Monday, May 20, 2013

This Week In Science

Hubble's First Photos
- In 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope sent its first photograph from space, an image of a double star 1,260 light years away.


Saturn Moons
- In 1995, astronomers Amanda S. Bosh and Andrew S. Rivkin found two new moons of Saturn in photos taken by the Hubble Space Telescope.

Wright Brothers Patent
- In 1906, the brothers Orville and Wilbur Wright received a patent for "new and useful improvements in Flying Machines" (U.S. No. 821,393). This was the first airplane patent in the USA.

Spectrophotometer
- In 1935, the first spectrophotometer was sold by General Electric Co., assignee of the patent issued at the beginning of the year to the inventor, Arthur Cobb Harvey (“Photometric Apparatus,” 8 Jan 1935, U.S. No. 1,987,441). This electronic machine was capable of distinguishing and charting two million different shades of colour. The apparatus used a photo-electric device to receive light alternately from a sample and from a standard for comparison. Its important innovation was to eliminate any need for the two beams (from sample and from standard) to travel different optical paths which in previous designs could introduce inaccuracies when one path varied from the other, caused for example by dirt on a lens in one path

Penicillin Test
-  In 1940, in one of the most famous animal tests in medical history, eight mice were inoculated with a lethal dose of streptococci and then four of them were injected with penicillin. Next day the four mice given streptococci alone were dead, the four with penicillin were healthy. Oxford scientists Howard Florey, Ernst Chain and Norman Heatley had revived Alexander Fleming's work. They produced enough antibiotic to test by isolating the active ingredient from what Fleming had called "mould juice," Ten years before, Fleming's had interest waned when he found penicillin prduction to be difficult, that it was very unstable, had no effect on certain bacteria (cholera, bubonic plague) and didn't work in animals when given by mouth

Leeuwenhoek's animalcules
- In 1676, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek applied his hobby of making microscopes from his own handmade lenses to observe some water running off a roof during a heavy rainstorm. He finds that it contains, in his words, "very little animalcules." The life he has found in the runoff water is not present in pure rainwater. This was a fundamental discovery, for it showed that the bacteria and one-celled animals did not fall from the sky. When a ball of molten glass is inflated like a balloon, a small droplet of the hot fluid collects at the very bottom the bubble. Leeuwenhoek used these droplets as microscope lenses to view the animalcules. Despite their crude nature, those early lenses enabled Leeuwenhoek to describe an amazing world of microscopic life.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

May Science Newsletter


Another school year is coming to a close. All of us here at Capital Microscope hope that the year has been successful and rewarding for you and your students. We are very pleased to be able to support your efforts in providing the very best in science education. Please contact us as you prepare your orders for next year. Remember that we have expanded our offerings to include much of the standard supplies that you need for your laboratory experiments.

The easiest way to find the best products at the best price is to go to our website at Capital Microscope. We also available to answer your questions and recommend products that will fit your particular needs for your students.

We are also very proud to be recognized for our support of NSTA. You can find us on the web at NSTA Science Supply Guide.

We are looking forward to sending you our "Science Newsletter" next year. We will continue to bring you information you can share with your students regardless of the discipline you teach. Keep scrolling down to find interesting facts to share with your students. Each month brings science news for you and your students.

We are also scheduling summer microscope service. Click here to contact us about servicing your microscopes at Capital Microscope. We can keep your microscopes operating like new and save you time and money.

Have a Great Summer!! "See" you next school year.

May Featured Products




3050 Cordless Monocular Microscope
The Perfect K-8 Grade Microscope
Features:

  • Modern design with convenient handle on arm of microscope for easy and safe transfer from workspace to workspace
  • 10x Wide-Field eyepiece with pointer
  • 45° inclined head, rotatable 360°
  • 3.5" round moveable stage rotates 360° for convenience of        adjusting specimens with spring mounted stage clips
  • Reverse nosepiece which allows for more work space on stage
  • LED Cordless with rechargeable batteries
  • Light intensity control
  • Achromatic color coded 4X, 10X, and 40XR objectives
  • Revolving triple nosepiece has positive click stops for easy and precise magnification changes.
  • Instruction manual included


List Price: $199.00 
Your Price: $149.00


This optical geometric apparatus offers a compact, convenient and comprehensive set up with a metal dish template that has 360º rotation.  13 optical components are included such as a rectangular prism, a trapezoid prism, a right angle prism, a semicircular lens, a convex lens and a concave lens.  Students can also examine light ray paths in liquids with a rectangular acrylic cell and two mirrors with combined concave and convex planes.  A periscope model, a Galilean telescope model, a kepler telescope model and an optical fiber unit are included.  Includes instruction manual and two AAA batteries.

List Price: $292.00
Your Price: $225.00


May Science "Tidbits"


General Science History

In 1928, radio station WGY, in Schenectady, NY, began America's first regularly scheduled TV broadcasts. The programs lasted from 1:30 to 2:00 p.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays. Most of the viewers were on the technical staff at nearby General Electric, which had designed the system and was using the broadcasts to refine its equipment. A handful of hobbyists who had built their own sets were also able to watch. Those who tuned in had to make constant adjustments, turning two knobs at once to keep the blurry picture discernible on their three-inch-square screens. By the end of 1928, 17 more stations around the country began scheduled broadcasts, designed to test the apparatus rather than attract viewers.

Biology History

In 1930, a new U.S. Plant Patent Act provided, for the first time, allowed patent protection for new and distinct varieties of asexually reproduced plants. This legislation resulted from the growing awareness that plant breeders had no financial incentive to enter plant breeding because they could not exercise control over their discoveries. In supporting this legislation, Thomas A. Edison testified: "This (bill) will, I feel sure, give us many Burbanks." He was referring to Luther Burbank who during a lifetime devoted to plant breeding developed more than 800 strains and varieties of plants. Burbank was issued 16 plant patents posthumously. Plant patent No. 10,000 was issued 12 Aug 1997 for a "Geranium plant named Lois."

Earth Science History

In 2000, a conjunction of the five bright planets - Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn - formed a rough line across the sky with the Sun and Moon. Unfortunately, nothing was visible from the earth, because the the line of planets was behind the Sun and hidden in its brilliance. Such a conjunction last happened in Feb 1962 and will not happen again until Apr 2438. Throughout former history, a conjunction event was regarded with foreboding. However, now science can be dismissive. Donald Olson, an expert on tides at Southwest Texas State University, working with the assistance of a graduate student, Thomas Lytle, calculated the stress on the Earth caused by the Moon and eight planets has often been routinely greater, most recently on 6 Jan 1990.

Physics History

In 1979, a potential difference of 32.0 million volts, the highest ever generated, was produced by the National Electrostatics Corporation at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), Tennessee. Company personnel were testing the newly installed Pelletron accelerator model 25 URC, the largest manufacturered by the company. (The sustained terminal voltage was measured by the current measurement of the column corona voltage grading system to within an uncertainty of +/-5% or +/- 1.5 MV). On 7 May 1979, voltage tests had been conducted on the column structure prior to installation of the acceleration tubes. This 25 MV electrostatic tandem accelerator remains in use at ORNL producing radioactive ion beams for research.

Chemistry History

In 1860, the discovery of two new elements, caesium and rubidium, was announced by German chemists, Robert Bunsen and Gustav Robert Kirchhoff to the Berlin Academy of Scientists. Their salts were found in tiny amounts in the mineral waters of Dürkheim. They were detected by spectral analysis. Caesium was first noticed by its characteristic sky blue spectral lines, for which colour is was named (from Latin caesius). Likewise rubidium was characterized by deep red lines (named after L. rubidus). They are alkali metals, and have similar chemical properties to potassium.

Quote

Never let the future disturb you. You will meet it, if you have to, with the same weapons of reason which today arm you against the present. - Marcus Aurelius Antoninus