|
Home / News / Tags / oxygen
|
|
The mass extinction of the marine life nearly 93 million years ago would have been most likely determined by the lack of oxygen in the oceanic waters as an intense underwater volcanic activity was triggered, says a study co-authored by Steven Turgeon of the University of Alberta. For a long time volcanism was thought... |
17 July 2008 10:29 GMT |
 |
So what is really the cause of apples remaining healthier than pears for a much longer time after being picked up? Scientists argue that it all has to do with oxygen and the way it behaves in order to reach the center of the fruit. By using one of the most powerful light sources in the world, Pieter Verboven of the C... |
12 July 2008 07:15 GMT |
 |
A typical Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus, or scuba gear for short, usually consists of a tank containing compressed air and a mouthpiece used to regulate the flow of air from the tank into the lungs. But breathing air in this manner is extremely inefficient, especially while considering the application... |
26 May 2008 08:51 GMT |
 |
The permanent crew on board the International Space Station is now formed of only three astronauts, but it will soon be able to support a complement of six, meaning that it will require a new water reclamation system to recycle the water used on board. The newly built water recovery systems, which will be set to fit ... |
13 May 2008 09:56 GMT |
 |
Blowtorches have been invented in the late 19th century and have since become both cool and useful to use in different applications ranging all the way from welding and cutting metal, lighting up cigars, melting jewelry and even cooking! They work on the basis of an oxygen and fuel gas mix, fed into a torch head from... |
3 April 2008 09:08 GMT |
 |
It is pretty clear that, in this rhythm, very few of us will have any money to buy petrol. That's why the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory is trying to develop new means through which chemically manipulated algae generate renewable fuels, such as hydrogen gas for example. "We believe ... |
2 April 2008 06:07 GMT |
 |
The Large Magellanic Cloud is a small galaxy in the Local Group only 160,000 light years away from Earth. Recently, NASA's Chandra X-ray Space Observatory discovered a large supernova remnant that contains large amounts of oxygen. The N132D supernova remnant is part of an oxygen-rich remnant and the brightest fe... |
18 March 2008 04:31 GMT |
 |
NASA is finally talking business and is clearly determined to put a manned mission on the surface of the Moon within the next decade and, why not, to establish a lunar base on our only natural satellite. The new lunar rover demonstrated by the NASA team during the Space Exploration Conference, which took place betwee... |
28 February 2008 09:12 GMT |
 |
Usually, when a metal catalyst reacts with an oxygen molecule, the individual split oxygen atoms behave in identical ways. It seems that this is not the case when oxygen molecule interacts with titanium metal. When the two oxygen atoms get split up, one remains embedded into the titanium crystalline structure, while ... |
14 February 2008 08:50 GMT |
 |
After more than three weeks of delicate operations to load fuel onboard the Automated Transfer Vehicle Jules Verne, European engineers have also been successful in loading the precious oxygen cargo that will be delivered onboard the International Space Station. This represents the European Space Agency's first I... |
29 January 2008 10:52 GMT |
 |
Just when you think you know everything about it, it starts again acting in unpredictable ways. Water is probably the substance with the longest list of anomalies known to man, meaning it behaves in unique and contrary ways in relation to the vast majority of all the other substances. When it freezes, it expands, as ... |
19 January 2008 06:34 GMT |
 |
1. Blood has the role of transporting food and oxygen to the cells, and to remove toxic wastes, including carbon dioxide. An average human adult has 5 liters of blood which comprises about one liter of oxygen, a quantity which, in resting conditions, would be enough for 4 minutes (in case of intense effort, just 1 mi... |
18 January 2008 17:21 GMT |
 |
1.The Earth is wrapped in a layer of gas called atmosphere. Atmosphere is tied to Earth by gravitation, so that it cannot disperse in the space. It is 500 km (300 mi) thick, being made of a mix of about 10 gases, called air. The air is made by nitrogen (78 %), oxygen (21 %) and other gases (argon, carbon dioxide, he... |
14 January 2008 16:26 GMT |
 |
Oxygen enters into our bloodstream through the lungs, while the toxic carbon dioxide is also expelled through them. We call this process breathing. The lungs have a system of tubes called bronchia. Bronchia ramify into gradually smaller tubes that can be as thin as a human hair. At the end of the thinnest tubes, call... |
14 January 2008 14:06 GMT |
 |
I would really like to live and say this line, the guy at the pump would probably laugh himself to death before filling the tank of the car. Imagine going home to your wife saying: 'Honey can you give me some money? I've just spent 20 bucks on pig manure... I was out', and her being like: 'You di... |
7 January 2008 04:51 GMT |
 |
Fire is the biggest destroyer of human life and goods. Now the ultimate technologies fights against it. Conventional firemen cars for putting out building fires are endowed with tanks of 1,365 liters of water and telescopic stairs with a length of 9-15 m (30-50 ft). This water is used only when there is no other sou... |
4 January 2008 14:06 GMT |
 |
We depend on them whether it is winter or summer, however if you have been staying in house for the last three days with all the doors and windows closed, without your air conditioning unit on, and you feel a slight headache maybe it's time to open the window to let some fresh air in; your life may depend on it!... |
27 December 2007 09:19 GMT |
 |
The chemical substance that we commonly call water presents some of the longest lists of substance anomalies known to man, amongst which most of them are widely a mystery to most people, such as phase, density, material, thermodynamic and physical anomalies. For example, water as a gas is the lightest known, as a liq... |
21 December 2007 06:50 GMT |
 |
The highest mountain in the world is Himalaya: its Chomolungma peak reaches 8,848 m (27,000 ft) in height and its next 170 peaks are all over 7,000 m (23,300 ft) tall, being the next on the worldwide scale! The largest freestanding mountain in the world is Africa's Kilimanjaro: 5,895 m (19,650 ft) with its high... |
13 December 2007 14:07 GMT |
 |
This is the champ diver of the birds' world, not just the largest penguin. A new study, published in the "Journal of Experimental Biology", attempts to decode the secret of why emperor penguins can dive down to 1,850 ft (565 m) for up to 23 minutes (with an average of 6 minutes) with a sole breath: a special hy... |
12 December 2007 03:39 GMT |
 |
About 3 % of the people will faint after donating blood for analysis or eye inspection. In case you suffer from this, you could try to do something to prevent it, but it is all in vain. You could try going to toilet in order to avoid being seen by anyone, but you could faint on the way and get hurt. The cause of fain... |
27 November 2007 18:49 GMT |
 |
1.The blood of all humans and animals is salty. Why? Because all animals started to evolve in the ocean, at least 3.8 billion years ago, under the form of unicelular creatures. Thus, the enzymatic systems sustaining life evolved during millions of years in watery conditions of high salt amounts. The content of the so... |
19 November 2007 14:11 GMT |
 |
The process is somehow similar to that which involves the wastewater cleaning operation, but tweaked a little, so that common bacteria that clean the waters will produce hydrogen instead, in a new efficient way. An experiment conducted at Penn State University has already successfully used microbes to produce electri... |
13 November 2007 05:44 GMT |
 |
We know that hemoglobin, the iron-rich pigment of the blood's red cells is the carrier of the oxygen from lungs to tissues and carbon dioxide from tissues to lungs. Now, a team from Wake Forest University, the National Institute of Health and other institutions has found, in a research published online on Nov. 4... |
6 November 2007 04:11 GMT |
 |
For no apparent reason, it seems that instead of developing, the fuel cell technology is stagnating. A truly remarkable technology, the fuel cells, seem to promise us a lot of advantages. Gas emissions that produce the greenhouse effect could be a thing of the past, and we could exploit a good reliable renewable sour... |
5 November 2007 10:13 GMT |
 |
Although water is found almost everywhere on Earth - 70 percent of our planet being covered with the indispensable liquid, of which 97 percent is salty water - the scientists' quest for new types of renewable energy uncovers a series of chemical reactions that can be used to produce water in a new way.Water is ... |
1 November 2007 07:32 GMT |
 |
You would get sick and disabled in the low oxygen conditions that are to be found at a hight of 14,763 feet (4,500 meters), which is the average altitude of the Tibetan Plateau. Yet, the Tibetans ruled empires from the 'roof' of the world.Such heights have defeated many mountain climbers, as the shortage of... |
30 October 2007 03:52 GMT |
 |
Microsoft has debuted the cooking of a security-management platform codenamed Oxygen. For this, the Redmond company hired Mark Curphey, as the new head of the ACE Services in Europe. The work of the Application Consulting & Engineering Team over at Microsoft is intimately connected to application performance, securit... |
10 October 2007 09:18 GMT |
 |
Our planet seems to have filled its lungs with oxygen 50 to 100 million years before previously believed. Two new researches show that low levels of oxygen were already present in the oceans and possibly in the atmosphere around 2.5 billion years ago, pointing to the fact that oxygen-releasing microbes, like cyanobac... |
28 September 2007 07:20 GMT |
 |
Oxygen, one of the largest US cable networks, signed a deal with YouTube to create a new channel on the online video sharing service in order to publish exciting content usually distributed through its TV channel. The new YouTube - Oxygen page was already released on September 17th and provides one click access to at... |
26 September 2007 09:20 GMT |
 |
The dream of many producers is to obtain naturally long lasting fruits. Until that dream becomes reality, they will fill the fruits with all kinds of additives to look healthy and fresh, even if they stay on the shelf for months. But what makes apples (and other fruits) go brown when cut or bruised? From that very mo... |
6 August 2007 07:16 GMT |
 |
While KDE 4 Beta 1 was just released today, a version that marks the stabilizing of foundations for the new major release of KDE, the team prepared a wallpaper contest for all of you KDE users out there!Here are the official contest rules:■ You can send as many wallpapers as you like, but if you want to send m... |
2 August 2007 06:47 GMT |
 |
The strong and prolonged contraction of a muscle during exercising causes sooner or later muscle fatigue. Researches showed that the fatigue increases while the glycogen stored in the muscles decreases. The glycogen is a glucose polymer, like an animal starch. When the muscle needs glucose to burn, the glycogen cuts ... |
17 July 2007 12:34 GMT |
 |
In the first 9 months of our lives, we live like aquatic beings in the womb of the mother. But that's all. After that, the water environment is forbidden for us: we can swim at the surface, but less under water. One famous and remarkable example (but not the only one) are the famous Japanese ama woman divers. Am... |
6 July 2007 15:16 GMT |
 |
The death of a star provides the ideal conditions for new life in space. It's called VY Canis Majoris and it's a red hypergiant, towards the end of its life. It's also the largest known star and one of the most luminous. A new study shows that it's also a surprising nursery for possible lifeforms... |
28 June 2007 05:52 GMT |
 |
There are organisms on Earth that can live without oxygen. Such is the case of archebacteria, that live in extreme environments that lack oxygen, like geysers, black smokers, oil wells, bottom of the lakes or oceans. They represent a basic stage, when the Earth lacked oxygen. Other organisms can live in anoxic enviro... |
27 June 2007 07:10 GMT |
 |
In severe cases or facing patients that are struggling to breathe, the current medical approach is to deliver pure oxygen and see if the patient's health condition improves. But increasing evidence points out that inhaling pure oxygen can actually damage the brain. A new UCLA research examined what is happening ... |
22 May 2007 06:41 GMT |
 |
It seems simple in case of insects: oxygen goes directly to the cells without the need of blood. But powerful X-ray technology that peers through the opaque beetles' cover has revealed a much higher complexity of their breathing apparatus. A recent investigation shows that insect respiration is more than a pass... |
18 May 2007 09:13 GMT |
 |
Oxygen (O) is essential for cellular respiration of all organisms that use air. It is the third most abundant chemical element in the universe by mass, after hydrogen and helium, and the most important on Earth.Scientists have published new strong evidence that the Sun contains nearly half as much oxygen as previous... |
14 May 2007 08:39 GMT |
 |
Oxygen Games has finally announced their enigmatic title, King of Clubs, a highly anticipated mix of absorbing and addictive mini-games, featuring lots of brain tickling situations, never the same game twice, buy, hire or simply outsmart others to achieve your very own piece of property. This one's for gamers w... |
9 May 2007 04:37 GMT |
 |
The leaf of a tree produces hydrogen from water using natural light. It splits water molecules into hydrogen (to make carbohydrates) and oxygen (released into the air for us to breathe). Photocatalytic cells using the same principle have been previously developed, but they are expensive and their efficiency is still... |
4 May 2007 11:24 GMT |
 |
Started in March 2005, at the Appeal Project meeting, in Berlin, the Oxygen icon theme is now created for the KDE 4 desktop in the SVG format. The use of the scalable vector graphics (SVG) allows the icons to better reflect 3D complex effects, highlights and shadows. Inspired by the OS X Aqua style, Oxygen is orient... |
19 April 2007 06:03 GMT |
 |
Oxygen Software, today announces the release of Oxygen Forensic Suite, a special, law enforcement agencies oriented version of the popular mobile phones communication software. Oxygen Forensic Suite includes all the features of Oxygen Phone Manager II and OPM II for Symbian OS smartphones concerning extraction of all... |
17 April 2007 08:30 GMT |
 |
Water may seem simple when we see it like that: H2O, two hydrogen atoms bound to an oxygen one. Or not?A research team at the University of Delaware and Radboud University in the Netherlands have employed high-speed computers and physics to peek into the hidden properties of water. Their novel first-principle simulat... |
6 March 2007 11:23 GMT |
 |
|
|
|