If you cannot see the html version of this email then you can view it online at: http://www.planet-science.com/wired/wiredNL/index.html
wired-up heading

Friday 11th May 2007 Issue 71

Hooray for Fridays! The sun is shining and Wired Up is in your inbox, what could be better than that? Okay, okay keep it short! We’ve got a great quiz for you and a truly ghastly story about spiders. Talking of spiders…UK fans helped Spider-Man 3 achieve a world record at the box office when it opened last weekend. Were you one of them? Click here if you want to know more about the Science of Spiderman.

  1. Planet Picks – May Mayhem Quiz
  2. The Wire – Who’s tap-dancing on my eardrum?
  3. Gear for Grabs – Stress Toys
  4. Try This! – Matchstick Boats
  5. Winners – Dr Mark's Magical Science Book 2
1. Planet Picks – News from the world of Planet Science…

It’s a new month so that must mean a new quiz! So many things to do, so little time – are you finding things a bit hectic? Add to the confusion by trying the new May Mayhem Quiz. Answer the 10 questions and you could win one of two Platinum Bedlam Cubes. The Bedlam Cube is the hardest & most addictive 3-D puzzle ever... You'll pull most of your barnet out trying to reassemble the gleaming little brain mangler.

<< back to top

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

You know those tales that people like to tell about spiders crawling in your ears at night and laying eggs in your brain? You know how we always scoff at them and go “Phshaw! As IF…!” Well we hate to tell you, but one boy from America has a different tale to tell. Nine-year-old Jesse Courtney from Oregon noticed a faint popping noise in his ear and mentioned it to his mum. Later it started to ache, so he visited the doctor who thought he could spot something deep inside. Eeek tell us no more! The doctor washed Jesse's ear out and to everyone's surprise a dead spider emerged, followed by a live one.

Doctors think the popping noise Jesse could hear was the sound of the spiders tip-tapping about inside his ear. Yuck! We cringe to think about it. However, Jesse is quite proud of the two dead spiders that he likes to take into class to show his pals. A sort of spidery souvenir. Strange, but true.

<< back to top

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

We hate to mention it, but are you revising at the moment? Oh the horror of the dreaded ‘E’ word. Never mind, if you’re feeling stressed then grab hold of one of these little stress toys from OCR. They look like little alarm clocks (just to rub it in). When you can't stand working any longer, get the little varmint and squeeze the living daylights out of it! Feel better? Well, you will do.

Anyway, those nice bods at OCR (is that your examining board by the way?) have given us THREE to give away.

Do you want to win one? If so, send us your name, age and address to: wired-up.news@nesta.org.uk with ‘STRESSED’ as the subject. The winners will be picked at random at 5pm on Wednesday, 23rd May 2007.

Good luck!

<< back to top

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

Matchstick boats

Build matchstick boats that will zip across a water surface - powered only by soap.

You will need:

  • A matchstick
  • A bowl or tray of clean water, which isn't soapy
  • A knife
  • A drop of washing-up liquid

What to do:

  1. First, use the knife to make a split in the wooden end of the matchstick, making it into a Y shape.
  2. Fill the bowl with water (just a cm or so is fine).
  3. Gently float the matchstick on the water.
  4. Place a tiny drop of washing-up liquid into the split on the matchstick.
  5. The matchstick zips away from the washing-up liquid as soon as you drop the washing-up liquid on the water.

What’s going on?

Water molecules have an attractive force between them, so if you imagine that you're a water molecule right in the centre of a tank of water, you'd be pulled in every direction by all the water molecules around you - and all these forces would cancel out so you wouldn't move. But if you’re a water molecule at the surface then you won’t be pulled from the top at all because there is just air above you. So, you end up with a more dense film of molecules on top of the water. The result of this is surface tension – the molecules are more attracted to each other then to the air above. Water molecules are also attracted to other substances, so a matchstick, for example, will be pulled by the water wherever it is touching it.

Washing-up liquid is a surfactant, which is something that breaks down surface tension. So by adding washing up liquid, one side of the matchstick has the attraction between the water molecules broken, whereas on the other side of the matchstick, they're still attracting each other and the matchstick.

What the matchstick feels is a pulling force from all the molecules on the clean water side, but on the other side there is virtually no surface tension. So rather than being repelled by the washing-up liquid, it's actually being pulled from the other side, across the bowl of water. Clever eh?

This activity came from Kitchen Science Experiments.

  • << back to top

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

    Remember Issue no. 70? We were giving away a copy of 'Dr Mark's Magical Science Book 2'. The winner is Antony Parry (14) of London. Congratulations! Happy experimenting. May be we'll see your entry in Planet- SciCast

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

    << back to top

    THAT’S ALL FOR NOW

    Got Wired-Up? Got clued up!

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

    P.S. If you wish to unsubscribe from Wired-Up then please email katie.walsh@nesta.org.uk with UNSUBSCRIBE in the subject line.

    Bye for now!