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Science & Mathematics - 23 July 2006

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics

Agriculture · Alternative · Astronomy & Space · Biology · Botany · Chemistry · Earth Sciences & Geology · Engineering · Geography · Mathematics · Medicine · Other - Science · Physics · Weather · Zoology

I am trying to help a friend of mine and if you can answer my question, that will be appreciated. Thank YOU!

2006-07-23 10:47:09 · 6 answers · asked by Mori C 1 in Other - Science

Does Ambidexterity increase brain size if you become ambidextrous in your late teens? Also if you learn to write with both hands at the same time(different words) will that increase the size of the brain as well?
I can't seem to find that much information on the internet about being ambidextrous. I want to find a book that talks about this subject as well as the human brain, any suggestions?
I do know that Left-handed and ambidextrous people have 11% larger corpus callosa.

2006-07-23 10:47:00 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Biology

2006-07-23 10:42:31 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

Are we the norm or the exception?

2006-07-23 10:40:52 · 12 answers · asked by fresh2 4 in Astronomy & Space

well tell me wants wrong im seeing people with nifes and they all ways look at me and run to my and look like there going to kill me . well i live in this house with my parents and im just a kid and it is a house were somone got killed and are they git there reving bye tring to kill me ..!!!1(**) there here.,,,,,,,,, wacing me

2006-07-23 10:39:17 · 6 answers · asked by Jody S 1 in Physics

this is not any kind of racist comment i can assure you

2006-07-23 10:31:59 · 38 answers · asked by yogi bear 1 in Biology

2006-07-23 10:30:19 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Chemistry

Does anyone know of any proteins which have a large number of isoforms which are reasonably well distributed across the population? I am thinking primarily of proteins which are found in body fluids: blood plasma, semen, gastric juice, saliva, etc...
If anyone could recommend any good online databases which I could look through that would also be a great help.

2006-07-23 10:30:16 · 2 answers · asked by alexjcharlton 3 in Biology

2006-07-23 10:28:17 · 4 answers · asked by ? 2 in Astronomy & Space

yes or no and y
please explane

2006-07-23 10:25:51 · 33 answers · asked by Anonymous in Physics

Instead of 2 large masses and 2 smaller masses on the torsion balance.

2006-07-23 10:08:09 · 2 answers · asked by Gravity Boy 1 in Physics

Currently in SLC Utah the temp is 98 degrees. 20 miles up the canyons of the wasatch natl forest it is 108 degrees. the elevation in the wasatch is approx 9000 ft give or take. In the past 10 years i have never seen the wasatch so hot. I worked up there in the summers because i knew it would be at least 10 to 15 degrees cooler....This increase in the mountain temp has got hotter all week. Mother nature is confused?

2006-07-23 10:06:43 · 10 answers · asked by yellowstonian 1 in Weather

Maybe an inner layer of clothing to protect firemen or any others who need protection from high or low temperatures? (Please research peltier chips before you answer).

2006-07-23 10:05:50 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Engineering

im fromkentucky and want to know what you people think of our state

2006-07-23 10:00:47 · 20 answers · asked by Anonymous in Geography

If energy can neither be created nor destroyed, does that imply that there is a set amount of total energy despite its form?

2006-07-23 09:53:59 · 9 answers · asked by will 1 in Physics

who's the winner?

2006-07-23 09:50:37 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Zoology

and a bunch of little green worms. Do you have any idea what they are? Are they termites?

2006-07-23 09:47:37 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Zoology

2006-07-23 09:43:49 · 31 answers · asked by Anonymous in Other - Science

According to the Lorentz Transformation, an object, as observed from a "stationary" frame of reference, moving at a speed approaching c will contract in the direction parallel to the direction of motion.
Say an object is moving towards a distant star with a speed approaching c. The length of the moving object will contract in the direction of motion as observed from an outside frame.
Here's the question: Can't it be said that the distance between the moving object and the distant star it's traveling towards is also contracting?
I'm not talking about the fact that the object is moving towards the star, & that's why it's getting closer. I mean that the effects of the Lorentz Transformation are also contributing to the contraction of the distance.

2006-07-23 09:36:14 · 6 answers · asked by vaporhut 1 in Physics

I hear i should be making over $22 hr....but then i hear the avg pay for them is like $10....so i dont know what the correct pay is. Anyone know?

2006-07-23 09:32:19 · 14 answers · asked by WHO_WHAT 2 in Medicine

I know in the past Iraq ranked second but what about now ?

2006-07-23 09:20:55 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Earth Sciences & Geology

Is it the tension in the suspending wire?

2006-07-23 09:20:07 · 4 answers · asked by Gravity Boy 1 in Physics

2006-07-23 09:16:22 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Other - Science

modern/conventional science didn't know it was there until the late 1800s- the dogons knew it was there in the 2nd century B.C. and called it "po tolo" (keep in mind: this particular star is not only invisible to the naked eye, it's invisible to all conventional instruments that pre date the 1950s)

2006-07-23 09:13:07 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Other - Science

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