Title: Training Presentation
1- Knowledge for Children
- Low Aim is a Crime, but not high ambition
- NCERT Guidance in Schools
A need for every Child Today at Kayalpatnam
2CFCs damage Ozone Layer ?
- Chloroflurocarbons (CFC) used by refrigrants,
coolants, cleaning agents, etc are main eaters of
ozone present in atmosphere. - Highly unstable, an ozone molecule readily splits
when hit by ultravoilet radation. Energy of
life-damaging UV rays is thus converted into
harmless heat and never reaches the earth. This
process generates Oxygen atom and Oxygen
molecule, which in an ongoing cycle, recombine to
form new ozone molecules. - When CFCs go upward to stratosphere and get
struck by ultra violet rays, it releases chlorine
atom, which attacks an ozone molecule, pulls away
one of the three oxygen and forms a chlorine
monoxide molecule thus destroying the ozone
molecule. - Oxygen atoms from the new chlorine monoxide
molecule is pulled away by free oxygen atoms
freeing the chlorine atom to restart the cycle.
Guidance for Children
3Dust Appear Reappear
- Dust is mostly tiny fragments abraded from large
things. - Dust knows no borders.
- Dust cloth may simply stir up dust.
- Charged particles of dust are attracted to
surfaces with the opposite charge. - An antistatic spray may help by providing a very
thin layer of insulation between the opposite
charges.
Guidance for Children
4Age of Fossils
- Atoms of same element having same atomic number
but different mass number are called isotopes. - Radio active isotope of carbon is 146C which has
a half life period of 5730 years. Half life
period of a radio active substance is defined as
the time required for half of its atoms to
disintegrate. - The radio isotope of carbon is continuously
produced in the atmosphere by the action of
cosmic rays on atmospheric hydrogen. - Plants and animals absorbs 146C with natural
carbon 126C. In living beings, the ratio of
146C/126C is a constant when a plant or animal
dies the 146C disintegrates without being
replaced. Hence by determining the ratio
146C/126C in fossil the age is determined. This
method is called Carbon dating.
Guidance for Children
5Height of Mountains Measured
- The method used is known as Triangulation.
- If one knows one side and two angles of any
triangle (or two sides and one angle), one can
find out the rest of its measurement. - One side of the triangle is usually a level piece
of ground between two landmarks. - The third landmark is the apex of the triangle.
The angle it makes with each of the first line is
measured. - Instrument for measuring these angle is called a
transit. The transit works vertically which is
called levelling as there is a spirit level at
the base of the instrument that indicates when it
is in level. By raising the sight to any landmark
or a mountain, the same process of measuring
angles can be done and the length of one side
(the height) can be measured.
Guidance for Children
6Lava is hot ?
- Magma is predominantly a molten silicate
saturated with gases that are dissolved in it. - Due to high pressure existing in deeper part of
the earth where volatile compounds are in a
dissolved state. within magma, diminishing its
viscosity and increasing the degree of its
mobility and chemical activity. - Volcanism unites all the processes connected with
the outflow on the earth surface. - Liquid products of volcanic eruptions are
represented by lava.
Guidance for Children
7Black and White Clothes
- Black material radiates heat faster than white
material, and similarly absorbs infrared heat
faster. - Although it is true that dark objects radiates
heat more effectively than light-coloured ones,
the amount of heat radiated from a body is
proportional to its absolute temperate raised to
the power of 4. - In Summer, it would be better to wear white as
the benefit of black clothes radiating heat away
quickly would not outweigh the disadvantage of
them absorbing infrared heat more quickly.
Guidance for Children
8Rainfall Measure ?
- A simple rain gauge which any one can use to
measure rain at his place consists of a funnel (3
to 4 inches in diameter) fitted into a bottle
(about 1 litre capacity) to collect the rain
water and a measuring cylinder. - An air-vent is to be provided to prevent
accumulation of rain water in the funnel in case
of heavy down pours. - Rain gauge is kept on the ground without
obstructions. - If the area of opening of the funnel is 80cm2
then for 1cm of rainfall the volume of water
would be 80cm2 x 1cm that is 80cm3. - If the total volume of rain water (in cm3)
collected, over a specified period, is divided by
8, we get the rainfall in mm in that place over
the given period.
Guidance for Children
9Smell after Rain
- Smell immediately after a shower is due to
certain volatile chemical compounds released by a
group of soil-inhibiting bacteria called
streptomycetes. - Streptomycetes are abandant in dry warm soil, a
million of them can be detected in a gram of
soil. - They release compounds such as geosmin and 2
methyl isoborneol when wetted by rain water after
a long dry spell. - Thus we get the odour only after the first rain
of the rainy season. The smell can be felt in
newly ploughed lands also.
Guidance for Children
10Rainbow Formation
- When the Sun shines after a shower, we often see
an arc of beautiful colours in that part of the
sky opposite to the Sun. - This is due to reflection and refraction of the
Suns rays as they fall on drops of rain. As a
ray passes into a drop of rain, the water acts as
a tiny prism. The ray is bent, or refracted as it
enters the drop and is separated into different
colours. As it strikes the inner surface of the
drop it is further refracted and dispersed.
Guidance for Children
11Mountain Tops are Cooler not hot?
- Air is a poor absorber of sunlight.
- Sun heats the Earth which is a better absorber,
and the Earth then heats the air close to it. - Hot air rises because it is less dense than
surrounding cooler air at the same pressure. - As it rises, a mass of hot air expands because
the ambient pressure is less. This expansion
cools the air, so the temperature of a thermal
bubble decreases with increasing altitude until
it reaches an equilibrium. - If you climb 40Km above the Earths surface, you
would find that it gets much warmer.
Guidance for Children
12Sound in Thunder
- Warm, wet air surges upwards into the sky and
cools dramatically forming thunderstorms. - Some of the water inside the clouds freeze and
strong air currents make the ice and water
droplets bump together. - This knocks tiny charged particles called
electrons from the ice and so there is a build-up
of electric charge. This charge is released by a
stroke of lightning. The lightning heats the air
around it to an incredible 30,000C. - We hear lightning first and then thunder because
light travels faster than sound. - By counting the seconds between the lightning and
thunder and dividing by three we get the distance
to the storm in Kilometres.
Guidance for Children
13Finger Cool Faster
- Our body is like a container of heat.
- The amount of heat per unit volume (say, every
cubic centimetre) of the body is approximately
the same. - But the fingers and nose have a greater surface
area per cubic centimetre than other parts of the
body and so they cool down faster. - As soon as heat is delivered to the fingers it
escapes through the surface. But the rest of the
body does it slower and so are a little hotter
than the fingers.
Guidance for Children
14Coconut Oil Freeze in Winter
- Oils are liquid fats. Fats are esters of
carboxylic acids which are either saturated (do
not contain double bond) or unsaturated (contain
one or two double bond). These esters are derived
from a single alcohol called glycerol and are
glycerides. - Fats with greater percentage of unsaturation tend
to be in liquid state and fats with greater
percentage of saturation tend to be in solid
state at room temperature. - Coconut oil contains nearly 91 per cent of
saturated fatty acids. Still, it is liquid at
room temperature because of the presence of more
number of short chain (C12 and C14). - Because of the greater percentage of saturation,
coconut oil can be solidified at low temperature
and becomes solid during winter when the
temperature falls below 20 degree centigrade.
Guidance for Children
15Water in Mud Pot remains cool
- Mud pots contain many minute pores through which
water can slowly ooze out. - These pores increase the surface area of water
and consequently increase evaporation. - For water to evaporate it requires some energy
while it takes as heat from the water itself. - This results in lowering the temperature of the
water in the pot. - Water never becomes ice because the system is not
a closed system and so it can take up heat from
its surroundings.
Guidance for Children
16Drops are Spherical ?
- Liquid drops tend to be in a state of minimum
surface energy which is directly related to the
surface area. - The force, surface tension, which is trying to
hold the droplet together, therefore tries to
reduce the surface area of the drop. - Mathematically only a sphere has the smallest
surface area for a given volume, compared to
other geometric shapes.
Guidance for Children
17Sunflower facing Sun
- Due to Phototropism.
- Phototropism is a growth-mediated response of a
plant to simulation by visible light. The
response is stimulated by a hormone called auxin
present in the stem. - Auxins promote lengthwise growth of plants.
Guidance for Children
18Lotus leaf does not get wet
- Lotus leaf does not get wet due to outlayers of
cells in the epidermal layer of leaves. - They contain cellulose, which get converted by
cutin by the process of cutinization and form an
impermeable membrane on the cell wall known as
cuticule. - Cuticle, is a layer of wax-like substances which
are simple lipids containing one molecule of
fatty acids esterified with one molecule of long
chain alcohols instead of glycerol. - A molecule of wax consists of odd number of
carbon atoms ranging from C25 to C35. These are
highly insoluble in water chemically inert
because these do not have double bonds in their
hydrocarbon chains. Hence waxes from a protective
covering.
Guidance for Children
19Lemon drops create white spots?
- Lime juice contains 6 10 per cent of citric
acid. - Cement is a complex mixture of calcium silicates
and calcium aluminates. - When drops of lime juice fall on the floor, a
chemical change takes place. - One of the products is calcium citrate which
gives a white colour on these spots.
Guidance for Children
20Cut Apple turns Brown
- Apple contains an enzyme known as polyphenol
oxidase (it is a copper containing enzyme). - When the fruit is cut, this enzyme becomes
reactive as it comes into contact with air. It
reacts with the sugar present in the fruit and
results in the formation of brown colour on the
cut surface. - If cut apple is dipped in an ascorbic acid
solution browning of the cut surface can be
prevented as the acid inhibits activity of the
enzyme.
Guidance for Children
21Temperature affect ripening bananas
- Temperature changes can delay or hasten the
ripening of banana. - Banana is a tropical fruit adapted to ripen
quickly at a certain stage of its development and
at a particular temperature and humidity. It
continues to ripen after harvest, with more and
more of its starch converted into sugars by the
action of enzymes. - When harvested, a banana contains about 20
percent starch and only 1 percent sugar. By the
time the fruit is ripe, the proportions are
reversed. - Banana releases comparatively large quantities of
ethylene gas to help itself ripen the gas will
even ripen other fruit put in a bag with a
ripening banana.
Guidance for Children
22Mango ripens in rice tin
- During ripening, a number of enzyme-assisted
reactions take place inside the fruits. The list
includes softening of tissues, hydrolysis,
changes in pigmentation, flavour and respiration
rate, and conversion of carbohydrates and organic
acids into fruit sugars. These changes are
induced by ethylene which is also called a
ripening hormone. - It has been found that during ripening, ethylene
production goes up. An ethylene-forming mechanism
and breaking of the insensitiveness to ethylene
are attained only when fruits reach a certain
physiological age. - When unripe fruits are kept inside a sack or tin
of rice, the time needed to attain this critical
physiological age is shortened. It could be that
the fruit to totally cut off from light which
promotes yellowing. The ethylene produced in the
fruit also diffuses rapidly through the fruits
tissues.
Guidance for Children
23Plants survive without leaves
- Abscission is a physiological process whereby
plants shed a part, such as leaf, flower or
fruit. - This is promoted by a plant hormone called
abscisin produced by leaves and fruits. - Extreme temperatures limit the metabolic
activities such as respiration, of plants. Such a
reduction, consequently necessitates only a low
level of photosynthetic activity. - Less Energy required could be got from
photosynthetic activity of a few green cells,
present in the terminal regions, after all the
leaves fell.
Guidance for Children
24Red parts in Sugarcane
- Red portions in the stem of cane is due to a
fungal disease called red-rot caused by the
organism Glomerella tucumanensis. The organism
attacks during the conidial stage (imperfect
stage). - When the affected canes are split open, the
tissues of the internode which are normally white
or yellow-white will become red in one or more
internodes usually near the base.
Guidance for Children
25Trees Reduce Air Pollution
- Trees act as sink for carbon dioxide. Through
photosynthesis they synthesize carbohydrate using
Carbon Dioxide, water and sunlight. - Trees release oxygen, which is needed by other
living organisms. - They act as barriers or curtains for dust through
the settlement on the dense foliage of trees.
Guidance for Children
26Visibility in the dark
- Vertebrates have two types of photosensitive
cells, rods and cones, so called because of their
shape. - The rods, which are long and fat, contain large
amounts of visual pigment and they mediate vision
under dim illumination (scotopic vision). - The cone cells, which are relatively small,
mediate daylight vision (photopic vision) and
colour sensation. - In nocturnal animals, the retina is mainly made
of rod cells. - Rhodopsin, a photosensitive pigment, present in
rods is decolourised by photons (light particles)
and slowly regenerated in the dark. This ensures
better vision for them in dim light.
Guidance for Children
27Eyes glow in dark
- Birds syrinx (the functional equivalent of our
larynx or voice box) is much simpler than that of
humans. - Some birds with more rudimentary syrinx can
become more proficient in creating sound. - In birds, the syrinx is located at the bottom of
the trachea. Sound is produced at the syrinx as
air flows and the volume is controlled by muscles
in the trachea. The sounds are then emitted with
little or no modulation. - Human vocalisations originate from the larynx at
the top of the trachea. The larynx is more
complex and produces relatively simple sounds.
Guidance for Children
28Eagles fly with flat wings
- Eagles adopt an energy-saving flight mode called
gliding. Their broad wings and broad rounded tail
enable them to exploit thermals in the air. - Thermals are upward air currents in the
atmosphere caused by the absorption of heat, from
the sun or load, by the air. - The birds flap their wings slowly and laboriously
in the air in wide circles, but once they catch
the rising air they begin to soar effortlessly
without even a single beat up to a point where
the warm air has cooled and stopped rising. - From this point, they start gliding down to
another thermal, which they spot by seeing other
groups of rising raptors or perhaps by their
delicate sensitivity to even minute changes in
air currents. - Their primary feathers are spread out to obtain
the maximum advantage from the rising air.
Guidance for Children
29Blinking Of Eyes
- Blinking keeps the front of eyeball clean.
- Blinking is done by means of muscles in the eye
lids and the cleansing by tears. - The tears are secreted in a little gland and
carried along to the eye and when our eyelids
open and close the tears are poured over the
front of eye and they wash away any particles of
dust or any other harmful substances.
Guidance for Children
30Run before Jumping
- Due to Newtons law of motion All objects living
and non-living, have inertia a tendency to
remain in its present condition. - If a body is at rest, it will have a tendency to
remain at rest in future also. In the same way,
if a body is moving, it will have a tendency to
continue its movement at a later time. - If we stand at a point and jump, we will not be
able to cover a good distance because our body
will try to remain standing (be at rest), and we
will have to spend a lot of energy (or more
power) to jump long distances. - Thus, we run before jumping before saving.
Guidance for Children
31Bees Find Their Way
- Information about the source of food is informed
to others during round dance or waggle dance. - Round dance is going in small circles, clockwise
or anticlockwise, alternately. - Waggle dance is tracing a figure of eight.
- Round dance is used if the food is of short
distance say 100m. Waggle dance is used if the
food is far away. - They use round dance or waggle dance to find
their way. Alternatively, they can return to the
hive by remembering the angles of triangles
formed by the position of the hive, the sun and
bee though this may vary with time. - Bees can also perceive polarisation of sunlight
and thus use the sun as a compass.
Guidance for Children
32Ants find their way to hidden sweets
- Antennae, the two hair-like structures on the
head of the ants, help them in locating sweets. - These chemoreceptors help them to perceive smell
and taste through minute sensilla, or sensory
cells. - If sweets are wrapped in paper bags or any other
wrappers having minute holes, the odour carried
by the air will be sensed by the sensilla. - If the antenna are removed, ants cannot identify
the smell and distinguish them from other foods.
Guidance for Children
33Ants dont get hurt when they fall
- Fall of a body is controlled by gravitational
attraction of the Earth. - Heavier object is attracted more than a lighter
object. - This attractive force is opposed by an upward
thrust (resistance) offered by air on the body.
This resistance also depends on the surface area
of the object. That is, if the surface area is
more, the resistance is also more. - In the case of an ant, the force of gravity is
almost balanced by air resistance and so it is
able to land safely.
Guidance for Children
34Ants go in a line
- Once an ant find an abundant source of food, it
returns to the nest with a sample of food. While
returning to the nest, it presses its abdomen to
the ground and at frequent intervals extrudes its
sting, the tip of which is drawn lightly over the
ground surface, much like a pen drawing a thin
line. - As sting touches the surface, a volatile chemical
(trail pheromone), flows out of a gland (Dufours
gland), associated with the sting. In this way,
the ant draws an invisible chemical line from the
source of food to the nest. - Since the chemical is highly volatile, the trail
remains only for a short time. Hence, all ants
constantly draw the line over and over again.
Guidance for Children
35Houseflies increase in Summer
- A single female may lay eggs 4 to 6 times and
each time each female lays 120 to 160 eggs. They
lay their eggs in clusters on compost, waste
heaps, manure and dumps. - The condition required for laying eggs are
moisture and favourable temperature. The eggs
hatch in 8 to 24 hours depending on the
temperature. - The whitish larvae moult twice to become the
familiar white maggots in 7 days. - The maggots transform into quiescent reddish
brown pupa from which the adult flies emerge
after 5 days if the temperature is optimal.
Summer provides all the favourable conditions.
Guidance for Children
36Bulges when mosquito bites
- Bulging is mainly due to histamine.
- It is widely distributed in the tissues, the
richest source being the mast cells that are
normally present in the corrective tissues
adjacent to the blood vessels. - Preformed histamine is present in mast cell
granules and is released by mast cell
degranulation process which in response to the
stimulus caused due to irritation at the site of
the bite. - This histamine causes dilation of the arterioles
and increases vascular permeability venules. This
in turn causes venular endothelial contraction
and widening of the interendothelial cell
junctions, where the extra vascular fluid
accumulates causing inflammation.
Guidance for Children
37Do Snakes Hear ?
- Snakes are deaf.
- Snakes actually respond to vibrations produced on
the ground and not to the sound waves produced by
the mahudi Snake Charmer, in the air. - Snakes do not have ears, instead they have a long
bony road called columella auris that extends
from fenestra ovalis to the quadrate bone. It is
this bone which helps the snake to detect the
vibrations. - It is to be noted that the charmer first hit the
ground with the pipe before playing it.
Guidance for Children
38Spiders dont get caught in their web
- Spiders secrete an oil on its legs that prevent
it from sticking to their own web. - Silk, made up of proteins, secreted by the silk
glands, are made into fibres as thin as a
thousandth of a millimetre. - The proteins are water soluble when secreted, but
when made into a fibre, some physical and
chemical changes take place, and so, after a
while the fibre becomes tough and does not
dissolve in water. - Spider at first makes the radials from the centre
and then the spiralling threads. There may be
10-60 turns in a web. To capture an insect,
spider places a small glue droplets throughout,
except at the place where it rests. - The vibrations of the captured insect are sensed
by the spider.
Guidance for Children
39Blood Clotting
- Blood has the ability to clot or coagulate, when
it is withdrawn from the body. - In the blood vessels, the blood remains in a
fluid condition shortly after being withdrawn,
it becomes viscid and gelatinous and sets into a
firm, jelly-like mass. - Clot consists almost entirely of red corpuscles
entangled in a network of fine fibrils or
threads, composed of a substance called fibrin.
It also contains platelets and plasma. - Certain substances promote coagulation
(procoagulants) and others inhibit coagulation
(anticoagulants).
Guidance for Children
40Blood Grouping
- Blood types is based on the different types of
antigens present on the surface of the red blood
cells (RBC). - Four Groups A, B, AB, O. The letters stand for
the type of antigen present on the red blood
cells. - The corresponding antibodies are carried in the
plasma and if the person has a particular antigen
in his red cells, he can not have the
corresponding antibody, since agglutination would
occur. Thus group A contains antigen A and
antibody anti-B. - Group AB has antigens of A B and not antibodies
of either type. - Group O has no antigens and antibodies anti-A and
Anti-B. - If the blood protein first discovered in blood
of Rhesus monkey is present in the blood cells,
then the blood cells are called Rh positive and
if they are absent, it is called Rh negative.
Guidance for Children
41Air we breathe out is seen in cold day
- The air we exhale on a cold day is visible
because of the formation of dew. - The air we exhale has water vapour and
carbondioxide. - Our exhale air is about 40oC but outside
atmosphere is about 10oC. - Cold air cannot hold as much water vapour as warm
air. Dew is formed when air is cooled to the
point where it cannot hold all its water vapour,
so the moisture in it begins to condense forming
tiny water droplets. The temperature at which the
moisture in the air begins to condense is called
dew point. - From 40 to 10 degree centigrade, it is cooled to
below the dew point but above its freezing point.
Hence the tiny water droplets float in the air
and are visible.
Guidance for Children
42Myopia
- Myopia is defined as an eye defect where the
image of the object falls before the retina of
the eye. - The person affected with myopia cannot see
distant objects clearly, but can see objects that
are close to him. - Myopia is also known as short sight.
- Three types
- Congenital Myopia Since birth.
- Simple or developmental myopia Defect increases
usually as age advances. - Pathological or degenerative myopia Condition
rapidly increases and there may be high myopia
upto 20 D.
Guidance for Children
43Cramps
- Cramp can occur due to a localised muscle spasm.
- Pain or uneasiness is caused by nervous
irritation due to accumulation of some
metabolites or chemicals in that area. - Massage, external compression of muscle, improves
blood supply. It helps in washing away these
metabolites and thus relives the cramp. - However, not all cramps can be relieved by
massage.
Guidance for Children
44Dandruff
- Dandruff is a condition of excessive scales of
the scalp. - There are two varieties Dry and Greasy.
- Dry The scales are fine, thin, white or greyish,
and dry or slightly greasy. - Lacks lusture Mild to moderate itching Scales
will fall freely on the shoulders. - Occurs more in winter than in summer.
- Exaggeration of normal exfoliation of the horny
layer of the epidermis. - Greasy Both the scale and integument are oily.
- Extends to eyebrows, eyelids, beard and others.
- Basic defect in this case is over production
and/or change in composition of the sebaceous
secretion. - Common at puberty and it occurs due to endocrine
disorders, familial predisposition, unbalanced
diet and constipation.
Guidance for Children
45Antidandruff Shampoo Work
- Dandruff is thought to be caused by overgrowth of
yeast such as Pityrosporum ovale which live on
normal skin. - Antidandruff shampoos work by three mechanisms
- Ingredients such as coal tar are antikeratostatic
and they inhibit keratinocyte cell division. - Detergents in the shampoo are keratolytic they
break up accumulation of scale. - Antifungal agents such as ketoconazole inhibit
growth of yeast itself. Other components such as
selenium sulphide also inhibit yeast growth and
therefore scaling.
Guidance for Children
46Cold Flu in Winter
- Rhinivirus, which is responsible for up to 40 per
cent of clods, culture better at a temperature of
32 degrees C rather than the normal body
temperature of 37 degrees C. However, 32 degrees
C is the normal temperature of the lining of the
nose, which is good news for the virus. - Children and teenagers are far more susceptible
to infection as the immune system learns how to
combat more infections as they get older as have
been exposed to more of the 200 or so viruses
responsible for the common cold. - Densely packed nurseries, schools and college
provide an ideal breeding ground for viruses
which then spread out into the community aided by
the cold damp weather.
Guidance for Children
47Hiccups
- Diaphragm is located between the chest and the
stomach. - While inhaling air this diaphragm goes down and
presses the stomach due to which the lungs are
filled with air. - While exhaling air, the diaphragm goes up and the
air comes out from the lungs. - Thus the diaphragm goes up and down and the
process of respiration continues incessantly
without making any sound. - Two sudden and involuntary contractions within
the diaphragm cause hiccups. You can get hiccups
if you eat too much or too fast or if you eat
victuals disagreeable to your system.
Guidance for Children
48Blocking Nose While Crying
- Tear fluid is secreted by a lacrimal gland seen
bulging the conjunctiva (muscous membrane
covering the eyeball and lining the eyelids) - Tear passes through numerous ducts into the
conjunctive sac, aided by ocular muscle
contraction. - From there it reaches the lacirne sac and through
the lacrimal duct it is drained into the nasal
cavity, (Lacrimal duct is an anatomical drainage
canal connects the corner of the eye to the lower
surface of the nasal cavity).
Guidance for Children
49Itching when wound heals
- Itching is due to the release of a chemical
substance, called histamine, which stimulates
nerve endings. - Histamine is a decarboeylated form of amino-acid
histidine, a powerful vasodilator present in
animal tissues. - When tissues become inflamed, histamine is
released from mast cells in the tissues. - During healing, the number of basophils in WBCs
increase. Basophils contain relatively large
amounts of histamine. - Histamine from the basophils and from the
surrounding cells diffuse into the skin nearby
and stimulates the nerve endings, which leads to
itching.
Guidance for Children
50Wound becomes Septic
- The reaction between metal sheets and air or
other oxidising agents are the cause for rusting. - Rust is a form of oxidised metal film forms on
metallic surfaces. - When these rusted metals make wounds, the
micro-organisms gain entrance into the wounds as
spores and germinate under unaerobic condition
particularly when the wound is deep or if the
oxygen tension is low due to the presence of
other aerobic micro-organisms. - During the metabolism these clostridia excretes
toxins, that are pathogenic for human beings, the
wound become septic and if left untreated results
in death.
Guidance for Children
51Burning Sensation using Dettol
- Tincture, dettol and other similar antiseptics
act as disinfectants and are corrosive in nature. - When these antiseptics are applied on wounds, due
to their corrosive nature they damage the cell
proteins in the tissues. - This action stimulates the underlying sensory
nerves leading to a sense of irritation. - To reduce the corrosive action, use them in a
diluted form live adding water to it.
Guidance for Children
52Sleepy after heavy meals
- In the human body the mechanism is such that the
oxygen we breathe in and the vital nutrients in
the food that we eat are absorbed by the blood
and supplied to the different organs. - The amount of blood supplied to each organ
depends on the oxygen and nutrition requirement
of the tissues of the organ and the importance of
the function it plays at any given time. - Normally one-third of blood goes to liver,
one-fourth to kidney, one-sixth to brain.
Remaining goes to the muscles and other parts of
the body. - With heavy meals, digestion of the food is needed
and so more blood is sent to the stomach wells.
Automatically the flow of blood to other parts of
the body, including the brain, is reduced.
Guidance for Children
53Yellowing of Urine
- Yellowing of urine is due to the predominant rise
in the unconjugated bilirubin in the blood. - Administration of certain drugs in the patients
can also result in the rise of unconjugated
bilirubin. - Even some common medicines like paracetamol and
sulfonamide are hepatotoxin. So they cause mild
damage to the liver cells which results in the
increase of bilirubin level in the blood. - In the case of tonics, yellowing is due to
excretion of B-complex vitamins. These vitamins
are water soluble and absorption of these
vitamins is very rapid. But they are rarely
stored in liver except vitamin B-12.
Guidance for Children
54Vegetables washing and cooking
- When the cut vegetables are washed in water, the
water soluble vitamins (B complex and Vitamin C)
are leached away. So, wash before cutting. - When vegetables are cooked, thermal destruction
of vitamins and nutrients also take place. So,
over heating of vegetables should be avoided. - Frying and roasting is bad as it causes 40 - 60
per cent nutrient loss.
Guidance for Children
55Vomiting while Travelling
- Giddiness occurs when we lose our sense of
balance. - The sensations perceived by the eye, inner ear,
skin, muscles and joints help the body to know
its stability. - When we look down from a great height, abnormal
visual signs are transmitted to the brain,
without any corresponding information from other
parts of the body. - While looking out in a fixed direction while
travelling in a bus, the eye sends fast changing
visual signals to the brain. Such signals confuse
the mechanism in the brain and lead to giddiness
and vomiting.
Guidance for Children
56Blind men with improved capabilities
- Scientists have found that the brain is plastic
meaning, the brain can rewire itself. This has
proved beneficial to the handicapped. - Researchers have demonstrated the process of
brain rewiring using a technique called
transcranial magnetic stimulation in which they
apply a magnetic field to the skull and induce
electric currents on the brain. - They found that the visual cortex (the part of
the brain which handles signals from the eye) of
a blind persons brain does not remain idle
other senses use it.
Guidance for Children
57Atmosphere with stellar bodies
- Atmosphere of stellar bodies is determined by
studying the spectrum of the light coming from
the stellar body. - We know that the atmosphere is made of atoms and
molecules. - Each of these atoms and molecules emit light at
characteristic frequencies or wavelengths which
are also called signatures. No two elements emit
light of the same frequency. - Researchers use spectroscopic tools to study the
light coming from stellar objects and identify
the frequency of components in them.
Guidance for Children
58Stars blink but not planets
- The stars seem to twinkle, because we see the
stars through the ocean of air, the atmosphere.
The twinkling is caused by differences in
temperature in the air. - Some layers of air are hotter than others, and
one layer is always swirling and moving through
another. These different layers of air bend the
star light in different ways, and at different
angles. - Stars near the horizon seem to twinkle much more
than those high in the sky. This is because the
light of these stars has to travel a longer path
through a thicker layer of atmosphere, and thus
has more chance to become disturb. - More rays come to us from the surface of a planet
than from the surface of a star. The light from
the planets does not waver as much as that from
the stars, the wavering of one ray of light is
counteracted by the wavering of another ray in
another direction.
Guidance for Children
59Refrigerator sound
- The sound from a fridge is due to the frequent
switching on and switching off the compressor. - The compressor is controlled by a thermostat, a
device which is generally used to measure
temperature. - When the inside of the fridge reaches a present
temperature, there is no need to cool it further.
So, the thermostat sends a signal and cuts the
power to the compressor to stop its cooling
function. - When temperature increases and reaches the
critical temperature, the thermostat sends a
signal to restore the circuit and switch on the
compressor.
Guidance for Children
60Cool room with fridge open
- Open fridge will heat the room.
- Under normal circumstances, the heat from inside
the fridge is taken out by the compressor and let
out in the air behind the fridge. - If the fridge is kept open in a closed room, the
chillness coming out through the front door of
the fridge is cancelled by the heated air coming
from behind. - In any electrical appliance, a part of the
electricity supplied is wasted as heat because of
the principles of thermodynamics. This heat will
raise the temperature of air inside the room.
Guidance for Children
61Automatic wrist watches stop
- Automatic watches have a different mechanism a
rotor which can rotate freely (like a free wheel
in a bicycle). - Our hand movements make the rotor rotate and wind
a coil spring. The rotor frees itself to the
original position after the winding. As a result
the rotations of the rotor tighten the spring.
The watch works as the spring releases very
slowly. - If the watch (spring) is kept idle for some time,
there is no rewinding of the spring, and so it
stops functioning.
Guidance for Children
62Pressure cooker
- Principle of a pressure cooker is cooking under
increased pressure. It is well known that food
gets cooked fast at high temperatures. - There is no possibility of heating the water
beyond 100 degrees in open vessels. Hence it
takes a lot of time to cook the food. - Boiling point increases with increase in
pressure. Hence in pressure cookers, the steam in
not allowed to escape but enclosed with in the
vessel. As more water is converted into gaseous
stream, the pressure increases which in a feed
back mechanism increases the boiling point to
well beyond 100 degrees enabling fast cooking. - Normally the temperature reaches about 120
degrees inside the pressure cooker. - In order that the pressure does not reach very
high values so as to cause an explosion, a weight
and safety valve are provided to let out the
excess stream. Also the body of the cooker is
made of an alloy which can withstand high
pressures.
Guidance for Children
63Draw more current with low voltages
- Current and voltage are not always in direct
proportion. - Electrical appliances are divided into two
groups - Appliances such as electric irons and electric
heaters which convert electrical energy into heat
energy. - Appliances such as motors which convert
electrical energy into mechanical energy. - In first group, the current drawn is proportional
to the square root of the voltage. - In the second group, the current drawn is
inversely proportional to the applied voltage,
that is, when the applied voltage is lower, the
current drawn will be proportionally higher, with
the mechanical power remaining constant. - Motors operating at low voltages burn out because
they tend to draw unduly large currents which can
not be carried by the wires wound inside them.
Guidance for Children
64Earthing Pin is Bigger
- Earth wire starts from the metal body of the
appliance and ends in the earth. So it should
never come into contact with live wire. - In case the earth pin is connected wrongly with
the live socket, the user touching the appliance
might receive an electrical shock. - Earthing pin is made longer than the other pins,
so that it gets connected the earth terminal
first before the other pins (live and neutral)
make the contact in their respective sockets. - In case there is a short circuit, as soon as the
appliance is plugged in, the current from the
electrical appliance flows to earth without
harming the user. Hence it is always safe to
install thick high tension wires for earthing.
Guidance for Children
65High Tension Wires - humming sound
- Air surrounding the conductors of a high voltage
overhead transmission line is normally an
insulator. - But at extra high voltages (66,000 volts and
above), the air in close proximity to the
conductor tends to break down under the voltage
stress, along the length of the conductor and
itself becomes a conductor. This is known as
corona effect. - This effect is seen as bluish violet light and
audible corona as a hum. Audible corona is
common. Visual corona requires a higher voltage
stress.
Guidance for Children
66Electric Line Tester
- It is used for testing alternating current (AC).
- In an electric line, phase line gives out AC
which has both positive and negative components. - In the case of a tester, when we touch its metal
cap, a very small amount of current being tested
passes through the neon bulb, a high resistance
and through the body to the earth which is at
zero potential. - In other words the body helps to complete the
circuit enabling the tester to glow. The high
resistance inside the tester acts as a safety
mechanism by restricting the amount of current
passing through the body.
Guidance for Children
67Bird not get electrocuted
- A bird sitting on a live wire will be
electrocuted only if electric current passes
through its body. - One wire which we call live will be at a
potential of 230 volts which is called the phase
wire and the other one which we call the neutral
wire will be at a potential of zero volts. - Immediately on sitting on the live wire the
birds potential will also be raised to 230 volts
and if by an accident it comes in contact with
the neutral wire or touches it, a current will
pass through its body from the live wire which is
at a higher potential to the neutral wire which
is at zero potential.
Guidance for Children
68Fan Wings Slightly Curved
- Fan wings, also called blades, are curved for
optimum air circulation which is determined by
solidity ratio which is the ratio of the area of
the blades to the area of the disc swept by them. - If a flat plate is used as a blade, it will
provide air circulation no doubt but the
volumetric flow will be less compared to a blade
which is suitably curved based on an aerodynamic
principles. - The cross-section of a blade is in the form of a
circular arc and is called camber. It will vary
from the root of the blade to its tip. One can
see the blade twisted from the root to the tip.
Guidance for Children
69Reduce power with slow speed in fans
- We can save power with the new electronic
regulators but not with the old regulators based
on rheostats. - Rheostats consume a fixed power all the time. If
we select the highest speed all the power is fed
to the fans motor. If a lower speed is selected,
electric power proportional to selected level is
fed to the motor and the remaining power tapped
from the mains is wasted as heat in the rheostat.
Thats why when we run the fan at slow speeds for
a long time the regulator becomes hot. - New regulators are made up of semiconductor
device called triac. Depending on the speed
selected, the electronic regulator draws, from
the mains, only the required power.
Guidance for Children
70Chokes and Starters in Tube lights
- Tube lights are discharge lamps. To initiate a
discharge, it requires a high voltage (about 1000
volts) several times the main voltage (about
200V). To sustain a discharge it requires only
about 100 V. - Choke in an inductance. When current through an
inductance is abruptly interrupted it induces a
high voltage. The interruption is done by the
starter which works like a switch. The high
voltage strikes an arc between the filaments at
the ends of the tube light. Once an arc has
struck, the choke takes half of the mains voltage
and leaves the rest to maintain the arc. - Choke has a core made of thin laminated silicon
steel sheets. When the sheets vibrate with the
power frequency (50 Hz) or its harmonics it
generates noise. - A starter is made of two electrodes one of them
is a bimetallic strip. When a tube light is
switched on, the voltage between the two
electrodes produces a spark.
Guidance for Children
71Incandescent light bulbs turn grey
- The greying of the inner surfaces of incandescent
bulbs is the result of gradual evaporation of
tungsten from the filament while the light is on.
This evaporation eventually makes the filament so
thin it burns out. - To reduce greying, a mixture of nitrogen and
argon is used today. - A small amount of abrasive tungsten powder can be
placed in the bulb. Shaking it occasionally will
remove the grey coating from the surface to the
glass. - Greying can almost eliminated by introducing a
small amount of halogens iodine and bromine.
Guidance for Children
72Shadows with tube light and lamps
- As light travels only along straight line paths,
if obstructed by any object, it creates a shadow. - Filament bulbs are point sources, that is, the
light emanates from almost a single point and
goes out radially in all directions. - In the case of filament bulbs, there is no light
ray falling on the shadowed area and so the
shadow is harp. - If the light from one end of the tube light
causes a shadow, there is a possibility for the
shadowed area to be lit by a light rays coming
from the other end or part of the bulb. Hence the
shadow is blurred.
Guidance for Children
73Photocopier
- Photocopier is an electromechanical device having
a photoconductive cylindrical drum made of
cadmium, selenium or an organic photoconductive
material. (A photoconductive material changes
its conductivity under light). - Upon switching on the machine, the drum is
positively charged and the heating section, at
the exit of the copier, with a teflon coated
roller is heated to 230 to 320 degrees Celsius by
a heating lamp. - An image of the document is reflected by various
mirrors and lenses to the drum. Depending on the
intensity of the light received the
photoconductive material loses its resistance at
varying levels on its surface. That is, the
positive charges on the drum are neutralised
except in those areas representing the image. - This results in a latent charge image on the
drum. A toner (negatively charged) is then pumped
to the drum. Based on the charge map the toner
gets deposited and forms a toner image on the
drum. The drum then rotates and prints this image
on the moving paper and fixes it at a high
temperature.
Guidance for Children
74Radio signals with directions
- In radio sets, the problem of not receiving
signals in certain directions is felt in the
medium wave band. - This is because for this band they use a coil
wound on a ferrite rod as the antenna. - Ferrite rod is directional in its sensitivity. It
picks up all signals that come in a direction
perpendicular to its axis and rejects them if
they come parallel to its axis. - Therefore the reception is entirely based on the
direction in which they reach the radio set.
Guidance for Children
75Gravel on Railway Tracks
- Gravel used on railway tracks is known as
ballast. - It is used to dissipate the vibration produced by
trains travelling at high speeds. - In effect, the gravel layer acts as a cushion and
damps the vibrations so that they do not travel
long distances. - If the rails are laid on a solid base, these
vibrations can travel long distances and lead to
cracks on the base as well as on nearby buildings.
Guidance for Children
76No Sound in Vaccum but Light
- Sound is a mechanical wave but light is an
electromagnetic (EM) wave. - Mechanical vibrations propagate by the actual
displacement of physical properties. Each
particle oscillates about its mean position in a
synchronized manner ot cause energy propagation
in a mechanical wave pattern. - In EM Waves, electric and magnetic fields
oscillate about their mean zero in mutually
perpendicular planes and cause wave motion. - Thus EM Waves doesnt need a medium but
Mechanical waves need a medium.
Guidance for Children
77Different Rods in TV Antenna
- The length of the elements and their arrangement
depend on the wavelength of the signal (local TV
station). For good reception, the antennas
length should be half the wavelength of the
signal in metres. - The gain of the folded dipole antenna alone will
not be much. To reflect the signal which are not
intercepted by the dipole, a reflector of length
more than half lamba is fitted at the rear end. - It reflects the electromagnetic waves just as a
mirror reflects light waves. Normally, only one
reflector is used because additional reflectors
do not significantly improve the gain. To boost
the gain, the signal is directed towards the
dipole using the director elements which are of
length less than half lamba.
Guidance for Children
78Water Heater Coil Heating Process
- Molecules of water that are adjacent to the
heating coil first gets heated and thereby
becomes less dense. - The water of lesser density will move up due to
which the high density cool water on the surface
comes down. (Liquid of low density will always be
at the top than a liquid of high density). - This movement of water molecules causes water at
the upper level to become warm sooner than the
bottom level though we put the coil at the bottom.
Guidance for Children
79Global Positioning System
- GPS is a system which shows the exact position on
the earth, anytime in any weather and any where. - There are 24 GPS satellites orbiting at 11,000
nautical miles above the earth. - GPS has 3 parts
- Space segment consists of 24 satellites.
- User segment consists of receivers which we can
hold in hand or mount in a car and this gives the
exact location on the earth. - Control segment consists of ground stations that
make sure that the satellites are working
properly. - Receiver detects the time signal and calculates
the distance of the satellite. By getting signals
from three different satellites and by doing
mathematical calculations, the receiver is able
to give the exact position where the receivers
located.
Guidance for Children
80Milk Overflows but not water
- Milk is of water (83 87), protein (3.5),
sugar (5) and fat (4 7.4). - When milk is heated, fat boils lighter than
water, floats as a creamy layer on the top and
water vapour, in the form of steam bubbles, is
trapped under it. - Further heating results in the formation of more
number of bubbles. - These bubbles expand and lift the creamy layer
causing it to overflow. In the case of water, the
steam bubbles break as they reach the surface.
Guidance for Children
81Candle lights a room but no LPG
- Yellow light in candle is responsible for
illumination of the room. - Combustion (burning of fuel) can be of two types
- Complete Sufficient quantity of oxygen for the
fuel to burn. This results in a blue frame and
the heat generated will be maximum. - Incomplete Oxygen supply is insufficient. This
results in an yellow frame with heat produced is
lesser than maximum obtainable from the fuel. - Candle flame has blue hottest zone surrounding
the wick, black unburnt volatile fuel and
yellow flames. - Yellow flame has hot carbon particles which get
heated by hotter zones below and emit light due
to incandescence. - LPG (Liquified Petroleum Gas), which is mostly
propane and a little butane, is mixed with
sufficient quantities of air in the burner and
then burnt to give a blue flame. - Propane needs about 25 times its volume for
complete combustion. The flow of gas in
controlled and ratio of gas and air is
maintained. As there is no incandescent zone, the
flame does not illuminate the room.
Guidance for Children
82Information on Audio Video Tapes
- Information is stored in audio/video tapes by
magnetizing them. These tapes are actually long,
thin plastic films coated with a magnetic
material, mainly iron oxide. - Player has a recording head which consists of a
coil of a wire wound around a circular piece of
iron with a small gap. Any current passing
through the wire would produce a magnetic field
around it. - When the tape is run through the small gap
present in the recording head, the varying
magnetic field magnetism the particles on the tap
rearranged their moments in accordance with the
variation in the input signal. - While playing, the tapes is run past the
recording/playing head which senses the magnetic
field along the tape. This induces a varying
current in the coil . This current is amplified
and fed to the speaker or TV to reproduce the
original message.
Guidance for Children
83Popping Ears in Aeroplane
- To maintain fuel economy, aircrafts should fly at
altitudes far in excess of those capable of
sustaining life. - Whereas 5500m is about the maximum altitude at
which a person can live for any extended period,
a subsonic passenger jet has the best fuel
economy when flying at around 12000m. - Therefore, aircrafts have to be pressurised the
interior of a passenger aircraft. - All airfields are not at the same altitude.
- As for ear popping, for our safety and comfort
the internal pressure is imperceptibly reduced,
all under computer control, as the aircraft
climbs. It is gradually increased during descent
so that, as the aircraft is coming to a stop on
the runaway, the pressure inside and out is the
same. Normally, it is sufficient for your ears to
adjust. If not, pinch your nose and gently but
firmly increase the pressure in the nasal cavity
until you feel the pressure equalise.
Guidance for Children
84Cola Foam Up
- Carbonated beverages when opened and released
from pressure or supersaturated solutions of gas
with more carbon dioxide dissolved in the
beverage than would be possible at normal
pressure. - Left alone for two hours, the drink would slowly
lose the gas and go flat. Sodium chloride
particles seem to provide an especially good
surface for gas to collect on, form bubbles and
quickly rise to the surface and escape.
Guidance for Children
85Ornaments of Pure Gold
- Ornaments could be made of pure gold but would
get easily pressed out of shape. This is because
gold is a soft metal, though it is heavy. - Gold has high density, over two times that of
iron, because its atoms are heavier. - A steel knife cannot cut glass, but a diamond
tipped steel knife could, because diamond is
harder than glass and steel is not. Gold is
easily scratched. - A bit of copper is added to gold, to give the
ornaments hardness and to prevent distortion. - 24 carat means 100 per cent gold. One carat
represents 100/24 per cent. 22 carat gold means
91.76 per cent of gold. Rest is copper.
Guidance for Children
86Hard Water and Layer on Utensils
- Water contains dissolved salts of calcium,
magnesium and often iron in the form of
bicarbonates, chlorides and sulphates present in
the Earths crust. When such water is heated, the
bicarbonates of calcium and magnesium decompose
evolving carbon dioxide and leave behind
sparingly soluble carbonates. - Bicarbonates of iron interacts with the carbon
dioxide and water forming sparingly soluble
ferric hydroxide (brown). These sparingly soluble
salts form the layer or scales seen in utensils
and boilers.
Guidance for Children
87Cold water extinguish fire faster
- If we use hot water to extinguish fire, the heat
absorbed from the source (fire), by a definite
quantity, to reach its boiling point will be far
lesser vis-à-vis the same quantity of cold water.
- Colder the water, faster would be extinction of
the fire.
Guidance for Children
88Boiled Water lose Taste
- Natural water contains few substances gases like
oxygen, carbon dioxide, sulphates and carbonates
of calcium and magnesium, iron, etc that impart
not only taste but also hardness to it. - Due to boiling, the dissolved gases are released
and hardness is removed. Insoluble carbonates and
hydroxides are formed which get deposited on the
surfaces and the bottom of the vessel as scales.
Their separation from water deprives it of its
taste.
Guidance for Children
89Air-Cooler and Air-Conditioner
- Air conditioning system is the system which keeps
on control and maintain the particular condition
(this is required temperature and humidity of
air) in the closed space. - It is technically defined as a system which
controls temperature, humidity, purity and motion
of air to produce desired effects upon the
occupants of the space. - In case of air cooler, which has the capability
to cool the air inside the space does not
maintain particular t