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Did you know that? Part II

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Thank you dear Mr. Boston Sankara!

Your input is both valuable and beautiful! WOW!!!
You have matched the crystals I will be posting here ...color for color and shape for shape! :clap2:

Structure and function are inseparable everywhere - not just in Chemistry!

I can give an off hand and easy to understand example now.

An elephant is built for stability and a deer for speed.

Can we reverse their roles while maintaining their structures or forms? :)
 
Dear Raghy Sir,

same is the condition of mine!! But wont we learn a lot or enjoy the beautiful drawings that are posted here?.. Cheers

What we love to do becomes very easy and what we fear more difficult to do!

Does this explains why kids pick up film song much better than classical songs?
 
Dear Manohar Kumar,

I was too scared about chemistry.. so scared, I always spent more time for that subject and always passed that subject with distintion grades ( not in PUC though... that was when I got scared of Chemistry.. analysing the salt brougt cold sweat for me... but later on when I studied it during my Engineering, I was paying a lot of respect to it..).


Cheers!

In spite of their photographic memory,

my sons spent maximum time in studying Chemistry.

There is so much to remember when compared to Mathematics and Physics.

These too have several formulas and definitions to be remembered,

but Chemistry is an awesome ocean of finer details!
 
In spite of their photographic memory,

my sons spent maximum time in studying Chemistry.

There is so much to remember when compared to Mathematics and Physics.

These too have several formulas and definitions to be remembered,

but Chemistry is an awesome ocean of finer details!

Dear VR ji,

My son has not started studying chemistry yet but he likes to mix all sorts of liquids and make some potion and then freeze it.
He says "that one drop of the potion will finish off the entire human race"

He keeps all weird colored liquids stored in the freezer some chemical formula of mass destruction!LOL
 
[h=1]Smell You Later![/h][h=1]Chemosignals Communicate Human Emotions[/h]Many animal species transmit information via chemical signals, but the extent to which these chemosignals play a role in human communication is unclear. In a new study published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, researcher Gün Semin and colleagues from Utrecht University in the Netherlands investigate whether we humans might actually be able to communicate our emotional states to each other through chemical signals.

Existing research suggests that emotional expressions are multi-taskers, serving more than one function. Fear signals, for example, not only help to warn others about environmental danger, they are also associated with behaviors that confer a survival advantage through sensory acquisition. Research has shown that taking on a fearful expression (i.e., opening the eyes) leads us to breathe in more through our noses, enhances our perception, and accelerates our eye movements so that we can spot potentially dangerous targets more quickly. Disgust signals, on the other hand, warn others to avoid potentially noxious chemicals and are associated with sensory rejection, causing us to lower our eyebrows and wrinkle our noses.

Semin and colleagues wanted to build on this research to examine the role of chemosignals in social communication. They hypothesized that chemicals in bodily secretions, such as sweat, would activate similar processes in both the sender and receiver, establishing an emotional synchrony of sorts. Specifically, people who inhaled chemosignals associated with fear would themselves make a fear expression and show signs of sensory acquisition, while people who inhaled chemosignals associated with disgust would make an expression of disgust and show signs of sensory rejection.

To test these hypotheses, experimenters collected sweat from men while they watched either a fear-inducing or a disgust-inducing movie. The men followed a strict protocol to avoid possible contamination. For two days prior to the collection, they were not allowed to smoke, engage in excessive exercise, or consume odorous food or alcohol. They were also instructed to use scent-free personal-care products and detergents provided by the experimenter.

Women were then exposed to the sweat samples while performing a visual search task. Their facial expressions were recorded and their eye movements were tracked as they completed the task.

As the researchers predicted, women who were exposed to chemosignals from "fear sweat" produced fearful facial expressions, while women who were exposed to chemosignals from "disgust sweat" produced disgusted facial expressions.

The researchers also found that exposure to fear and disgust sweat altered the women's perceptions during the visual search task and affected their sniffing and eye-scanning behaviors in accordance with either sensory acquisition or sensory rejection. Importantly, the women were not aware of these effects and there was no relationship between the effects observed and how pleasant or intense the women judged the stimuli to be.


These findings are important, Semin and colleagues argue, because they contradict the common assumption that human communication occurs exclusively through language and visual cues.

Rather, the findings provide support for the embodied social-communication model, suggesting that chemosignals act as a medium through which people can be "emotionally synchronized" outside of conscious awareness.

The researchers acknowledge that these effects could very well contribute to the kind of emotional contagion that is often observed in situations involving dense crowds.

Smell you later! Chemosignals communicate human emotions
 
It is patently unbelievable that you would use Renuka'a anecdote relating the innocent play of a child to personally attack her. His grave warning of the contents of his toy bottles is simply that a warning (and a child's play nonetheless). To dare even jest about harming a child is sickening. Do you blame the bottle of bleach because it bears a warning as well? The amount of ricin toxin the the castor bean is enough to lay low many many people. It is only the fool that eats it expecting a mango.

Ahimsa, it's quite delicious. You should try it sometime.

Namaste,
Roman

Edited to remove hateful speech.
 
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It is patently unbelievable that you would use Renuka'a anecdote relating the innocent play of a child to personally attack her. His grave warning of the contents of his toy bottles is simply that a warning (and a child's play nonetheless). To dare even jest about harming a child is sickening. Do you blame the bottle of bleach because it bears a warning as well? The amount of ricin toxin the the castor bean is enough to lay low many many people. It is only the fool that eats it expecting a mango.

Ahimsa, it's quite delicious. You should try it sometime.

Namaste,
Roman


Shankara,
That was a beautiful post.
 
Oh brother! This is not funny at all! :nono:

I thought someone was pulling Dr. Renu's leg for the fun of it.

But it is not so.

You are a newbie who knows nothing about anyone here.

Don't bite more than what you can chew - if you want to continue here.

I insist on your tending an unconditional apology for insulting a very

longstanding and respected member of the forum and my bosom buddy.

She is an experienced doctor specialized in medicine as well human mind.
 
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Dear VR ji,

My son has not started studying chemistry yet but he likes to mix all sorts of liquids and make some potion and then freeze it.
He says "that one drop of the potion will finish off the entire human race"

He keeps all weird colored liquids stored in the freezer some chemical formula of mass destruction!LOL


Dear Renu!

How right it is that ...
Fools rush in where angels fear to tread!

My prayer as usual is ...

Let good sense dawn in everyone!
Sabko sanmathi de bhagavan!

My elder son was a doctor + compounder + pharmacist
at the tender age of three.

He would put kumkum, chandan, vibhoothi and turmeric
kept in the swami alamaarah into the pancha paatram.

He would prepare a glorious, colorful and sweet smelling potion
and dispense it to the patients of my father with the words,

"If you drink this all your problems will disappear" in Tamil.

Kids have very fertile imagination.. if only we learn to appreciate it.
 
Mukundan,

I refer to post #31. I requested Sri. Praveen to remove that post. Sir, you have no business to talk ill of a member. You have talked ill of not only a member, but of her family too. Your message is horrible to say the least. Remove it, if you still can. How you render your apology is for you to decide.
 
Sri. Sankara, Greetings.

I refer to your post #32, please. Can you kindly delete the quoted portion, please? I requested Sri. Praveen to remove the original message. Thank you.

Cheers!
 
Namaskaram Sri Raghy,

Done as requested! Hope all is well with you :)


Sri. Sankara, Greetings.

I refer to your post #32, please. Can you kindly delete the quoted portion, please? I requested Sri. Praveen to remove the original message. Thank you.

Cheers!
 
A to Z in gemstones.

#2. Minerals, Rocks and Gemstones.




Basic definition of a mineral:

The general definition of a mineral encompasses the following criteria
1. Naturally occurring
2. Stable at room temperature
3. Represented by a chemical formula
4. Usually abiogenic
5. Ordered atomic arrangement

The first three general characteristics are less debated than the last two.

The first criterion means that a mineral has to form by a natural process, which excludes anthropogenic compounds.

Stability at room temperature, in the simplest sense, is synonymous to the mineral being solid at 25°C. Classical examples of exceptions to this rule include native mercury which crystallizes at -39°C, and water ice, which is solid only below 0°C.

Modern advances have included extensive study of liquid crystals, which also extensively involve mineralogy. Minerals are chemical compounds, and as such they can be described by fixed or a variable formula. Many mineral groups and species are composed of a solid solution; pure substances are not usually found because of contamination or chemical substitution.

The formal definition of a mineral approved by the IMA in 1995:

A mineral is an element or chemical compound that is normally crystalline and that has been formed as a result of geological processes.

In addition, biogenic substances were explicitly excluded. “Biogenic substances are chemical compounds produced entirely by biological processes without a geological component (e.g., urinary calculi, oxalate crystals in plant tissues, shells of marine mollusks, etc.) and are not regarded as minerals. However, if geological processes were involved in the genesis of the compound, then the product can be accepted as a mineral.

To put it in a nutshell…

All gemstones are minerals but all minerals are not gemstones.

All minerals are rocks but all rocks are not minerals!
 
Dear Mukundan,

LOL! What is this??( I am referring to a post deleted by Moderator)


Newbie but directly attacking specific people.

How come you Newbies seem to well versed with Forum?

Can't stop laughing.

I have seen this over and over again.

Same reel played over and over again.

Relax my dear.

I know you are seeking strong reaction from me..but this time you are not going to get it!Ha Ha Ha.

Reactions make you stronger..some people feed on anger of others!LOL

So too bad this time..you are not getting any Pinda and Water!LOL
 
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Oh brother! This is not funny at all! :nono:

I thought someone was pulling Dr. Renu's leg for the fun of it.

But it is not so.

You are a newbie who knows nothing about anyone here.

Don't bite more than what you can chew - if you want to continue here.

I insist on your tending an unconditional apology for insulting a very

longstanding and respected member of the forum and my bosom buddy.

She is an experienced doctor specialized in medicine as well human mind.

Dear VR ji,

Thank you for kind words.

Apology from that member is not needed.

Regards
Renu
 
Sri. Sankara, Greetings.

I refer to your post #32, please. Can you kindly delete the quoted portion, please? I requested Sri. Praveen to remove the original message. Thank you.

Cheers!

Dear Raghy,

I have temporarily quoted that post in my reply.
Once Praveen deletes the post..I will delete the portion I quoted too.

Thanks
Renu
 
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It is patently unbelievable that you would use Renuka'a anecdote relating the innocent play of a child to personally attack her. His grave warning of the contents of his toy bottles is simply that a warning (and a child's play nonetheless). To dare even jest about harming a child is sickening. Do you blame the bottle of bleach because it bears a warning as well? The amount of ricin toxin the the castor bean is enough to lay low many many people. It is only the fool that eats it expecting a mango.

Ahimsa, it's quite delicious. You should try it sometime.

Namaste,
Roman

Dear Roman,

Thanks for your post.

Children have very fertile imagination and they like to experiment lots of stuff.

It's really fun to watch them play.
 
I can't stop wondering how Mr. Boston Sankara has

both my sons' names slightly modified as his names.

Shankar and Raman are the names of my sons and

Sankara and Roman are the names of our friend! :)
 
Sri VR Ji, you my friend have good taste and I am from a state known for it's funny dialect and bad spelling!!!!!

:-D


I can't stop wondering how Mr. Boston Sankara has

both my sons' names slightly modified as his names.

Shankar and Raman are the names of my sons and

Sankara and Roman are the names of our friend! :)
 
#3. Agate





Agate is a micro-crystalline variety of Silica, mainly chalcedony. It characterized by its fine grains and bright colors. Agates are found in various kinds of rocks, but they are classically associated with volcanic rocks and certain metamorphic rocks.


The Greek philosopher and naturalist, Theophrastus discovered the stone along the shore line of Achates river (now called Dirillo in Sicily) sometime between the 4th and 3rd centuries BC.

Agate is most commonly used for hand-stone carving and has been recovered at a number of ancient sites, indicating its widespread use in the ancient world.

Industry uses agates chiefly to make ornaments such as pins, brooches, paper knives, inkstands, marbles and seals. Agate is also still used today for decorative displays, beads, carvings as well as face-polished and tumble-polished specimens of varying size and origin.

Because of its hardness and ability to resist acids, agate is used to make mortars and pestles to crush and mix chemicals. Because of the high polish possible with agate it has been used for leather burnishing tolls for centuries.

Idar-Oberstein was one of the centers which made use of agate on an industrial scale. In the beginning locally found agates were used to make all types of objects for the European market. This became a globalized business around the turn of the 20th century Idar-Oberstein imported large quantities of agate from Brazil.

Making use of a variety of proprietary chemical processes, they produced colored beads that were sold around the globe. Agates have long been used in arts and crafts. The sanctuary of a Presbyterian church in Yachats, Oregon, has six windows with panes made of agates collected from the local beaches.

 
Nickel

Nickel is not as well known as other metals, but it plays an important, if invisible role in modern life. It has some very useful properties, and when it is mixed with other metals it helps create amazing alloys that are strong, won't rust, can withstand high and low temperatures, and can be easily shaped into anything from thin wires to flat sheets. For example, nickel is one of the metals added to iron to make stainless steel - an extremely useful product! And if you have ever wondered why a 20 cent coin is more silver-white in colour than a $1 coin, it is due to the relative amounts of nickel.

Source

Australia (mostly Western Australia but also Queensland) is one of the world's major nickel producers. In 1897, nickel was discovered, but it was 1966 before an orebody of nickel sulphide large enough to mine was found at Kambalda, 50 kilometres south of Kalgoorlie. Nickel is mined by open-pit or underground methods, then the rock is crushed and ground up, and the nickel sulphide ore is separated from the waste rock using froth flotation. At a refinery, the ore is then heated and treated with various chemicals to separate out the nickel.

Amazing Facts



  • Earth's magnetic field is due to the iron and nickel in its core.
  • The ancient Chinese used nickel alloys, calling them 'paktong'.
  • It was 1751 before nickel was first isolated, by a Swedish chemist, Alex Cronstedt.
  • In the 19th century, nickel was popular for making items such as cutlery. However, it was in 1889 that James Riley gave an historic speech to the Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, declaring that tests had shown that a steel containing nickel gave the alloy almost unbelievable strength. From then on, nickel alloy steels became vital materials for a whole range of uses.
  • There was an especially big demand for nickel in the two World Wars, for making armour plate for vehicles.
  • Lockheed Missiles and Space Company Inc. have made a test chamber in California to replicate the cold vacuum (low pressure) and solar heat of outer space. It is made from 372 tonnes of nickel-containing stainless steel.


More at - http://www.australianminesatlas.gov.au/education/rock_files/nickel.html#top

Kind Regards
 

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My full name is Roman James Sherman Hunt. James is the name of my maternal grandfatherand Sherman the name of my paternal grandfather. It is uncommon to have two middle names here.....


THE PLOT THICKENS!!!!! :-D

Actually both of these are the names of the
paternal & maternal grandfathers of my sons! :)
 
My full name is Roman James Sherman Hunt. James is the name of my maternal grandfatherand Sherman the name of my paternal grandfather. It is uncommon to have two middle names here.....


THE PLOT THICKENS!!!!! :-D

So you have four names in your original name plus one user name for the forum! WOW!!!

In India it was the custom to name the children after their grandfathers, great grand father, grand mothers and

great grandmothers and call them by a simple (silly) nickname, since we should not utter the names of the grand

old people while chiding the children.

It had an added advantage that whenever we call the kids by their real full names, we will be uttering the names

of Gods (those days everyone wad named after a God) and earn good karma (even if God was farthest from our

thoughts at that time).

Now people want fancy names- unpronounceable even to Hindus and Indians - with no sacred connections.

Aakaash is the most popular name for a boy!

Reason???

With two 'a's in the name he is likely to be the first in the attendance register (hitlist?)

Some fancy names for girls Nilita, Likita, Ankita ....:dizzy:

We used to have Raadhika and Deepika in addition to Mallika and Chandrika.

But now add 'ka' to any word to make a fancy name
Anushka, Jyothika, Lathika, Bhoomika...:bump2:

The only names to be added are the names of vegetables like

nellikkaa, maangaa, thengaa, vaazhakkaa!!! :rolleyes:

Here is a story to show how God's name can save even the long time sinners in a jiffy!
 
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