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Post Info TOPIC: 20 Things You Didn't Know About...


Cleverly Disguised As A Responsible Adult

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20 Things You Didn't Know About...


20 Things You Didn't Know About... Nothing

by LeeAundra Temescu


1
  There is vastly more nothing than something. Roughly 74 percent of the universe is nothing, or what physicists call dark energy; 22 percent is dark matter, particles we cannot see. Only 4 percent is baryonic matter, the stuff we call something.

And even something is mostly nothing. Atoms overwhelmingly consist of empty space. Matters solidity is an illusion caused by the electric fields created by subatomic particles.

There is more and more nothing every second. In 1998 astronomers measuring the expansion of the universe determined that dark energy is pushing apart the universe at an ever-accelerating speed. The discovery of nothingand its ability to influence the fate of the cosmosis considered the most important astronomical finding of the past decade.

4  But even nothing has a weight. The energy in dark matter is equivalent to a tiny mass; there is about one pound of dark energy in a cube of empty space 250,000 miles on each side.

5
  In space, no one can hear you scream: Sound, a mechanical wave, cannot travel through a vacuum. Without matter to vibrate through, there is only silence.

6
  So what if Kramer falls in a forest? Luckily, electromagnetic waves, including light and radio waves, need no medium to travel through, letting TV stations broadcast endless reruns of Seinfeld, the show about nothing.

Light can travel through a vacuum, but there is nothing to refract it. Alas for extraterrestrial romantics, stars do not twinkle in outer space.

8
  Black holes are not holes or voids; they are the exact opposite of nothing, being the densest concentration of mass known in the universe.

9
  Zero was first seen in cuneiform tablets written around 300 B.C. by Babylonians who used it as a placeholder (to distinguish 36 from 306 or 360, for example). The concept of zero in its mathematical sense was developed in India in the fifth century.

10
  Any number divided by zero is . . . nothing, not even zero. The equation is mathematically impossible.

11
  It is said that Abdülhamid II, sultan of the Ottoman Empire in the early 1900s, had censors expunge references to H2O from chemistry books because he was sure it stood for Hamid the Second is nothing.

12 
Medieval art was mostly flat and two-dimensional until the 15th century, when the Florentine architect Filippo Brunelleschi conceived of the vanishing point, the place where parallel lines converge into nothingness. This allowed for the development of perspective in art.

13 
Aristotle once wrote, Nature abhors a vacuum, and so did he. His complete rejection of vacuums and voids and his subsequent influence on centuries of learning prevented the adoption of the concept of zero in the Western world until around the 13th century, when Italian bankers found it to be extraordinarily useful in financial transactions.

14
  Vacuums do not suck things. They create spaces into which the surrounding atmosphere pushes matter.

15 
Creatio ex nihilo, the belief that the world was created out of nothing, is one of the most common themes in ancient myths and religions.

16 
Current theories suggest that the universe was created out of a state of vacuum energy, that is, nothing.

17
  But to a physicist there is no such thing as nothing. Empty space is instead filled with pairs of particles and antiparticles, called virtual particles, that quickly form and then, in accordance with the law of energy conservation, annihilate each other in about 10-25 second.

18
  So Aristotle was right all along.

19
  These virtual particles popping in and out of existence create energy. In fact, according to quantum mechanics, the energy contained in all the power plants and nuclear weapons in the world doesnt equal the theoretical energy contained in the empty spaces between these words.

20 
In other words, nothing could be the key to the theory of everything.



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Cleverly Disguised As A Responsible Adult

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20 Things You Didn't Know About... Sleep

by Jason Stahl


1  Chronic snoring can be treated by uvulopalatopharyngoplasty, a surgical procedure that tightens the tissues of the soft palate and throat. Possible side effects include changes in voice frequency.

2 
Another option involves injecting the palate with a chemical to harden the soft tissue. This is called a snoroplasty, derived from the Greek word plastos, meaning molded, and somewhat lamely from the English word snore, meaning snore.

3 
Baaaa'd idea: A 2002 study by Oxford University researchers concluded, brilliantly, that the traditional practice of counting sheep is an ineffective cure for insomnia. The mental activity is so boring that other problems and concerns inevitably surface.

4  Mattresses have an average life span of 8 to 10 years. They grow some nasty stuff in that time; one study links mattress bacteria to sudden infant death syndrome.

5  An adult bedbug can survive up to one year without feeding.

6
  In 2004 Americans filled more than 35 million prescriptions for sleeping pills.The number of adults aged 20 to 44 taking pills to help them fall asleep has doubled in the last four years.

7
 
More than 100,000 car crashes in the United States each year result from drowsiness. Drivers talking on cell phones increase the rate by 6 percent, so don't call someone if you get tired.

8 
Disco isn't dead, it's on the dashboard: In 2008 Volvo plans to unveil a system that will monitor a driver's eyes and head, along with the movement of the steering wheel. If a driver seems to be nodding off, interior lights will start to flash.

9  A six-year study of a million adults showed that people who get only six to seven hours of sleep a night have a lower death rate than those who get eight hours. Maybe it's those late nights watching QVC.

10  In 1964 17-year-old Randy Gardner stayed awake for 264 hours and 12 minutes, the world's record. He then slept for 15 hoursnot a record, but not bad.

11
 
Let's sleep on it first: In a gesture of integration with the European Union, Spain has launched a campaign to eliminate the tradition of siestas, or afternoon naps.

12 
Thanks in part to their afternoon naps, Spaniards sleep an average of 40 minutes less per night than other Europeans. Spain also has the highest rate of workplace accidents in the EU and the third lowest productivity rate.

13  Who knew it was that easy? A Muslim couple in India is being forced to split up after the husband uttered the word talaq, the Arabic word for divorce, three times in his sleep. According to Muslim law, the "triple talaq" is an actual divorce.

14 
The idea that it is dangerous to wake a sleepwalker is a myth. Given the things sleepwalkers get up to do, like climbing roofs and fixing insanely large sandwiches, it is probably more risky not to wake them.

15 
Whales and dolphins can literally fall half asleep. Their brain hemispheres alternate sleeping, so the animals can continue to surface and breathe.

16 
Dreaming is connected to bursts of electrical activity that blow through the brain stem every 90 minutes during REM sleep. Over a lifetime, an average person spends more than six years dreaming, clocking more than 136,000 in all.

17
 
But nobody knows why we dream.

18 
Hey, be glad she doesn't have a telethon: More than 5 million American children suffer from nocturnal enuresis, better known as bed-wetting. Actress Suzanne Somers used to be one of them, according to her autobiography.

19 
Somniphobia is the fear of sleep.

20 
So far, there are no known celebrity somniphobes. 



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20 Things you Didnt Know About... Hygiene

by Liza Lentini and David Mouzon


Hygiene comes from Hygieia, the Greek goddess of health, cleanliness, and . . . the moon. Ancient Greek gods apparently worked double shifts.

The human body is home to some 1,000 species of bacteria. There are more germs on your body than people in the United States.

Not tonight dear, I just washed my hands: Antibacterial soap is no more effective at preventing infection than regular soap, and triclosan (the active ingredient) can mess with your sex hormones.

Save the germs! A study of over 11,000 children determined that an overly hygienic environment increases the risk of eczema and asthma.

5
  Monks of the Jain Dharma (a minority religion in India) are forbidden to bathe any part of their bodies besides the hands and feet, believing the act of bathing might jeopardize the lives of millions of microorganisms.

6
  Its a good thing theyre monks.

7
  Soap gets its name from the mythological Mount Sapo. Fat and wood ash from animal sacrifices there washed into the Tiber River, creating a rudimentary cleaning agent that aided women doing their washing.

8
  Ancient Egyptians and Aztecs rubbed urine on their skin to treat cuts and burns. Urea, a key chemical in urine, is known to kill fungi and bacteria.

9
  In a small victory for cleanliness, Englands medieval King Henry IV required his knights to bathe at least once in their livesduring their ritual knighthood ceremonies.

10 
Thats their excuse, anyway: Excrement dumped out of windows into the streets in 18th-century London contaminated the citys water supply and forced locals to drink gin instead.

11
  A seventh grader in Florida recently won her school science fair by proving there are more bacteria in ice machines at fast-food restaurants than in toilet bowl water.

12
  Theres no five-second rule when it comes to dropping food on the ground. Bacteria need no time at all to contaminate food.

13
  The first true toothbrush, consisting of Siberian pig hair bristles wired into carved cattle-bone handles, was invented in China in 1498. But tooth brushing didnt become routine in the United States until it was enforced on soldiers during World War II.

14
  Please dont squeeze the corncob. In 1935, Northern Tissue proudly introduced splinter-free toilet paper. Previous options included tundra moss for Eskimos, a sponge with salt water for Romans, andhopefully splinter-freecorncobs in the American West.

15
  NASA recently spent $23.4 million designing a toilet for the Space Shuttle that would defy zero gravity with suction technology at 850 liters of airflow per minute. Thats a lot of money for a toilet that sucks.

16
  In 1843, Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. campaigned for basic sanitation in hospitals. But this clashed with social ideas of the time and met with widespread disdain. Charles Meigs, a prominent American obstetrician, retorted, Doctors are gentlemen, and gentlemens hands are clean.

17
  Up to a quarter of all women giving birth in European and American hospitals in the 17th through 19th centuries died of puerperal fever, an infection spread by unhygienic nurses and doctors.

18
  TV kills! University of Arizona researchers determined that television remotes are the worst carriers of bacteria in hospital rooms, worse even than toilet handles. Remotes spread antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus, which contributes to the 90,000 annual deaths from infection acquired in hospitals.

19
  It is now believed President James Garfield died not from the bullet fired by Charles Guiteau but because the medical team treated the president with manure-stained hands, causing a severe infection that killed him three months later.

20 
What on earth made them think manure-stained hands were remotely acceptable to treat anyone?



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Ghost In The Machine

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Wow, I just got educated about hygiene, sleep, and then nothing.  I like nothing.  Nothing is great. biggrin

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ghostdancer wrote:

Wow, I just got educated about hygiene, sleep, and then nothing.  I like nothing.  Nothing is great. biggrin




rofl.gif Nothing has it's place in the sun, don't you think? I like nothing. nod.gif



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20 Things You Didn't Know About U.S. Presidents

Not only were these men leaders of the United States, they were multitalented, unique, and sometimes even downright quirky. We've heard a lot about their contribution to United States history. But would you have guessed the following?

John Quincy Adams (Image credit: Culver Pictures)

1. In warm weather, 6th president of the United States John Quincy Adams customarily went skinny-dipping in the Potomac River before dawn.

William Henry Harrison (Image credit: Hulton Deutsch)
2. 9th U.S. president William Henry Harrison was inaugurated on a bitterly cold day and gave the longest inauguration speech ever. The new president promptly caught a cold that soon developed into pneumonia. Harrison died exactly one month into his presidential term, the shortest in U.S. history.

John Tyler (Image credit: Culver Pictures)
3. John Tyler, 10th U.S. president, fathered 15 children (more than any other president)--8 by his first wife, and 7 by his second wife. Tyler was past his seventieth birthday when his 15th child was born.

James Polk (Image credit: Hulton Deutsch)
4. Sedated only by brandy, 11th president of the United States James Polk survived gall bladder surgery at the age of 17.

James Buchanan (Image credit: Hulton Deutsch)
5. 15th U.S. president James Buchanan is the only unmarried man ever to be elected president. Buchanan was engaged to be married once; however, his fiancée died suddenly after breaking off the engagement, and he remained a bachelor all his life.

President Lincoln
6. Often depicted wearing a tall black stovepipe hat, 16th president of the United States Abraham Lincoln carried letters, bills, and notes in his hat.

Andrew Johnson (Image credit: Hulton Deutsch)
7. 17th U.S. president Andrew Johnson never attended school. His future wife, Eliza McCardle, taught him to write at the age of 17.  (Bonus fact about Andrew Johnson: He only wore suits that he custom-tailored himself.)

Union General Ulysses S. Grant (Image credit: Hulton Deutsch)
8. Ulysses S. Grant, 18th president of the United States, died of throat cancer. During his life, Grant had smoked about 20 cigars per day.

James Abram Garfield
9. Both ambidextrous and multilingual, 20th president of the United States James Garfield could write Greek with one hand while writing Latin with the other.

Grover Cleveland (Image credit: Hulton Getty Picture Collection)
10. Grover Cleveland, 22nd and 24th president of the United States, underwent a secret operation aboard a yacht to remove his cancerous upper jaw in 1893.

Theodore Roosevelt (Image credit: THE BETTMANN ARCHIVE)
11. The teddy bear derived from 26th U.S. president Theodore ("Teddy") Roosevelt's refusal to shoot a bear with her cub while on a hunting trip in Mississippi.

William Howard Taft (Image credit: Culver Pictures)
12. William Taft, 27th president of the United States, weighed more than 300 pounds and had a special oversized bathtub installed in the White House.

Warren G. Harding (Image credit: Culver Pictures)
13. Warren Harding, 29th U.S. president, played poker at least twice a week, and once gambled away an entire set of White House china. His advisors were nicknamed the "Poker Cabinet" because they joined the president in his poker games.

Calvin Coolidge (Image credit: Culver Pictures)
14. Calvin Coolidge, 30th president of the United States, had chronic stomach pain and required 10 to 11 hours of sleep and an afternoon nap every day.

Herbert Hoover (Image credit: Hulton Deutsch)
15. Herbert Hoover, 31st U.S. president, published more than 16 books, including one called  Fishing for Fun-And to Wash Your Soul.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Image credit: Art Resource, NY/National Portrait Gallery)
16. 32nd president of the United States Franklin D. Roosevelt was related, either by blood or by marriage, to 11 former presidents.

Harry S. Truman (Image credit: Culver Pictures)
17. The letter "S" comprises the full middle name of the 33rd president, Harry S. Truman. It represents two of his grandfathers, whose names both had "S" in them.

Dwight D. Eisenhower (Image credit: Hulton Getty Picture Collection)
18. Military leader and 34th president of the U.S. Dwight D. Eisenhower loved to cook; he developed a recipe for vegetable soup that is 894 words long and includes the stems of nasturtium flowers as one of the ingredients.

Ronald Reagan's Inauguration (Image credit: THE BETTMANN ARCHIVE/UPI)
19. 40th president of the United States Ronald Reagan broke the so-called "20-year curse," in which every president elected in a year ending in 0 died in office.

George W. Bush
20. George W. Bush, 43rd president of the United States, and his wife Laura got married just three months after meeting each other.


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Smiles everyone, smiles!

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4. Sedated only by brandy, 11th president of the United States James Polk survived gall bladder surgery at the age of 17.

well then! if brandy can get him throug gall bladder surgery, surely it can get me through the next few year with my son!

which reminds me, i'm out of brandy...

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disco strangler wrote:

4. Sedated only by brandy, 11th president of the United States James Polk survived gall bladder surgery at the age of 17.

well then! if brandy can get him throug gall bladder surgery, surely it can get me through the next few year with my son!

which reminds me, i'm out of brandy...



laughing.gif If it's gotta last you the next few years, you might want to look at a bulk discount. wink



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The Good Witch Of The South

    



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disco strangler wrote:

4. Sedated only by brandy, 11th president of the United States James Polk survived gall bladder surgery at the age of 17.

well then! if brandy can get him throug gall bladder surgery, surely it can get me through the next few year with my son!

which reminds me, i'm out of brandy...



lmao.gif

 



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2. 9th U.S. president William Henry Harrison was inaugurated on a bitterly cold day and gave the longest inauguration speech ever. The new president promptly caught a cold that soon developed into pneumonia. Harrison died exactly one month into his presidential term, the shortest in U.S. history.

I don't remember exactly how, but I knew this one. I think a teacher must've told us in school.

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