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Ant architects

The photo shows a green sweet that has been discovered by ants on a paved path in my garden. The sweet had been dropped several hours before, and had attracted the interest of an ant colony which was carrying it away. But the pattern of the surrounding plant debris is a mystery. What accounts for its arrangement around the candy?

Roy Levian, Lexington, Massachusetts, US

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Categories: Animals, Unanswered.

Tags: ant, nature.

 

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Building bodies

Why and how does hard work cause physical development?

Through physical work, muscles get bigger, tendons develop and bones change.  How does this happen at a cellular level?

Does the same thing happen in all animals & plants?

Is built-in adaptability an evolved trait - if so when in evolutionary history did it begin to emerge?

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Categories: Human Body.

Tags: evolution, physiology, nature, osteology, Botany.

 

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What (on Earth?) makes footprints like this?

These photos were taken in my parent's garden, Gloucestershire, during the snowy weather in January earlier this year.

The first photo shows the footprints starting near to the back door of their house, the second shows them making their way past the side of the house in a very straight line and the final photo shows them simply stopping.

We're still all very puzzled and wondered if anyone had any theories or ideas?

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Categories: Unanswered.

Tags: animals, Space, snow, aliens, spacetravel, nature, Unidentified, footprints.

 

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What is a force, exactly?

Human beings have identified four fundamental forces of nature (the strong nuclear force, the weak nuclear force, the electromagnetic force, and gravity), and it appears that these four fundamental forces enable us to account for everything we observe in the universe (including all matter – i.e. all particles and subatomic particles are understood to be stable manifestations of these four fundamental forces). It appears that all other forces observed in nature can be derived from these four fundamental forces.

 

If it is correct that Energy is defined not by what it is but by what it can do, then is it correct to assume that energy must be some measure of the fundamental forces of nature acting upon one another?

 

The fact that mass (such as matter) can be converted into energy (such as in a nuclear explosion) in accordance with Einstein’s equation suggests that everything we observe in the universe is simply the various stable manifestations of the four fundamental forces acting upon one another. If this is correct, then what is a force, exactly (i.e. what is a force, not what does it do)?

 

According to the second law of thermodynamics, the energy of a closed system always tends towards equilibrium (because an equilibrium state has a higher probability than any other) and the overall entropy always increases. Can energy (all forms including heat, potential energy, kinetic energy, chemical energy etc.) be explained and defined by the fundamental forces of nature tending towards equilibrium?

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Last edited on: 2010-02-06 13:34:21

Categories: Our universe.

Tags: physics, chemistry, energy, thermodynamics, science, force, nature, ParticlePhysics, fundamentalforces.

 

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