Randomised Friday 10th October 2008 Issue 16

Welcome to another Randomised. In the week that sees a jellyfish earning scientists a share of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry then surely anything is possible.

  1. Sooo Random - Jellyfish wins a Nobel prize! Well sort of...
  2. Gear Giveaway - Five packs of Flipsides
  3. Over 2U! - Waterproof hanky
  4. Winners - Crisp Packet Fireworks book
  5. Rib Busters - fishy howlers

1. Sooo Random - Science news straight to your Inbox...

green jellyfishThe Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2008 has been awarded to Martin Chalfie, Roger Tsien and Osamu Shimomura for the discovery and development of the green fluorescent protein, GFP.

Today scientists use this to tag biological systems. Importantly this can show how brain cells develop or how cancer spreads through tissue.

So where’s the jellyfish connection? Jellyfish will glow under blue and ultraviolet light because of a protein in their tissues. Scientists refer to it as green fluorescent protein, or GFP. For more details visit: The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2008

nobel prize logoThe Nobel Prizes also cover physics, medicine, literature, peace and economics. The winners are known as laureates and receive a medal and a diploma as well as a very tasty £800,000.

Talking of the Nobel Prize for Medicine 2008 - this year French team Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Luc Montagnier were recognised for their discovery of HIV and Harald zur Hausen, from Germany, received the prize for making the link between HPV and cervical cancer. More than 25 million people have died of HIV/Aids since 1981. Globally, more than 33 million people are living with HIV.

By the way, did you know that the medal for Chemistry and Physics bears an inscription which translates as

“And they who bettered life on earth by their newly found mastery”

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2. Gear Giveaway - You’ve got to be in it to win it...

flipside magazineThis week we have FIVE two-packs of Flipside magazine to give away. The October edition plus another. So if you want to read more about the top inventions of the next 50 years or discover the world’s most poisonous food then you know what to do...

Email us with your name and address, and the words ‘PENTA FLIP’ in the subject line, to randomised.news@nesta.org.uk

The draw will take place at 5pm on Wednesday 22nd October.

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3. Over 2U! - Science experiments for you to try at home...

Waterproof Hanky

A handkerchief is not something you think of as very waterproof. Find out how waterproof a hanky can be and how this helps make coats waterproof yet breathable.

aglass, a handkerchief, tap

You will need:

  • A glass
  • A handkerchief or a thin piece of fabric
  • Some water

What to do:

  1. Fill the glass up with water.
  2. Stretch the fabric over the top of the glass.
  3. Turn the glass upside down, over someone else's head if you dare...

What's happening?

Rather surprisingly you should find that the water stays in the glass even though you wouldn't think the handkerchief was very waterproof.

The first thing to work out is how water falls out of a glass normally. For the water to fall out something has to take its place, normally air. But how does the air choose where to get into the glass.

If the base of the water is uneven, a lower part will have more weight of water above it than a higher part. This means it will start to fall down sucking water away from other areas, and that the air can get into the higher areas, allowing the water to fall out.

hanky stretched over glassThis can happen because there is nothing stopping the slight unevenness in the base of the water growing.

If you look at a hanky it has lots of fine pieces of cotton thread woven into a fabric. In between them there are small holes where normally air or water can get through. Cotton really likes water so once the hanky is wet it is covered with water. Now if air wants to get through the holes it has to push the water out of the way - it has to blow little bubbles.

If you have ever tried blowing bubbles and then stopped halfway through you will know that the film will try and pull itself flat due to the surface tension. The same happens here, but the smaller the bubble the harder they will pull back, and there is no soap in the water which reduces the surface tension.

This means that the air has to push really quite hard to get through the fabric, much harder than it could do randomly. So the imperfections can't build up and the water stays inside.

The hanky isn't watertight, but it is airtight, which is enough to keep the water in.

If you put the glass on its side or make the hanky very loose there is enough pressure difference to blow the bubbles, letting air in so it will leak.

What has this got to do with breathable fabrics?

In a breathable coat (made of something like Gore-Tex™) you want to stop rain coming in but still let sweat evaporate from your skin. This is the opposite requirement from the hanky which lets liquid through but not gasses. The problem is actually solved in a really similar way.

Instead of making the fabric out of something like cotton which loves water, you make it out of something which hates it (like PTFE - the non-stick frying pan stuff). Now for a waterdrop to go through it has to split up into lots of tiny drops, which surface tension will fight very strongly just like making small bubbles, but water vapour from your sweat can pass straight through. Just what you wanted.

This activity came from the Waterproof Hanky activity in the
Crisp Packet Fireworks book

Talking of the Crisp Packet Fireworks book...

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4. Winners - Has your name been picked out of the bag?

Last time we were offering a copy of Crisp Packet Fireworks from New Holland. The lucky winner is Emma Blood of Derby.

Have fun experimenting!

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5. Rib Busters - Funny ha ha AND sometimes funny weird!

What do you call a neurotic octopus?
A crazy, mixed-up squid.

What do you get if you cross a salmon, a bird's leg and a hand? Birdsthigh fish fingers !

What do you get if you cross a jellyfish with an elephant?
Jelly the Elephant.

What do you get when you cross an ape with a shellfish?
A shrimpanzee.

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THAT'S ALL FOR NOW

You've been Randomised!

Send any questions, comments, jokes or experiment ideas to: randomised.news@nesta.org.uk

Bye for now!