Bobbit Worm. By: ken & Anita’s Photos

Bobbit Worm. By: ken & Anita’s Photos

Bobbit Worm. By: ken & anita’s photos

The Bobbit worm, Eunice aphroditois, is a ferocious underwater predator. Armed with sharp teeth, it is known to attack with such speeds that its prey is sometimes sliced in half. Though they do vary in size, they have been recorded to grow up to nine feet tall. 

More Posts from The-sleepy-chemist and Others

8 years ago

“i should drink more water” i remind myself, halfway through my fifth coffee

8 years ago
Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.
Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.
Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.
Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.
Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.
Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.
Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.

Chemistry Valentine’s Cards by Nick Uhlig.

8 years ago
COFFEE STAIN UNDER A MICROSCOPE

COFFEE STAIN UNDER A MICROSCOPE

Vin Kitayama, an artist and environmental researcher, created this image from something fairly mundane: an evaporating drop of espresso. Kitayama placed the drop on a microscope slide and then snapped pictures through a polarized light microscope at 4× magnification. As the coffee dried, solid compounds that were dissolved in the coffee, such as caffeine and chlorogenic acid, started forming small crystals. In the polarized light, these crystals shimmered different colors. The image won 9th place in the Nikon Small World photomicrography competition.

Credit: Vin Kitayama

More Chemistry in Pictures and C&EN content:

U.S. Senators Push for Ban on Caffeine Powder

Caffeinated Cocrystals

Tweaking Coffee’s Flavor Chemistry

10 years ago
Aurora - Nutirwik Creek, Brooks Range, Alaska | By Fred Wasmer

Aurora - Nutirwik Creek, Brooks Range, Alaska | by Fred Wasmer

10 years ago

Successful people dare to fail but refuse to be defeated by failure

(via aslam1)

8 years ago
KISS OF DEATH

KISS OF DEATH

One of the reasons cancer is so hard to defeat is that the body’s immune system has trouble recognizing cancer cells growing among healthy cells. Some scientists want to help. Researchers designed mouse T cells to specifically bind to a protein complex on fibrosarcoma MC57 tumor cell membranes. In this sped-up video, once the T cells (each about 10 μm across) meet their targets, they create holes in the cancer cell membranes using a protein called perforin. Next, the immune cells flood the pierced cells with a rush of cell-killing granules called granzymes. Propidium iodide, a dye the scientists added to the plate of cells, also squeezes in through the hole and starts glowing red when it comes in contact with RNA and DNA inside the cancer cells. This tells the researchers that the cells have been pierced and will soon die. This process takes about 75 minutes in real time.

Credit: Misty Jenkins (Read the paper.)

Related C&EN content:

The Immune System Fights Back

Cancer-Killing Machine

10 years ago
The Oldest Ancestor Of Modern Birds Has Been Found In China
The Oldest Ancestor Of Modern Birds Has Been Found In China

The Oldest Ancestor of Modern Birds Has Been Found in China

Ever since the birdlike dinosaur Archaeopteryx was first discovered in 1861, paleontologists have tried to decipher the evolutionary origins of modern birds—the only surviving descendants of the dinosaurs.

Now, paleontologists based out of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) have reached a new milestone in this quest. The CAS team has discovered the oldest fossils from the Ornithuromorpha group of dinosaurs, the common ancestor of all modern bird species.

The two specimens date back 130 million years to the Early Cretaceous period, when pterosaurs still dominated the skies. They belong to a new species named Archaeornithura meemannae, a feathered wading bird that lived in what is now northeastern China. The CAS team, led by paleontologist Min Wang, published a detailed analysis of the new specimens today in Nature Communications.

Continue Reading.

8 years ago

Lab life

Constantly using acetone to wash your glassware which ends up making your nails super brittle 💔

7 years ago

Roses are red Your titriant is pink You failed Go throw your diploma in the sink

Roses are redYour titrant is pinkYou’re not within 2% of the actual valueYou automatically drop a full letter grade on this assignment because achem is a bitch

10 years ago
High Current/Amps Through Metal
High Current/Amps Through Metal
High Current/Amps Through Metal

High Current/Amps through metal

Any metal that can conduct low voltage / high amperage electricity acts as a resistor between two electrode wires (as in the case above), which are made out of copper, which has a better conductivity than iron/steel which heats up due to the extreme electrical resistance. 

Copper (Cu):

Resistivity: ρ(Ω·m) at 20ºC = 1.68×10−8

Conductivity: σ (S/m) at 20ºC = 5.96×107 

Temp. Coefficient:  0.003862 (K−1)

Iron (Fe): (although what you see in the gif is steel, iron comes pretty close)

Resistivity: ρ(Ω m) at 20ºC = 1.00×10−7

Conductivity: σ (S/m) at 20ºC = 1.00×107

Temp. Coefficient: 0.005 (K−1)

Giffed by: rudescience  From: This video

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