But remember, I'm a chemist, I'm not omniscient. I'll do my best.
I can help in the field of molecular biology
Since Psychology gets classed as a science - ask away!
But I have one for Chemgoddess:
When you mix Maizena with a certain quantity of water, it has this weird quality of feeling hard and liquid at the same time (try it, you'll be playing for hours, great for kids). Now I'm not sure how to Google this so my question is - how does that work?
A cornstarch solution is a type of non-Newtonian fluid, a fluid whose viscosity changes with shear.
In the case of a mixture of cornstarch and water, the viscosity increases with the shear rate - so it gets harder the more you stir. This is known as a dilatant material.
The opposite (viscosity decreases with shear) is a pseudoplastic material. A common example of this is tomato sauce - we all know how hard is getting that stuff out of a bottle, but once it starts moving, you can't stop it.
I've seen an episode of Heroes and want to develop my ESP. Any tips?
One more: why doesn't the Earth's gravitational force provide / allow a constant law regarding hydrodynamics? It's complicated and I need an idiots guide. Thanks for any feedback.
(someone said there are no dumb questions)
As for the universe, that's a tough one, as there is actually nothing outside of the universe. I find this totally unfathomable and explain this shortcoming with the fact, that my brain has boundaries given by the skull it lives in.
But if you want a really good explanation for that, I recommend Bill Bryson's Short History of Nearly Everything, also available as an audiobook and a brilliant read for people who like simple explanations for complex things.
And before the Physicists get all heady, remember Philosophy is the Mother of all Science
Who am I?
Why am I here?
What's it all about..?
Don't bother adding oil, it's useless. Use more water instead - hence deep pasta pans
So when we think about what happens when water boils. You have liquid water getting heated up enough that it has enough energy to go from the liquid to the gas phase, a phase transition. Nucleation is the term for a phase transition that occurs in small region. The spots on your pot where see the tiny bubbles at the bottom of soon to be boiling water, could be considered nucleation sites, you have some water molecules trying to go from liquid to gas. Nucleation is a pretty difficult, not fully understood concept but it tends to happen on surfaces. Generally your pot is pretty smooth so there aren't a bunch of nucleation sites but eventually your liquid to gas bubbles grow bigger, and your gaseous water gets enough energy to break free.
But as I said previously nucleation sites occurs on surfaces, when you add salt you add a whole bunch of little tiny places where your water can undergo it's phase transition and hence it all starts going to the gas phase, i.e., boiling all at once.
It's kinda the same phenomena as the mento's/diet coke explosion. When you put in the rough surfaced mento, all the CO2 dissolved in the soda has a ton of new nucleation sites and hence can fly outta the bottle, i.e., outgas.
Hope that makes sense.
Of course, I'm no chemist.
Does anybody watch Die Sending mit der Maus on German TV Sundays? They do cool explanations for things too, although there's no particular focus on science there.
1) one piece expanded into an infinite 4-dimension macro space in which our universe is expanding
2) the other piece contracted/collapsed into an infinitesimal 6-dimension space about the size of the Planck length .