMedia IconPeregrinefund's feed.

    If you want to learn more about Birds of Prey, check out this week’s broadcast show or the Birds of Prey Web Extra. This was our last live show of the 2008-2009 school year. We will be back with a new season of programs starting in September. I will spend the summer preparing for those shows AND I will still be doing my blog. So check it out each week for the latest, most interesting science news.

    Oh, one more thing, thanks to Norm at Echo Films for letting us use some of his spectacular footage for the Birds of Prey shows. I ran out of time on the live show to express my appreciation. Thanks Norm!

    May 11, 2009:

    ”LabIf I could wish for something for you all, according to science, it would be to have a good Mom. Now Dads are important, no doubt, but scientists at Tufts University report that genes you get from your Mom have a lot more to do with how you turn out.

    Genes determine how our body works and whom we turn out to be. We get half our genes from our Mom and half from our Dad. Researchers now think that it is the genes you get from your Mom that decide how those genes are first “expressed.” Genes “express” themselves in different ways. They determine how we look, if we are naturally athletic, even if we are more likely to get a deadly disease. Apparently, your Mom’s genes have more say than your Dad’s genes, especially if you are a mouse.

    Scientist Larry Feig and his colleagues at Tufts University took a female mouse and gave her an education. In a mouse world, an education comes from living in an “enriched environment.” We know that mice that live in a more interesting place become smarter than mice that hang out in a bare cage. The researchers followed the educated mouse from her youth. When she grew up, she was put in a boring cage and than mated. Her pups, who had never lived in that “enriched environment” still turned out smarter than pups who came from a mom who had never had an education. They also found that the pups of a wise mom were smarter than their peers, even if a different, not-so-educated mom raised those pups. The education level of the dad mouse apparently had no effect.

    This is not to say Dads aren’t important. They are. But since we just celebrated Mother’s Day, I thought I’d give you another reason to tell your Mom thanks!

    Be sure to get your questions in about Birds of Prey for our next live D4K. That program will be broadcast on May 19th at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac on Idaho Public Television or live streamed here on the web site. Email a question here or check out the Birds of Prey web site.

    May 5, 2009:

    This is exciting! We have our first prime time D4K special this week. We are celebrating our 10th anniversary with a look at some of our favorite video shorts and studio moments. Watch the one-hour special Wednesday, May 6 at 8:00 pm on Idaho Public Television. You can watch the promo for the D4K 10th Anniversary show by clicking here. The show itself isn’t encoded yet so it isn’t available on-line. I’ll let you know when you can see it on-line.

    And just a reminder, our last broadcast show for this school year airs on May 19th. Send in your questions about birds-of-prey.

    April 27, 2009:

    Artist illustration of the Milky Way [Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech]Astronomers, scientists who study the stars, have found a giant dust cloud in the center of the Milky Way and they think it might taste like raspberries. Yup, raspberries.

    First some background . . . The Earth is a planet in the grouping of stars called the Milky Way. Radio Astronomers in Bonn, Germany were searching space for amino acids. Amino acids are one of the basic chemicals from which life is created. They look for very small parts of those chemicals called molecules. Find the molecules and you've found the substance.

    So, these astronomers were looking at a region near the Milky Way's center. It was a gas cloud that surrounds a newborn star. The scientists studied the chemical properties of the molecules in the gas cloud and found ethyl formate, the chemical responsible for the flavor of raspberries.

    So, does space taste like raspberries? Perhaps. Ethyl formate is also the chemical responsible for the smell of rum. Now that is an interesting combination!

    Raspberry on a bush [Credit: Vassil, Wikimedia Commons]But I wouldn't suggest you run out and try to smell and taste this particular space cloud. Scientists also found a deadly chemical, propyl cyanide, in the same place. However, they say that this is actually good news. Both molecules are the largest yet discovered in deep space and are both part of the essential building blocks of life. They will continue looking and see what other berries they find in space (just kidding!)

    Have a good-smelling, good-tasting week!

    April 20, 2009:

    Ever hear laughter is the best medicine? Scientists at Loma Linda University think it at least helps. According to LiveScience.com, researchers there found that laughter may improve the health of people with diabetes. Diabetes is a serious illness, nothing to laugh at.

    Three Smiles by Gordana Adamovic Mladenovic - http://missingwhy.blogspot.com/The researchers split diabetes patients into two groups. Both groups received the same treatment except one group watched 30 minutes of something that made them laugh each week. After two months, the laughter group had lower stress hormones in their system. Humor, according to the researchers, gives people hope and hope is good for your body.

    You know what else is good for your body, spending time outside with nature. Tomorrow, we have our next broadcast show all about nature deficit disorder. Watch it on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac or live streamed here on your computer. You can also watch it afterwards here on your computer.

    Be sure to send in a question so you and your class can be entered in a drawing for stuff for your classroom. Oh, here is my joke for the day: Why did the chicken cross the basketball court? Because the ref was calling fowls. Hope you feel better.

    April 15, 2009:

    Sorry I’m a bit late this week. We have been working on the schedule for next season’s shows. My thanks to the teachers and others who suggested topic ideas. We’ll let you know what we decided to do next month.

    I have been getting a few questions about next week’s topic. On Tuesday, April 21st, we will be answering your questions about “Being Outside.” A few of you have asked what that means and why is it important.

    Being Outside is an effort to get kids outside. Health experts think not spending time in the out of doors is unhealthy. For the first time in human history, more than half of the world’s population lived in cities rather than in rural areas. That means more of us aren’t getting outside and spending time with Nature. More of us are inside watching TV or playing video games or working on a computer.

    So, does science back up the idea that we humans do better when we spend time outside?

    • One study of 80 to 85 year-olds in Tokyo found those who could get outside to green spaces had a lower rate of mortality. They lived longer.


    • Another study found that children who had access to a neighborhood park had a reduced risk of being overweight.


    • A 2001 study found that children 7-12 with Attention Deficit Disorder were able to do better after a “green” activity (one that took place in a natural setting, like fishing or soccer) than they did after a “non-green” activity (one like playing video games).

    If you are thinking of questions for next week’s show, how about considering ways to add more outdoor activities in your life? How could educators move their classes outside? What kind of activities could your family do on your next vacation?

    Whatever your question, send it here or call in live. The show airs on Idaho Public Television on Tuesday, April 21st at 2:00/1:00 p.m. Mt/Pac. Remember, when you send in a question, you and your class could win stuff for your classroom.

    April 6, 2009:

    Joan Winslow the Rabbit

     

    Do you look like your pet? It is possible. A study out of England showed that people can guess what breed of dog someone owns just by looking at the person’s picture.

    According to a report in Live Science.com, a group of 70 people who do not own dogs were asked to match photos of 41 dog owners to one of three possible breeds- a Labrador, poodle or Staffordshire bull terrier. They matched the right person to the right dog more than half the time. Now, if it were just left to chance, they should have made the right match only one third of the time. The fact that they did better than chance supports the idea that we look like our pets.

    Here is my picture and a picture of my pet Winslo. Do we look alike? I think we have the same twinkle in our eyes!

    We are about to set the schedule for next season’s D4K. If you have any suggestions for topics, email them to me! I will send the first 10 teachers who submit an idea ten of our D4K Frisbees.

    March 30, 2009:

    Welcome back from Spring Break (for those of you who had Spring Break last week).

    Videogames - Mario, viva Pinata, Sega, SonicDid you play any video games while you were off of school? Well, it turns out that playing action video games may improve your vision. Scientists have discovered that playing video games with lots of action can improve your ability to see “fine contrast differences” by up to 58 percent. What does that mean? Well, with being able to see “fine contrasts” mean you can see small differences in shades of gray. That really is important. Scientists say being able to tell the difference between shades of gray is how we decide how well someone can see overall. We wear glasses or contacts to improve “contrast sensitivity,” that is being able to see small differences in shades of gray.

    The scientists in this study tested the vision of 22 students. They then divided the students into two groups. One group played action video games. The other group played “The Sims 2.” The students played 50 hours over nine weeks and then the scientists tested the students’ vision again. They found the group that played the action games showed an average 43 percent improvement in their ability to see small differences in shades of gray. The Sims players showed no improvement. The scientists think playing action video games may train the brain and some how improve the way the brain processes the stuff you see.

    Now, studies have also shown the violent video games are not good for kids, so don’t use improving your sight as an excuse to play those mature rated video games. But maybe you can find a non-violent action game and spend a little time seeing better.

    March 23, 2009:

    Mt Redoubt Erupting [Credit: Alaska Volcano Observatory]It is spring break for me and my family, but I thought I would pass along this bit of news. Mount Redoubt Volcano in Alaska has erupted five times! The volcano sent ash nine miles into the air and a bunch of air planes had to change their route or cancle their flights. Folks in Anchorage were getting a light dusting from the ash but so far no one has been hurt. Scientists knew something was up when the area had an earthquake on Sunday. If you want to see more about the volcano, go to the Alaska Volcano Observatory.

    We are just starting to set the schedule for next year's season of D4K. If you have an idea for a show topic, send me an email. The first 10 teachers to submit an idea will receive 10 of our D4K Frisbees as a thank you. Sorry, you must be a teacher to get the prize...but hey, anyone can submit an topic idea so send your best suggestion! If this is your spring break too, enjoy!

    March 16, 2009:

    Another reason not to litter… NASA engineers are considering moving the International Space Station out of the way of some space junk.  An old Soviet satellite will zip past the station tomorrow (Tuesday) and is traveling at about 19,800 mph! If apiece of the space junk hits the space station, it could cause a lot of damage and put the astronauts there at risk.  There is a lot more space junk after two other satellites collided on February 10th and it is a real problem for engineers.  So next time your Mom or Dad asks you to clean up your junk, consider yourself to be lucky.  Your job is easier than NASA’s.

    Have a question about Bears?  Now is the time to send it in.  We have our broadcast show Tuesday, March 17th at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac.  Watch it live on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer or watch the archived version or the Web extra sometime after the live show.

    Also, now is the time to send me any ideas for our next season.  We are looking at topics for 2009-2010.  Have an idea? Send it in!

    March 9, 2009: Homo Erectus Footprint [Credit: M Bennett BBC]Sorry I have been absent lately. Al Hagenlock (the D4K Director/Editor) and I have been busy creating the D4K 10th Anniversary show. Hopefully you had a chance to see it when it aired on Idahoptv. Al and I still have some tweaking to do on the show, but eventually it will make it to the Web site.

    I didn’t forget my blog entirely while we were editing. I saved a couple of interesting science news reports for you. The first is the discovery of the earliest human footprints.

    As reported in the journal Science, anthropologist John Harris and his colleagues found several footprints in Northern Kenya. They believe the footprints are 1.5 million years old. And just in case you were wondering, some of these ancient humans would have worn men’s shoes size 9. Check with your Dad or an older man and see if they wear a size 9. That will give you an idea how big the feet of some ancient humans were.

    The other bit of science news I wanted to pass along comes form England. Researchers at the University of Essex have found a “genetic tendency to optimism.” That means scientists thinks being cheerful is something that runs in families. If you have older relatives who tend to be positive, than it is likely that you have a greater chance to be someone who sees the bright side of life. Scientists are trying to figure out why some people bounce back more easily from life’s stresses and now they think it may be something in your genes.

    We are coming up on our next broadcast D4K show. On St. Patrick’s Day, March 17th, we will be answering questions about bears. Send in your questions or plan to call in live. Watch it on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00pm Mt/Pac or here on your computer.

    Oh, one more thing… I am collecting ideas for next season’s shows. If you have a topic you’d like us to do, send me an email. See you on the 17th and don’t forget to wear green.

    February 16, 2009: Chocolate stars [Credit: thenutfactory.com]Hope you had a happy Valentine’s Day. Did you get some chocolate? I hope you enjoyed it. Scientists report that chocolate is in danger. Because of farming practices, disease, global climate change, and other factors, the world may face a shortage of cacao beans, the primary ingredient in chocolate. Now that is BAD news. The good news is that scientists and officials in various countries are trying to solve the problems before your favorite Hershey bar costs $100.

    One of the problems for cacao growers is changing weather. We will be talking about the weather tomorrow in our next broadcast D4K show. Send in your questions for our two meteorologists to answer. Watch the show live on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer at 2:00/1:00 pm Mt/Pac or watch the archived show here later.

    Also, I am proud to announce that you can watch the best of the last ten years of D4K on our Anniversary Special. Check that out on Idaho Public Television on March 1st at 5:00 pm. Al Hagenlock and I are still working on the show, but I think you and your parents will enjoy it! Be sure to tune in.

    February 9, 2009: Harlequin frog [Credit: Ana Carolina Carnaval/ UC-Berkley]If you like frogs, you are in for some good news. Scientists report they found as many as ten new species of amphibians in the jungles of Columbia and a dozen new species in the forest of India. It is good news because frogs and amphibians have been going through some tough times. They have been dying off because of climate change, fungal infections and other issues. Amphibians are considered to be an indicator species, that is when frog are in trouble so is the habitat in which they are living. And that could spell trouble for humans, plants and other species in the same place.

    The new Columbian frogs include three types of glass frogs, three types of poison dart frogs, two species of rain frogs, a salamander and a harlequin frog. View pictures of the Indian frogs on the MSNBC site.

    Be sure to send in a question about the weather for next week’s broadcast show. You and your class could win stuff for your classroom if your question is picked. You can see that broadcast show on Tuesday, February 17th at 2:00/1:00 pm Mt/Pac or watch it live here on your computer. You can watch the archived version of the show or our Web Extra later in that same day. Tune in!

    February 2, 2009: Men in top hats holding a groundhog [Credit: AFP/Getty Images]Hi, sorry I have been absent lately. I'm afraid January was a busy month, including some travel, so I haven't blogged for a while. But I'm back and with some bad news.

    Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow. America's furriest weather forecaster says we are in for six more weeks of winter. According to legend, this groundhog comes out of his burrow on February 2nd. If he sees his shadow, we can expect more snowy weather. If he doesn't, we get an early spring. Now an upstart groundhog in New York City didn't see his shadow, but true Groundhog fans say the NY guy is a fake. For 120 years, folks have been gathering in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania to see what Phil has to say. So, how accurate is Phil? According to groundhog.org, he is never wrong. I'm not so sure. What do you think?

    If you want to know what tools meteorologists really use to forecast the weather, tune in on February 17th for our next D4K broadcast show. We'll be taking your questions about the weather. Send in a question now.

    Just one more science note because I've been away so long… Scientists have discovered that cows give more milk if they have a name and are treated as individuals. Researchers at Newcastle University report that farms where each cow was called by her name showed a higher milk yield than farms where cows were herded as a group. So one-on-one attention is good for cows and people too. Science marches on….

    December 31, 2008: Happy New Year! I hope you have a good celebration to start 2009. I thought I would use this last blog of the year to pass along the top science stories of 2008. In no particular order, here they are:

    1. Water on Mars: NASA's Phoenix Lander explored the polar region of Mars and discovered water ice. Scientists believe there could have been a lot of water on Mars at one time and maybe Mars could have supported life of some kind.
    2. Golden suit: 23 of the 25 swimmers who broke world records at this year's Olympics were wearing the new LZR Racer bathing suit from Speedo. The suits were especially designed to reduce drag (see the Force and Motion show to learn more about drag). The suits are made from a special fabric and the seams are ultrasonically welded.
    3. Bending Backwards: Scientists have taken a step toward creating invisibility. Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley were able to bend light backwards. That means the light looked like it was bouncing back at the viewer, so you wouldn't see what was in front of you. They hope to use it to make new microscopes to can see DNA molecules. I like the idea of an invisibility cloak!
    4. Splitting the Sun: MIT chemistry professor Dan Nocera developed a way to use the sun to split water molecules and makes usable energy. He used a process similar to how plants operate. This could mean a clean source of energy. Now that's news!
    5. Gecko Feet: Scientists have long wondered how Gecko's can climb upside down. Now they know. Researchers discovered that gecko's use magnetism. The tiny hairs on a gecko's feet get so close to the molecules of the wall that they form a tiny powerful attraction.
    6. More Gorillas: Scientists think they have found more gorillas. It is hard to estimate how many there are in the forests and swamps of the northern Republic of Congo. Scientists did some surveys and think there are now 125 thousand gorillas there. That is twice the number before. Unfortunately, war in that part of the world still threatens this very endangered population.
    7. Smarter Scientists, sort of: Researchers believe Americans have gotten a little bit smarter about science. Political scientists at the University of Michigan did a poll that showed about 25 percent of Americans are "civic scientifically literate." That means that only one in four can understand the stories in the weekly science section of the New York Times. I think that if you are reading this, you are probably one of the four!
    8. Big Bang: Speaking of good news/bad news. The Large Hadron Collider went on line in 2008. This is a massive particle accelerator on the Swiss-French border. This device will be used to study the particles not seen since the Big Bang. This is an amazing advancement in science, but it has been stopped by a helium leak. Repairs are underway and they should continue studying the universe in June.
    9. Exoplanets: For the first time this year, astronomers saw planets orbiting other stars. They used special telescope techniques to distinguish the planets' faint light from the stars' bright light.
    10. Scientists who said they found Big Foot were proved wrong. Sorry about that.

    My thanks to the Boston Museum of Science, the Science Channel, the Omaha Science Examiner, Science magazine, Time magazine and The Hindu for their help in drawing up this list. Have a Happy New Year and check out my blog in 2009!

    December 24, 2008: Happy Holidays everyone!

    A chocolate chip cookie

    Science has come to the rescue of all cookie bakers. In an article for NPR, Food Scientist Shirley Corriher had some good ideas about how to fix common problems with cookies. Do your cookies break up after you pack them in a package to give as a gift? Corriher suggests adding a tablespoon of water to a cup of flour that's going to be used in the cookies. Why? Because flour is made up of proteins and when you add the extra water the flour becomes a "springy stretchy, strong elastic sheets of gluten." The gluten is what holds the cookies together, she says.

    Do your chocolate chip cookies spread too much? Corriher suggests chilling the dough in the refrigerator overnight before baking. She also suggests using bread flour because it is higher in protein. So, make some cookies and share some science!

    I also received this press release from NORAD yesterday.

    PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. ­ Members of North American Aerospace Defense Command are preparing to track Santa again this year, and are working to accommodate the jolly fellow's change in flight schedule. Santa, according to NORAD, will launch two hours later than he has in previous years. They didn't exactly say why, but rumor has it that Santa changed his departure time because too many kids were awake when Santa arrived at their houses and he had to come back later. You can track Santa's progress at www.noradsanta.org or, new this year, people can get updates on Santa's travels using Twitter. Follow @noradsanta once logged in to www.twitter.com to not only track Santa but to participate in Twitter holiday conversations. Check with your parents first! Also, on December 24th, you can call Santa at 1-877-Hi-NORAD (1-877-446-6723). You can also send him an email to noradtrackssanta@gmail.com. Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy Hanukah!

    NIST-F1 Atomic Clock [Credit: NIST)December 16, 2008: You know how some days seem longer than others? Well this year, December 31st will actually be longer than most days. The U.S. Naval Observatory is going to add a "leap second" to the world's clocks. On December 31st, the day will be 86,401 seconds long.

    Historically, time was based on the earth's rotation around the sun. But when scientists invented atomic clocks, they were able to calculate time more accurately. So they have two time scales, one based on atomic clocks and one based on the earth's rotation. The problem is that, because the earth's rotation is very gradually slowing down, the two time scales get off. So the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service, the group that keeps track of time for the world, has called for the addition of a "leap second" to get the time scales back in sync. This is the 24th time a leap second has been added to the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The last time was on December 31, 2005. If you want to keep track of time, click here for the U.S. Naval Observatory's Master Clock.

    Tuesday will be our next live broadcast show. Be sure to send in your questions about the planets. Check out the show on Idaho Public Television or here on the Web site at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT, or watch the archived show afterwards. You can also check out our planet video short or web-only show.

    December 10, 2008: Are you happy? Find someone who is and become his or her friend. It turns out that happiness may spread like germs. Research from social scientists in England reports that those who surround themselves with happy people are more likely to be happy themselves. Scientists know that we are influenced by other people's moods, but this study shows that happy people tend to form their own groups, or social contacts. If you are a part of a group that is made up of happy people or come in contact with those people, you are more likely to pick up on the happiness. Kind of like ripples in a pond, happiness spreads.

    Full Moon [Credit: Gary Seronik, Sky & Telescope magazine]Envy, it turns out, is another emotion making science news this week. Researchers found out that dogs experience envy. Scientists were trying to learn more about emotions and animals. They knew that monkeys get resentful if a partner received a greater reward for doing the same task. But do dogs? In new research, scientists found that indeed dogs reacted differently to unfair food distribution. They "felt" envy. So, there is a similarity between humans and their dogs.

    If you don't want to be envious of other students and if do want to spread some happiness, send me a question about the planets for next week's broadcast show. We will be answering your planetary questions at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT on Tuesday, December 16th. Watch it on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer.

    By the way, the biggest and brightest full moon of the year will happen the evening of December 12th. The path of the Moon's orbit will put it closer to earth than it has been all year, so the full moon will look 14% bigger and 30% brighter than it has all year. If you have clear skies on Saturday, check it out. The best time is just when the moon is near the horizon. Send me a picture if you have a chance!

    The night sky with Jupiter, Venus and the Moon visible.December 1, 2008: Check out the skies tonight, Monday, for a cool sight! The planets Venus and Jupiter are close to each other and the crescent moon. Check out the horizon early in the evening. You'll see two bright lights near the moon.

    The crescent moon is pretty cool looking too, with earthshine dimly lighting up the rest of its face. We will hope for no clouds tonight so you can see it. This planetary show won't last long and the planets won't line up like this again until 2052, so take some time tonight for stargazing.

    And if you want to learn more about planets, be sure to check out our Planets site. I'm taking questions now for our next broadcast show all about the planets. Send one in and be entered in our drawing for stuff for your classroom. The Planets show airs December 16th at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT.

    A human earNovember 24, 2008: Happy Thanksgiving! I am very thankful for all of you who check out my blog and the D4k site. I am thankful for those of you who call or email in questions for our broadcast show. I am thankful for the folks with whom I work here at Idaho Public Television and I am thankful for science and scientists. Here's a cool story for this week — it deals with light waves, guinea pigs, and the deaf.

    Scientists at Northwestern University in Illinois are shining infrared light on the nerve cells in the inner ear of deaf guinea pigs. Sounds a bit odd, I grant you, but what they have discovered is pretty interesting. It turns out that you can use light to help the deaf hear.

    Some deaf people have a cochlear implant. A cochlear implant is a tiny electronic device implanted in a deaf person's head that stimulates the nerve cells in the ear and helps that person to hear. But cochlear implants aren't as good as regular hearing. People with cochlear implants have a hard time in noisy places or hearing music well. But doctors found that when they stimulated ear nerve cells with light, the brain reacted like it had heard a sound. Dr. Claus-Peter Richter shone infrared light into the inner ears of deaf guinea pigs while measuring electrical activity between the inner ear and the brain. He found the light did a better job of causing brain activity than the cochlear implants did. Now it is a big step from a guinea pig to a person, but it is a promising start. It is something for which we can be thankful!

    November 18, 2008: Well, that was a first. My guests for today's show about robots didn't make it to the studio in time for the live show. John Sosoka, UGOBE's Chief Technology Office, sends his apologies and regrets for missing the show.

    Well, sometimes things happen and you just have to figure out your options and move forward. We were lucky that we had a good show "in the can." Idaho National Laboratory scientists Matthew Anderson and Mark McKay answered questions about robots back in 1999. That was our first season! Anyway, if you want to see what I looked like nine years ago, check out the archived show.

    Because we had no new guest, we did not do a Web extra program, but the new video piece on robots is available. Check out that video to learn how UGOBE built Pleo, a robotic baby dinosaur.

    I really appreciate everyone who emailed and the few folks who called in their questions. We will put everyone's name into the hat for this month's drawing, so your efforts weren't entirely wasted.

    Don't give up on us. Our next broadcast show will be on December 16th and we will be taking questions about the Planets. I promise I will do whatever I can to make sure the guests show up!

    Asimo and Robot Cam [Credit: Technabob.com]November 17, 2008: Check out our new broadcast D4K show on Tuesday. We will be taking questions about Robots! You can send in your email or tune in live either here on the website or over-the-air on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00p.m. MT/PT. The show and the web-only program will be archived here on this site later in the day so, if you miss the live broadcast, you can watch it here. More science news later!

    November 10, 2008: Boy, you can tell I wasn't with it last week. At the end of last week's blog, I encouraged you to send in questions for out next broadcast show on planets. Oops! Our next show is actually all about Robots. We will discuss planets in December. Sorry about that. I am already getting questions about robots and it should be a great show. Check out the website and send in your questions.

    Makoshark and golfballABC News has an interesting report about sharks and golf balls this week. Sharks can swim really fast, up to 50 miles per hour. Scientists were trying to figure out how. It turns out that sharks can raise the scales on their skin. This unevenness creates little hill-and-valley like pockets across the surface of their skin just like the dimples on a golf ball. Scientists already know that the dimples on golf balls helps cut drag. When you hit a golf ball, it flies through the air. Now, the air rushing past the ball forms little whirlpools within each of the dimples. This extra layer of air acts as a buffer and helps the ball move faster. Sharks apparently take advantage of the same physics. With less drag, a shark can swim faster and golf balls can fly farther.

    Amy Lang from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa and her colleagues discovered the difference when they created artificial sharkskin with those raised scales. They put the skin through water tests and found the speedy effect. Lang says, "It's like the difference between pushing a box over ball bearings instead of dragging it along the floor." Scientists think they can now use this discovery to improve the design of things like underwater vehicles.

    Have a great week and send in those questions about ROBOTS!

    November 3, 2008: Junk falling from space, a Presidential election, and a cool meteor shower . . . lots of news on a planetary scale this week.

    A refrigerator-sized piece of space junk fell into the South Pacific Sunday night. The junk was a tank full of ammonia coolant from the international space station. Astronaut Clayton Anderson threw it overboard during a spacewalk in July 2007 because it was no longer needed. The space junk fell in the ocean somewhere between Australia and New Zealand.

    A Taurid fireball photographed Oct. 28, 2005, by Hiroyuki Iida of Toyama, Japan [NASA]Tomorrow is Election Day, even if you are floating in space. NASA astronauts Michael Fincke and Gregory Chamitoff will vote from the International Space Station. Texas Law allows their votes to be sent electronically from space and then counted. In the last 50 years, only four Americans have been allowed to vote from space. That's because the Texas law was only passed 11 years ago. Another good reason to vote tomorrow: to elect legislators who think beyond the earth's atmosphere.

    And finally, look to the skies between November 5th and November 12th for the Taurid meteor showers. You should be able to see 10 to 15 meteors per hour after the moon sets. Moonlight makes it kind of hard to see. The Taurid meteors are the leftovers from Encke's Comet. Scientists think that this year the shower will include a few unusually bright meteors known as "fireballs." Meteors create streaks of light when they burn up in the atmosphere. I don't know if they make bigger shooting stars than tanks of coolant, but they are still cool to see.

    Something else cool to see . . . check out our next D4K broadcast show on November 18th. We will be taking your questions about robots.

    Dinosaur printsOctober 27, 2008: Dance. Dance. Dance. That's how scientists jokingly describe a new find of dinosaur footprints on the Arizona-Utah border. Paleontologists found more than 1,000 prints inside the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument. At first, everyone assumed the marks were just holes caused by erosion. But when research established that four dinosaur species had lived in the area, scientists took another look at the holes. Professor Mark Can from the University of Utah thinks the area was probably a watering hole from the late Jurassic Period. He thinks there were mothers walking around with babies. He says you can even see tail marks in the rocks, a rare find. Scientists think the prints were locked in the sandstone after being covered by shifting sand dunes.

    If you want to hear what stars sound like, click on over to the BBC. A group of scientists using France's Corot space telescope recorded the sounds. It's called stellar seismology. Scientists use the recording to tell different things about what's happening to the star. The sounds stars make depend upon their age, their size and their chemical composition.

    If you didn't have a chance to see it, check out last week's new broadcast show and Web Extra on habitat. They are both very interesting. Or, if you are in the Halloween mood, check out our website on bats! Happy Halloween!

    October 20, 2008: We have a live broadcast show up tomorrow (October 21st). Watch it here on your computer or on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT. Email in your questions about Habitats. Be sure to check out the Habitat website too.

    The Constellation Cygnus [Photo credit: NCAR/UCAR]I'm jumping the gun a bit here, but here's a science story better suited to our planets show scheduled in December. School children and others are participating in the Great World Wide Star Count from October 20th to November 3rd. The Great World Wide Star Count helps scientists map light pollution globally. What is light pollution? Well, bright outdoor lighting makes it more difficult to see stars. Your eyes just can't see the fainter light of stars in the face of a streetlight, for example. It is annoying to us, but it is an especially big problem for scientists who are trying to study the stars.

    The Windows to the Universe project at the University Corporation organizes the Great World Wide Star Count for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) in Boulder, Colorado. This year, star-watchers in the Northern Hemisphere will look for the constellation Cygnus. Those in the Southern Hemisphere will look for the constellation Sagittarius. Participants can look outside their homes or go to places where there is less light pollution. Participants report on what they see, and UCAR then builds a map of star visibility around the world. If it is cloudy, participants can report on cloud cover and that will be added to the map.

    Dennis Ward from UCAR says, "Without even being aware of it, many of us have lost the ability to see many stars at night. Part of our goal is getting people to look up and regain an appreciation of the night sky." If you are interested in getting involved, here's a link to UCAR.

    October 13, 2008: Happy Columbus Day! Scientists are explorers too, and some researchers have discovered quite a find in a most unusual place.

    Desulforudis audaxviator [Credit: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory]Scientists have found a bug that could give us a clue whether life could exist on other planets. Desulforudis audaxviator is a microbe or a tiny bacterium found inside a gold mine in South Africa. This bacterium lives almost two miles beneath the surface of the Earth in total darkness and without any oxygen. It apparently relies on water, hydrogen and sulphate for its energy. The microbe lives entirely alone, making this the first known ecosystem with a single biological species.

    Dr. Dylan Chivian from California's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, whose team gets credit for this find, notes that early Earth and other planets didn't have much oxygen on them. He says if life forms were to develop, they would need to use chemicals like sulphate to get their energy. They will study Desulforudis audaxviator and find out more over then next few years.

    All life forms need a habitat that provides them with energy to survive. Desulforudis audaxviator lives in total isolation and miles under the ground. What is your habitat like? You can find out more about all kinds of habitats on our next broadcast show. Tune in on October 21st at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT on Idaho Public Television or here on the website. Send in your question and you'll be entered into our contest for stuff for your classroom.

    October 8, 2008: Martialis heureka ant species [Credit: C Rabeling, M Verhaagh] Sorry my blog is a bit late this week. It has been a busy place around here and I'm not the only one with something new on her plate. In Brazil, scientists have found a new species of ant. It's called a Martialis heureka. It has no eyes. Its body is pale and its mouthparts are longer than the rest of its head. Christian Rabeling from the University of Texas at Austin gets credit for the discovery. He says the Martialis heureka appeared on Earth earlier than any other ant living today. Scientists think it is blind and pale in color because it lives underground.

    pronghorn antelopeScientists also reported some good news and some bad news this week. The bad news is one in four mammals are facing extinction. The threats seem to come from hunting and destruction of habitat. If you want to learn more about this, be sure to tune into our next D4K broadcast show. We will be taking your questions about habitats. Email them before the show and watch the show over the air or on line on October 21st at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT.

    This week's good news is that an asteroid that was heading on a course to Asteroid [Credit: Reuters/Ali Jerekji]collide with the earth will burn up once it gets into our atmosphere. That's good news because it means the asteroid won't destroy the Earth and because it is among the first times scientists have been able to identify and track an asteroid long before it heads toward our planet. Finding, tracking and predicting the path of asteroids that are headed toward Earth is very hard and this was a sign scientists are getting better at doing all that.

    Here's hoping your week has good news in it!

    September 30, 2008: The wind is blowing at a 50-year low . . . but not the wind here on Earth. Scientists say solar winds are blowing about 20-25% less hard and about 13% cooler than they were during the last solar minimum. The solar wind is a stream of charged particles or plasma that is shot out from the sun. These particles head out into space, creating a Heliosphere or a bubble of wind material that surrounds the Sun and planets. Solar winds have a regular cycle where they blow hard sometimes and less at others. But scientists say the winds now are a lot less than they had expected.

    The Sun (left) and the Heliosphere (right) [Credit: NASA]

    So what does that mean? Well, the winds carry with them some of the Sun's magnetic field. That field helps protect the planets from high-energy cosmic rays that come from outside the solar system. We here on Earth are safe because we still have our atmosphere to protect us, but it may not be a good time to travel in space. Also, satellites are at greater risk of being damaged.

    And why is this happening? Scientists aren't sure. If you want to learn more about plasma, check out our States of Matter video short. We'll be talking more about planets in our December show, so send your questions in and I'll hold onto them until then. Have a good week!

    September 22, 2008: Happy first day of Fall! Fall, or the autumnal equinox, happened at 9:44:18 a.m. on Monday, September 22, 2008. The equinox happens twice a year when the Sun crosses the equator and the day and the night are approximately the same length, 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of dark. For those of us in the Northern Hemisphere, the days will now get shorter. We will lose a few minutes of daylight each day until December 21st, the first day of winter and the shortest day of the year.

    Mount St. Helens, July 1980 [Credit: USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory]To keep you amused during these darker days, I am passing along some fun websites to check out.

    There are 170 volcanoes around the world that could potentially erupt. Take a look at this site that tracks these volcanoes: http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/ You'll be glad to know that the volcanoes closest to Idaho, the ones in Yellowstone National Park, are calm. Whew! But if you are heading to Hawaii, watch out.

    A few seasons ago, D4K worked with Zoo Boise to promote ways of saving endangered or threatened animals. Zoo Boise collects a little bit of its entry fee into a fund each year and then awards money to preservation efforts. Kids like you can vote on which program will receive the money this year. Go to the Zoo Boise web site, read more about the various nominees and vote!

    I also encourage you to check out last week's Dinosaur program. It was great! You can also watch the video short or the web-only program. Have a bright first week of fall. I'll have more science news next Monday.

    September 8, 2008: Music notesDo you have a favorite song? It might be the key to helping you remember elementary school when you are older. Dr. Catriona Morrison, a researcher from the University of Leeds in England, is studying why music helps people remember things from way in their past. Dr. Morrison asked people to remember something relating to the Beatles, one of the world's most popular music groups from the 60's and early 70's. The memories they came up with were almost always positive and folks could remember a lot of detail. It seems attaching music to an event may help humans remember that event years later.

    Our first D4K broadcast show of the season is next week! We'll be talking about dinosaurs so get your questions in. You can email questions. Remember, if you send in a question, you and your class will have a chance to win stuff for your classroom.

    Be sure to tune into the Dinosaur show. It airs Tuesday, September 16th at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT. You can watch it on Idaho Public Television or here on the D4K Web site.

    September 2, 2008: Elephant walking with sensors attached to its body. [Credit: John Hutchinson]Elephants can't jump and T-Rexes didn't run fast. That's the news today out the University of London. John Hutchinson, a biologist at the Royal Veterinary College, studies how large animals move. First, about elephants. Using stop motion photography, Hutchinson filmed elephants walking and running. He discovered that their legs are not built like stiff columns, as previously thought. Instead, they are more flexible, more bouncy. Still, he reports, elephants don't jump. They don't have all four feet off the ground at once. Tyrannosaurus Rex skullHutchinson also used computers to study how fast a T-Rex could run. His research shows that these big creatures were probably walkers rather than runners. Their legs just couldn't, ahem, stand up to the pressures of running at fast speeds. Want to know more about dinosaurs?

    Our first show of the new school year will be all about dinosaurs. Check it out on September 16th. Be sure to send in your questions too and win stuff for your classroom.

    August 25, 2008: Welcome back to school for many of you! After taking a few weeks off, I'm back to my weekly D4k blogging today. Check it out each week as I offer you one of the week's most interesting science stories. This week, it has to do with your nose.

    Picture of Grueneberg ganglion neurons. [Credit: American Association for the Advancement of Science]All living things send out chemical signals to their fellow species when they are in danger or in trouble. The signals are called "pheromones." They are molecules and are very small. Scientists know pheromones exist, but they don't know what pheromones are made of and how animals and plants produce them. But now, scientist know how animals detect them.

    These molecules float out into the air and go into your nose. A group of tight, round cells located near the tip of the nose, called the "Grueneberg ganglion," apparently picks the pheromones up and alerts you to the danger. Scientists knew about the Grueneberg ganglion years ago, but until now they didn't know what its purpose was.

    Drawing of a mouse showing the Grueneberg ganglion on its nose. [Credit: American Association for the Advancement of Science]Julien Brechbuhl and his colleagues at the University of Lausanne discovered the Grueneberg ganglion's role by comparing how normal mice and mice without Grueneberg ganglion react to alarm pheromones. Normal mice froze. The mice without the Grueneberg ganglion were unaware of the danger.

    So, next time you seem to "sense" something is wrong, it may just be your nose doing its job.

    My thanks to the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) for providing this story. Be sure to check out our new season of shows and our updated Web site next week!

    July 14, 2008: All right guys, time to hang out with girls for a while. It might make you a better student. A study by psychologist Arlen Moller of Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania shows that preschool boys do better in school when they are in classes that have more girls than boys in them.Preschool-aged girl standing in front of a tree.

    There is lots of debate about what's better for learning: classes with boys and girls together or classes that are only boys or only girls. Other studies have shown that in high school, girls may do better in all girl classes. But the results aren't as clear in junior high or grade school.

    In this study, the researchers looked at 70 preschool classes over a school year. They looked at the students' motor, social and thinking skills. They found that boys in majority-girl classrooms developed these skills more quickly. Boys who were in majority-boy classrooms didn't develop as fast.

    And what did they find for girls? It turns out that the number of boys in a classroom didn't affect how the girls learned. What do you think of that!

    July 7, 2008: Mercury is shrinking! That's a headline you don't see too often. We usually think of the planets in the solar system as staying pretty much the same.

    The planet Mercury [Credit: NASA]But scientists at NASA say Mercury's diameter, that is the distance around the planet, has shrunk by about a mile over time. Scientists think the planet is shrinking because its core, the planet's center, is cooling. The core of the planet is made up of hot liquid. When it cools, it doesn't take up as much space; hence the whole planet is getting smaller.

    Scientists are learning more about Mercury because the Messenger spacecraft flew by the planet last January. Messenger, by the way, stands for "Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry and Ranging." This spacecraft will fly by Mercury three times as it prepares to settle into an orbit around the solar system's smallest planet in 2011.

    If you want to learn more about planets, check out our D4K Planets website, or watch one of our videos on planets.

    Old Faithful geyser, in Yellowstone Park, erupting and a rainbow reflecting in the eruption.June 16, 2008: Old Faithful is the world's most famous geyser. A geyser is a hot spring that erupts a burst of steam and hot water. Old Faithful goes off once every 50-to-90-minutes. Now scientists think that the length of the period between eruptions has to do with the annual rainfall. Researcher Shaul Hurwitz and other scientists from Yellowstone National Park have discovered that when there is less rain, the length of time between eruptions gets longer and when there is more rain, the duration is shorter. Watch Old Faithful erupt.

    Just so you know, there are less than a thousand geysers worldwide, with more than half of them in Yellowstone National Park. Old Faithful was named in 1870 and was the first geyser in the Park to be named.

    May 27, 2008: Who would have thought that Idaho and the planet Mars have something in common? Researcher Michael Lamb at the University of California at Berkeley does. Lamb and his colleagues studied Idaho's Box Canyon and have decided that it may tell us how water shaped the landscape on Mars.

    Box Canyon, Idaho [Credit: American Association for the Advancement of Science]Geologists had always thought that Box Canyon was formed slowly, with groundwater seeping through the canyon walls and wearing the rocks away in a process called erosion. These canyons are stubby and end with a round steep wall. They are called "amphitheater-headed" canyons. Geologists assumed other, similarly shaped canyons, including canyons on Mars, were formed in the same manner. But Lamb and his colleagues have decided that a massive flood formed Box Canyon about 45,000 years ago. The water probably came from melting ice sheets and would have blasted through the canyon at an incredibly fast speed. If this is the case, Lamb says it is likely that megafloods occurred on Mars and created similarly shaped canyons there.

    If you want to learn more about rocks and minerals in Idaho, be sure to check out our most recent broadcast show. You can also find out more on our rocks and mineral site. And just a reminder, even though we won't have any new broadcast shows until September, there will be new postings here on my blog. There are also lots of interesting things to find on this web site, so check out a topic, watch a video short, a web-only show, or a full 30-minute program. Send me an email for the "Watt's up" section. School may be out, but D4K is always here!

    American alligator in captivity at the Columbus Zoo, Powell, Ohio [Credit: Postdlf, WikiMedia Commons]May 12, 2008: While I wouldn't recommend having anything to do with an alligator, you might someday need its blood. Chemists Dr. Mark Merchant, Kemit Murray and Lancia Darville are working on ways to use alligator blood to create new antibiotics. Doctors use antibiotics to kill germs that make us sick. If you get a cut, and the cut gets infected with bad germs, it can turn red and puffy. But these chemists noted that when alligators get cut, they don't get this kind of infection even though they live dirty, germ-filled water. Why?

    It turns out alligator blood contains materials that work like antibiotics. In laboratory tests, gator blood seems stop a number of the Earth's worst infections, so the researchers hope to turn the proteins in alligator blood into new medicines.

    One more roundup of scientific news in honor of Mother's Day. It turns out that scientists have concluded that if you have a good Mom, you will probably live longer and healthier and be smarter and happier. Researchers found that good mice Moms, the ones who licked and groomed their pups, turned out pups that did better on mouse IQ tests. Researchers at the McGill University in Montreal found that mouse pups that were canoodled by their mothers grew into less anxious, more self-assured adults.

    Joan C-H, with her grandmother and motherScientists at the University of Tampere in Finland found human Moms are important too. Researchers videotaped infants 8 to 11 weeks old and their Moms and noted how much each parent and child interacted. Two years later, they found that those children who did not interact with their Moms tended to be sicker and had more chronic illnesses. So science proves good kids need good Moms! By the way, this research doesn't mean you don't need good Dads. Moms (especially mice Moms) tend to be the primary caregivers, so Moms were the focus of the research. But Dads can be primary caregivers too.

    Be sure to send in your questions about rocks and minerals. We have a new broadcast show next Tuesday, May 20th. Email me or plan to call in live 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT. You can watch the show on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer. The show and the Web Extra will be archived here on the Web site shortly afterwards.

    Squid eyes held in a hand [Credit: Kim Griggs]May 5, 2008: Scientists have found what they think is the biggest animal eye. The eyes of the colossal squid measure eleven inches across. The human eye is only about an inch across. So this lady could really see! The scientists think that when the animal was alive, the eyes were probably even larger.

    By the way, the squid itself is no small creature. It is about 34 feet long. A fisherman caught this one in the Ross Sea near Antarctica last year. Scientists don't know too much about this type of squid because only ten have ever been caught. They are dissecting the rare specimen in hopes of learning more about the animal.

    Our next broadcast show is coming up soon. We'll be talking about rocks and minerals. Check out the show's Web site, and send in your questions.

    Bionic eye [Credit: BBC]April 21, 2008: A 'bionic eye' may give sight to those left blind by a hereditary disease. Scientists at London's Moorfields Eye Hospital are testing an artificial eye on two men who lost their sight to the disease retinitis pigmentosa. The 'bionic eye' is implanted in the back of the eye and is connected to a camera on a pair of glasses. The camera sends a wireless signal to a very thing electronic receiver and electrode panel. That panel is implanted in the eye and attached to the retina. Learn more about the eye from one of our previous D4K shows. Initially, doctors hope the men will be able to see light and dark outlines. They aren't sure if everything will work, but the doctors are hopeful. If perfected, the bionic eye may give sight to thousands of Americans.

    If you want something to look at, check out our program with Idaho's Teacher-in-Space, Barbara Morgan.

    One other note of interest, D4K received two (2) Emmy nominations! The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Northwest chapter nominated D4K in the Children/Youth program category, and the D4K "Web Extra" was nominated for best Children/Youth/Teen Advanced Media. This Emmy is given for programs designed exclusively for the Web. The Emmys for the Northwest region will be presented on June 7, 2008 in Seattle. Yippee!

    April 14, 2008: Have you felt the ground moving? You might have if you lived in central Oregon. Scientists have detected an unusual number of earthquakes in that area. Using underwater microphones, the scientists picked up more than 600 quakes over the past 10 days in a basin deep within the earth about 150 miles southwest of Newport, Oregon.

    Researchers aren't quite sure what these quakes mean. This type of quake usually happens before a volcanic eruption, but there are no volcanoes in this area. Scientists think that molten rock is moving away from recognized earthquake faults off Oregon shores. They hope to send research ships into the ocean to take water samples. They want to look for evidence that sediment has been stirred up. That might show that magma is on the move.

    Speaking of moving, it's time for you to get moving and send in a question for this week's new broadcast show. Teacher-in-Space Barbara Morgan will be our guest for a one-hour special. That show airs at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT on Tuesday, April 15th.

    Send in your questions via email or call in during the live show. You can watch it on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer. We will archive the show and the Web Extra shortly afterwards. Remember, when you send in a question, you and your class are entered into a drawing for stuff for your classroom. I hope to hear from you.

    April 7, 2008: DNA extracted from, well, poop, is making news this week. Scientists found some fossilized feces in a cave in Oregon. It shows that humans lived in North America more than 14,000 years ago, 1,000 year earlier than previously thought.

    Fossilized feces [Credit: Dennis LeRoy Jenkins/Science]Researchers also learned that these ancient peoples were related to humans living in Siberia and East Asia. This suggests that these peoples came to North America from Asia over a land-bridge between Alaska and Siberia.

    The ancient poop also gives scientists an idea about what these early humans ate. How's this for a diet: squirrels, bison, fish, grass, sunflowers, birds and dog.

    Scientists call fossil feces coprolites. The oldest bit of coprolite being studied is about 14,340 years old.

    If you are more interested in space than coprolites, here is your chance to talk with a real astronaut. Idaho's Teacher-in-Space, Mission Specialist Barbara Morgan is our guest on next week's D4K. She will be joining us from Houston for a one-hour special. Send in your questions now or call in live during the show. Check it out at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT on Tuesday, April 15th on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer. We will also archive the show afterwards AND do a Web extra with Barbara. So check it out!

    Phonautograph [Credit: BBC]April 1, 2008: For years, everyone thought that a recording of "Mary Had A Little Lamb" by Thomas Edison was the oldest known recording of the human voice. But scientists have discovered a song recorded 17 years earlier. In 1860, Edouard-Leon Scott de Martinville, a Parisian inventor, recorded, sort of, a bit of the song "Au Clair de la Lune." I say "sort of" because the recording isn't like any modern day recording. The French inventor used a "phonautograph." This invention scratched lines onto a piece of paper covered in soot from a burning oil lamp. The lines came from a needle attached to a diaphragm that responded to sound. The BBC has more on the story. You'll also find a link there to listen to this ancient piece of music.

    I hope you had a chance to see our show on Amphibians. While you're there, you can also watch our web-only or video short pieces. Our next program is a one hour special with Education Mission Specialist, Idaho's Teacher-in-Space, Barbara Morgan. If you have a question for her, send it in soon. We are expecting more than a thousand questions. You can also call-in during the live show.

    We are starting to decide what subjects we will feature next season. Do you have any suggestions? Send me an email.

    March 24, 2008: Sorry I missed last week. We had a new show. Check out our program about amphibians, including facts and links as well as our Web-only video.

    We are starting to build up to our next broadcast show with Barbara Morgan. If you have a question for her, get it in early. Last time Barbara was on, we had more than a thousand questions. Send in your question here.

    My favorite science story of the week comes out of Harvard. Researchers there were testing the idea that good guys finish last. It turns out they were wrong. Being nice and fair helps you succeed.

    Researchers watched 100 college students play the same game over and over. The theory was that punishment makes two equal players cooperate rather than compete. But when played over and over, punishment didn't seem to work as well. Working together, being nice, was the way to win.

    The author of the study, Marin Nowak said, "We find that those who used punishment are losers." Those who escalate the conflict, or push punishment, often wound up 'doomed.'

    So when playing the game of life, science seems to think, that they best way to play is to be nice.

    Be sure to check out the amphibian pages. For those of you on Spring Break, have a great time!

    March 10, 2008: Rats and frogs are not necessarily the best of friends, but they share one thing in common, the year 2008. According to the Chinese Zodiac, 2008 is the year of the Rat. But starting February 29th, it is also officially the year of the Frog. The Association of Zoos and Aquariums is promoting 2008 as the Year of the Frog because, they say, frogs are going extinct. The World Conservation Union estimates that at least one-third of known amphibian species are threatened with extinction.

    Bronzed frog (Rana temporalis) [Credit: L. Shyamal, Wikimedia Commons]If you want to learn more about why amphibians are in trouble, tune into next week's live broadcast show. Scientists will be in the studio to answer your questions about amphibians. You can see it here on your computer or on Idaho Public Television on March 18th at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT. You can also catch the web extra or the full half hour show after that here on the D4K site. Be sure to email your questions or call in live.

    March 3, 2008: You are what you drink, or at least your hair is. Scientists have discovered that they can figure out where you live and where you have been based on the chemical makeup of your hair. And they can do this because of the water we drink.

    Remember, water is made up of hydrogen and oxygen atoms. These atoms can vary in how much they weigh. Different forms of a single element like hydrogen or oxygen are called isotopes. And scientists know that tap water in different parts of the world contain unique proportions of heavier and lighter hydrogen and oxygen isotopes.

    Now, water makes up more than half of an adult's body weight. Our bodies break down water as part of the digestive process and parts of the water we drink end up in our hair. So environmental chemist James R. Ehleringer from the University of Utah wondered if he could learn where you live based on the amount of isotopes found in your hair.

    He and his colleagues collected hair samples from 65 cities in 18 states and found that hair from a specific spot matched the concentrations of isotopes found in that spot's water supply.

    Even if you drink bottled water, Ehleringer and his team say your hair will still give you away because you probably use tap water for your cooking and because milk and soft drinks contain large amounts of water from within a local region.

    Now, Ehleringer says the technique can't pinpoint a person's exact location because similar types of water can be found in rather broad regions. But it can help narrow down the search, especially for police who use hair samples to investigate criminals or to help crime victims.

    Maps of the US showing concentrations of certain hydrogen isotopes (top) and oxygen isotopes (bottom) in water [Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences]



    These maps illustrate how the concentrations of certain hydrogen isotopes (top) and oxygen isotopes (bottom) in water differ throughout the United States. Red areas are where concentrations of these isotopes are highest. Blue points to regions having the lowest concentrations.[From the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences].

    Beelzebufo frogFebruary 25, 2008: The frog from hell, that's quite an introduction. Scientists have unearthed a fossil of a frog believed to have weighed in at about nine pounds. They call it Beelzebufo, or "frog from hell." It was apparently quite different from frogs today. Its body was about 16 inches long, with short legs and a big mouth. Scientist Susan Evans, from the University College of London, believes the frog from hell might have been a scary predator. "Its diet most likely [would] have consisted of insects," she said, but it might have also eaten small dinosaurs. If you want to learn more about frogs, be sure to tune into our next broadcast show. We'll be answering your questions about amphibians on March 18th. You can send in your questions now, and you and your class will be entered into a drawing for stuff for your classroom.

    Did you have a chance to watch the lunar eclipse last week? Here are a couple of pictures I took of the event. The next lunar eclipse we can see will be in 2010.

    Partial eclipse of the moon

    Full moon

    You don't have to wait that long if you missed last week's broadcast show on teeth. Take a couple minutes to look at the "Video Short" or the "Web Extra" programs.

    February 18, 2008: Ever been head-butted? Apparently head-butting was the weapon of choice for one dinosaur. Paleontologists (scientists that study dinosaur bones) found the bones of two new meat-eating dinosaurs in Africa. The first was named "Kryptops palaios" or "old hidden face." Scientist Paul Sereno called it that because of a horny covering over its face. Sereno and his other fossil hunters named the second new dinosaur "Eocarcharia dinops," which means "fierce-eye dawn shark" for its razor-sharp teeth and bony brow.

    Dinosaur [Photo credit: AP Photo/Project Exploration illustration via the University of Chicago, Todd Marshall]Both dinosaurs were about 25 feet long and stood 7 feet tall. By studying the dinosaurs' teeth, scientists think Kryptops was a scavenger. His short snout was better for gnawing its food. They think Eocarcharia used its head to butt its rivals.

    Scientists can tell a lot about a creature by looking at its teeth. Do you want to know how? Well, tomorrow, Tuesday, February 19th, I have a new broadcast show all about teeth. Check it out on Idaho Public Television or here on your computer at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT or watch it here afterwards on this website. Be sure to send in your question about teeth (link) so you can win stuff for your classroom.

    Donelan's device [Photo credit: Eurekalert]February 11, 2008: Researchers have come up with a new power source for your iPod or cell phone, and it is as close as your knee. Maxwell Donelan of Simon Fraser University in British Columbia and his colleagues have invented a device that looks like a knee brace. It converts the energy from a moving leg into electricity. When we walk, we generate energy. The hamstring muscle slows our knees, absorbing energy with each step. Donelan's device "harvests" the extra energy and converts it into electricity.

    Volunteers wore the brace walking slowly on a treadmill. They found they could walk with the device without much bother and without much effort. But the payoff was pretty good. They could generate about five watts of electricity. That's enough power to run ten cell phones or twice the power needed to run a computer. That's good news for the millions of kids who live in places without electricity. Just think, some day you may take a walk around the block to check the Internet!

    Two more things: if you are giving your Valentine a bunch of roses this week, be sure to also give a can of lemon-lime soda. Scientists at the University of Missouri report that lemon-lime soda can extend the life of cut roses.

    Red rose [Photo credit: Nino Barbieri, Creative Commons]Here is the whole recipe: 12 ounces of lemon-lime sofa (regular, not diet), 12 ounces of water, and half a teaspoon of bleach or mouthwash. If you have hard water, add a drop of dishwashing liquid. Once your Valentine gets his/her roses home, have them re-cut the stems under running water (very important to be cut under running water) and put them into your lemon-lime formula. That should do it. Science can make your love last — or at least your love's flowers!

    Finally, remember we have a new D4K broadcast show next Tuesday, February 19th. Send in your questions about teeth! See the show on Idaho Public Television at 2:00/1:00 p.m. MT/PT or here online afterwards.

    Happy Valentine's Day!

    Zodiac wheelFebruary 4, 2008: Happy Year of the Rat! This Thursday, February 7th, is the beginning of the lunar year in China. The Rat is the first of 12 animals on the Chinese Zodiac. People born in the year of the Rat are supposed to be leaders and pioneers and to like order. It is all based on an ancient Chinese philosophy.

    Check out this chart and find out what animal you are. Remember, if you were born in January or early February, you are probably associated with the prior year's animal. That's because the Chinese New Year happens in early February, not on January 1st. I am an Ox.

    Blue rose [Source: AFP/File Photo]I am also a fan of roses. And Japanese researchers worked for 14 years to develop a new blue rose. They created the rose by implanting the gene that makes blue pigments in pansies into a rose. The company says it will start selling them in Japan next year. They aren't saying how much they cost. So if you want a blue rose for your valentine this year, make it out of paper!

    Be sure to send in your questions about teeth for our next D4K broadcast show. That program airs on Idaho Public Television on February 19th at 2:00/ 1:00 p.m. MT/PT.

    January 28, 2008: What did the dentist see at the North Pole? A molar bear. What was the dentist doing in Panama? Looking for the Root Canal? What did the tooth say to the departing dentist? Fill me in when you get back.

    Taxidermied polar bear head [Source: Wikimedia Commons]Dental humor might or might not be your thing, but scientists now believe humor might help you learn more and might help your parents cope with difficult jobs. Researcher Melissa B. Wanzer, a professor of communication studies at Canisius College in Buffalo New York, wondered how health care providers for very sick people managed to go to work each day. The answer: humor. Workers who approached their job with a sense of humor coped better in tough situations. She also found that if a manager or teacher used humor appropriately, they were generally viewed as doing a better job. She reports that students also learn more when their teachers use humor effectively.

    Now this is not to say your teacher should start each day with a stand-up routine, but a joke now and then and a good sense of humor can make everyone's day a bit better.

    What does the dentist of the year get as a prize? A little plaque.

    If you have a question for the dentist who will appear on our next broadcast D4K, send it in. The show airs on Idaho Public Television on February 19th and will be here on the D4K website after that.

    One more thing — D4K was just honored with the Best Instructional Program (small market) award from the National Education Telecommunication Association (NETA). Yippee!

    January 21, 2008: I hope you had a chance to see last week's show on Force and Motion. If you missed it, you can see the whole show, the video short, or the web-only extra from the show's video archive page. Check it out!

    I've been doing lots of reading about teeth leading up to our show next month so this bit of science news caught my eye. Scientists think they may have come up with a better way to cure bad breath.

    Halitosis, or bad breath, can be caused by germs that grow in your mouth. The germs live on the bits of food left on your teeth. If you don't brush and floss regularly, the germs grow. They excrete waste, using your mouth as a, forgive the term, toilet. Those waste products leave you with bad breath.

    But scientists in Illinois report that breath mints made with magnolia tree bark extract kill the germs in about half an hour. Minmin Tian and Michael Greenberg tested the magnolia bark using spit taken from volunteers. They found the magnolia tree bark extract mints killed more than 61 percent of the bad breath making germs. That's 15 times better than your average breath mint.

    They also found that the extract mints helped kill the bacteria that cause cavities. The scientists say the best way to stop bad breath and cavities is still brushing and flossing regularly, but any new weapon in the war against bad breath is important. There is one thing news reports about this discovery doesn't say. It doesn't say what the magnolia tree bark extract mints taste like!

    Be sure to check out the Force and Motion videos and send in a question for February's broadcast show. It is all about teeth. Maybe the dentists coming on the show know what magnolia tree bark extract mints taste like!

    January 7, 2008: Okay, I have a few more weird science stories of 2007 to report. MSNBC polled its readers and came up with its own list. Here are my favorites from their list:

    • Cloned cat [Photo credit: AFP/Getty Images]Glowing cat clones: Scientists in South Korean transferred genes into cloned cat embryos so the cats would glow under ultraviolet light.
    • See-thru frog [Photo credit: msnbc.com]See-through frogs: I did report this on my blog when it made the news. Japanese scientist developed these frogs to study internal organs without having to dissect the frog.
    •  
    • Checkers board and computer code [Photo credit: Univ. of Alberta]Checker champion computer: Researchers at The University of Alberta in Canada have developed a computer program that figured out every single possible move in checkers. So, don't play against this guy. This computer will win every time.
    •  
    • Monkey manipulating objects on board [Photo credit: Tetsuro Matsuzawa/AP]Monkeys with good memories: Experiments with young chimps found they could perform memory tests faster than human and do them just as well. Hmmmm, maybe we should have the monkeys play the computer?

    Now, time to look forward. We have a new broadcast show all about force and motion for January 15th. Send in your questions now and be entered in our contest for stuff for your classroom.

    December 31, 2007: Happy 2008 to you all! Before we jump into the New Year, let's look at some of my favorite science stories of 2007. Here they are, in no particular order:

    Supernova* The weather was a big story in 2007. January was the warmest first month on record worldwide at 1.53 degrees above normal. And 2007 was shaping up to be the hottest year on record in the Northern Hemisphere. We here in Idaho felt the heat. Chilly Barton Flat (in Central Idaho) was singled out for its record high temperatures of 100 degrees for four days in July and August.

    * Astronomers spotted the brightest supernova of a star ever observed in May. The star was 240 million light years away. A supernova is a star that explodes. This one was located in the galaxy NGC 1260SN. It burned for more than 250 days.

    * Scientists all over the world discovered thousands of new species including:

    • a rat the size of a cat in New Guinea
    • a deep-water squid with fins like elephant ears and with 10 arms
    • a black toad with purple rings in Suriname
    • a new variety of clouded leopard on Borneo and Sumatra
    • a medium sized, tree-dwelling primate call a highland mangebey in the mountains of East Africa

    But, scientists also say that if global warming continues, 20% of the world's plant and animals may vanish. That's not good news.

    * Archaeologists in China discovered the remains of a feathered, 16-foot-tall, 3000-pound flightless dinosaur. The 70-million-year-old Gigantoraptor erlianensis was found in Mongolia.

    * Scientists learned that Neanderthals might have been redheads. Hey!

    LED light* Experts have found a way to make Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) brighter and use less power than regular bulbs. This may mark the end of incandescent lights. Actually, that's good news because we all need to use less energy and this way, we will still be able to see in the dark!

    * By the end of the year, the world's population will top 6.6 billion — that's 100 million new people since last year. Wow.

    My thanks to Lisa Stein at Scientific American and Elizabeth Weise at USA ToDAY for their help with today's blog. If you have a minute, scroll down this page and check out some of the other science stories I highlighted over 2007. They include more about giant ancient scorpions, why you like chocolate, the oldest living creature (a clam), and a web of millions of spiders that covers acres in Texas, just to name a few.

    Have a great 2008 and keep checking back here for fun science news!

host joan cartan-hansen

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