The paper, recently published in the journal PNAS, found that roundworms can use static electricity to leap up to 25 times their body length. The research focused on a series of experiments using high ...
Ticks can’t jump. But thanks to the forces of static electricity, sometimes, the arachnids can soar through the air, a new study says.
Many people don’t realize that STEM is all around us in our daily lives. This is one of the many reasons why WonderWorks ...
Many people don’t realize that STEM is all around us in our daily lives. This is one of the many reasons why WonderWorks Pigeon Forge is inviting ...
Rotherham Advertiser on MSN
REVIEW: Ministry of Science Live, Rotherham Civic Theatre
The Ministry of Science Live stage show came to Rotherham Civic Theatre and the thrills, spills and explosions never let up through its high-octane, high-adrenalin two hour running time.
KTAB Abilene on MSN
Weather Wednesday: Static Electricity Balloon and Tissue Experiment
Have you ever rubbed a balloon on your hair and watched it stick to the wall? That’s static electricity in action!
A parasitic worm uses static electricity to launch itself onto flying insects, a mechanism uncovered by physicists and biologists at Emory and Berkeley. By generating opposite charges, the worm and ...
At first glance, it’s a wonder that parasitic nematodes exist at all. To reproduce, these minuscule creatures—roughly the size of a pinpoint—must leap 25 times their body length and land on a flying ...
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Fun and Easy Experiments to try
Fun and Easy Experiments to try!! Trump administration looking to sell nearly 200 commissary stores ESPNers Call Out Pat McAfee Over 'College GameDay' Comments: 'You Are Not a Victim' Border Patrol ...
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Easy and Fun Science Experiments
Easy and Fun Science Experiments!! Trump’s Canada Gaffe Steals Spotlight My Mom Said 1 Word On Her Deathbed That Made Me Look At My Life In A Way I Never Had Before ‘Elaborate’ heist through hole in ...
When the heat is relentless and there’s no power in sight, how do you stay cool? A team of Saudi researchers may have just cracked the code: a cooling system powered entirely by salt and sunlight.
This spooky science trick uses a magnet and a paper clip to make paper ghosts seem to fly through the air. It's a fantastic ...
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