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Friday 2nd February 2007: Issue: 65

Psssst! Over here! Step closer to the keyboard.  Now pretend to be typing and listen carefully.  This week’s Wired Up is all about spying.  Sssssshhhh! Keep it down will you? Plenty of tips for writing secret messages plus the chance of winning a family ticket to the Science of Spying exhibition at the Science Museum. Over and out.

  1. Planet Picks – the February Quiz
  2. The Wire – Bee prepared…
  3. Try This! –  Secret writing
  4. Gear for Grabs – Science of Spying exhibition
  5. Winners – Flipside two-packs, twice the fun
1. Planet Picks – News from the world of Planet Science…

It’s the February Quiz. This month’s quiz is all about helicopters. If you get all the questions right you’ll go into the prize draw for a PicoZ Micro Helicopter. This tiny little remote controlled helicopter is no bigger than your hand but don’t be fooled, in this case size doesn’t matter. Great for surveillance.  Who could suspect such a tiny buzzing thing?

Enter here

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2. The Wire  – Science news straight to your Inbox…

Talking of flying, scientists have been busy getting some flying lessons - from bees. Small aircraft would be very useful for getting into very small or dangerous places.  Think how useful they might be for spying!  We need to look closely at what makes bees and other insects fly so well.  Scientists have found that the wings of small insects are very flexible, which allows them to lift off the ground and move forward quickly. Already some tiny aircraft (a few cm in size) have been built in America but they can only stay up for a few minutes. Well nobody ever said that science was easy. As Thomas Edison said “Genius is 1% inspiration, and 99% perspiration”

Not only are bees great at flying but they also have hidden talents as would-be sniffer dogs! It’s true. Scientists have known for a long time that bees have a great sense of smell, and now they've figured out how to get them to work for us. Bees in the US-based Stealthy Insect Sensor Project have been taught to stick their tongues out when they sniff explosives. They knew that bees automatically stick their tongues out when they think they are going to get some nectar. A bit like you sticking your hand out every time you think you’re about to get some pocket money…

This is how they did it

Step 1: Keep bees in jars, with their heads sticking out so they can smell anything dangerous.

Step 2: Every time a bee identifies an explosive give it nectar.

Step 3: After a while, the smell of explosives make them expect to get a nectar treat - so they stick out their tongues.

Hey presto! A swarm of explosive-detecting bees.  Hang on a minute.  Who’s going to be looking at the bees to see if they have their tongues sticking out?  And what happens if the explosives are hidden in a lovely clover field? Hmmmm.  We need more convincing

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3. Try This! – Science experiments for you to try at home...

Secret writing

There are many ways of writing secretly.  A good spy should know at least three but we’ll give you FOUR!

You will need:

  • Candle or white wax crayon
  • Paper
  • Water-based paint
  • Cotton buds
  • Lemon juice
  • Bicarbonate of soda
  • Red cabbage water (see instructions)
  • Pencil
  • Paintbrush

What to do:

  1. Method 1: Candle or white wax crayon
  2. Write your message on a piece of paper using the candle or crayon. 
  3. Now paint over the message with water based paint. See the message now?  Aha!
  4. Method 2: Lemon juice
  5. Write your message on a piece of paper using a cotton bud dipped in lemon juice. Now either iron over the message (ask an adult to do this) or place it near a light bulb (ask an adult to do this).  We don’t want anyone getting burnt! See the message now?  Oooh yes! And it’s gone brown!
  6. Method 3: Pencil and wet paper
  7. Wet some paper, just a bit, and place another sheet of paper on top. Use the pencil to write your message quite gently.
  8. Take the topmost paper off. Wait for the wet paper to dry. 
  9. Now wet the paper again.  Well would you believe it?  There’s the message.
  10. Method 4: Bicarbonate of soda and red cabbage water
  11. Dissolve two teaspoons of bicarbonate of soda in four tablespoons of warm water.
  12. Write your message on the paper using a cotton bud dipped in the solution. 
  13. Let it dry. 
  14. Pour hot water over some shredded red cabbage leaves. Leave for 15 mins and then strain.  You should have a dark purple solution.
  15. Paint the red cabbage water over your message.  Well I never!
  16. Try it again but this time use lemon juice instead of bicarbonate of soda.

What’s going on?

Method 1: Candle or wax crayon

Wax is oil based and oil and water do not mix. The paint will not stick to the wax message so the paint soaks into the paper and leaves the waxy areas paint-free.  Your message will show up white against a coloured background.

Method 2: Lemon juice

The lemon juice is very nearly clear so does not show up on the paper when it is dry. When you heat the paper, the lemon juice starts to burn. Like all organic material (i.e. anything that was once living), the lemon juice contains carbon. When it burns, some of the carbon is released in the same way a candle releases soot. The brown writing is just the carbon that has come out of the charred lemon juice.

Method 3: Pencil and wet paper

The pressure from your pencil will mash up the fibres on the lower, damp sheet of paper. Mashed up fibres reflect the light differently to normal, unmashed fibres.
But when the paper dries, the fibres look the same, so your message disappears - until you wet the paper again.

Method 4: Bicarbonate of soda and red cabbage water

Red cabbage water is a dark purple colour. It is a natural indicator which means it changes colour in the presence of acids or alkalis. With acids it turns red or pink and with alkalis it turns blue or green. Bicarbonate of soda is alkaline and when the red cabbage water is painted on it turns blue and shows up against the purple background. If you use lemon juice instead the message will appear red against a purple background.

So there you are, there’s plenty to choose from.  Let us know which one works best. Email us at  wired-up.news@nesta.org.uk with your name and age and ‘SECRET WRITING’ as the subject.

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4. Gear for Grabs – You’ve got to be in it to win it...

The Science Museum's interactive exhibition, The Science of Spying opens on Saturday 10th February 2007. Newly appointed spies will enter through the covert entrance, receive a personal spy ID card and embark on their secret mission. Training will put them through their paces and use a series of interactive challenges to discover if they have got what it takes to be a spy.
During their mission, trainee spies will get to grips with the very latest spy gadgets, as they infiltrate a shadowy organisation, evade counter surveillance and escape without detection.

For more information:  www.scienceofspying.com

And we have a family (for 4 people) pass to give away!

So if you’d like to win it, then send us an email with your name, age and address to: wired-up.news@nesta.org.uk with ‘I SPY A GR8 PRIZE’ as the subject. The winners will be picked at random at 5pm on Wednesday 13th February 2007.

Good luck!

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5. Winners – Has your name been picked out of the bag?

Remember issue no. 64?  We were giving away FIVE – yes, you heard right – five double packs of Flipside magazines.  Two for the price of one eh? Anyway the lucky winners are Kasia Bielska from Slough, Catherine Webster (16) from Lincoln, Lia McKellar (13) from Inverness, Tom Parry (11) from London and Aaron Cross (11) from 28 Engineer Regt.

The winners of the January body stuff quiz are Chloe Merchant of Peacehaven, Angela Pollard of Barnsfield, Andy Craig of Leeds, and Sue Blake of Gawsworth.

Well done!

So keep entering – you never know! Next time - it could be YOU…

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THAT’S ALL FOR NOW

Got Wired-Up? Got clued up!

Don’t forget that Wired-Up will be hitting your inboxes every fortnight from now on, but in the meantime, send any questions, comments, jokes or experiment ideas to: wired-up.news@nesta.org.uk

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Bye for now!