Science experiments sometimes find the oddest things. These facts from experiments on this bug will give you some respect for the creepy crawler. Cockroaches have been around for 400 million years. Dinosaurs have come and gone. Entire races of people have come and gone. But cockroaches remain. Would you believe that there are over 4000 different species of the little buggers?
If there is a nuclear attack, we will die, but the cockroaches are likely to live. Humans can withstand a one-time exposure of 5 rems (a radiation measurement) of radiation. A dose of 800 rems will kill a human. A cockroach, on the other hand, can withstand up to 67,500 to 105,000 rems before succumbing. Think of the science experiments conducted that came up with this fact! Next time you chase a cockroach with a can of spray in your hand, you'll feel him laughing at you.
If you cut off its head, it could live for a month without it. And don't try drowning it. The cockroach can hold its breath for 40 minutes. If you try to seal them off, better not leave a space as thin as a dime, because that's all the space that a young roach needs to crawl into. Roaches of certain species can grow to six inches in length with a 12 inch wingspan. If all other sources of food fail you, a cockroach recipe has been offered that advises simmering in vinegar, boiling with butter, farina flour, pepper and salt to make a paste and then spreading on buttered bread.
Roaches can run at speeds of nearly 2 miles an hour. They can make up to 25 body turns in a second - the highest known rate in the animal kingdom. And, being nocturnal, they do most of this in the dark. So why don't they crash into things?
The answer is: their antennae. In a series of cockroach-assault course experiments it was found that these much-loathed insects boast highly flexible and seriously sensitive antennae one and a third times the length of their bodies and segmented into between 150 and 170 jointed sections.
Researchers found in science experiments that blinded and deafened cockroaches were able to navigate completely normally, even if their average speeds were lower than their sighted and air-current-sensitive counterparts.
Cockroaches are considered one of the most successful groups of animals; because they are so adaptable, cockroaches have adjusted to living with humans much more readily than humans have adjusted to living with them.
Cockroaches thrive in nearly every corner of the globe, despite our best attempts to eliminate them.
Why is it almost impossible to squish a cockroach before it shoots out of sight behind the refrigerator while it is often quite easy to zap it with the nozzle of a vacuum cleaner?
The answer is that the jet-propelled bug thinks with its behind. The cockroach is able to sense minute changes in the air flowing round its body using tiny hairs on two posterior appendages called "cerci" and that includes your foot coming down.
The vacuum cleaner, however, has even smart roaches fooled. If a vacuum cleaner approaches from behind a cockroach, the wind goes from its head to the nozzle. It thinks the attack is from the front and it turns round and runs straight into the nozzle.
And if food is scarce, adolescent cockroaches can live on a very reliable resource -- their parent's feces. I don't recommend recreating this particular science experiment.
In the natural world, dodging disaster is vital if you are not going to be pounced on by predators. Now, the world champion dodger has been crowned - the cockroach.
Japan has been able to stimulate the muscles in a cockroach leg with electrical signals so that its movements can be controlled. A tricky science experiment indeed!
There could be big advantages for the military. Rats could be used to check damage at bombed enemy factory sites, where their presence would be unlikely to raise suspicion. Dogs could be used to search for casualties on battlefields and cockroaches could be used to place surveillance devices in military installations.
Among the more futuristic scenarios portrayed in the study, robots called neural network bugs, built like small cockroaches, can crawl to the best location for surveillance. Researchers are now working on controlling and manipulating real cockroaches by implanting microprocessors and electrodes in their bodies. The insects can be fitted with micro-cameras and sensors to reach the places other bugs can't reach.
The most common injury for them to endure is the loss of a leg. If a predator tugs on a cockroach leg it will fall off at a preset point called an autonomy point, similar to a lizard losing its tail as a reflex to being caught by the tail.
Unlike some other insects which will gradually regenerate a leg over several molting cycles, the cockroach will delay its next molt in order to regenerate its leg. This will provide the cockroach with the swift feet necessary to escape the next enemy quickly. Six legs are better than 5 or 4. The fast escape of the cockroach requires the pattern of running which uses a tripod of legs on the ground at any one time.
One person reported that after cooking pizza in the microwave, the microwave was opened and discovered a small roach still alive.
The microwave oven is amazingly non-uniform in its heating. That is why most of them have carousels to keep the food moving through the focus of the power.
The roach found was clearly not at the focus of the microwave's power, otherwise it would have exploded under the heat at the focus. Another science experiment that I would not try.
Science Experiments For Kindergarten
Physics is all around us. It is in the electric light you turn on in the morning; the car you drive to work; your wristwatch, cell phone, CD player, radio, and your television. It makes the stars shine every night and the sun shine every day, and it makes a your favorite basketball player seemingly fly while dunking the ball!
Physics is the science of matter, energy, space, and time. It explains ordinary matter as combinations of a dozen fundamental particles, interacting through four fundamental forces. It describes the many forms of energy - such as kinetic energy, electrical energy, and mass - and the way energy can change from one form to another.
This list of weird, strange and unbelievable facts prove that the science of Physics is truly amazing!
Lightning strikes about 6,000 times per minute on our planet. That's 360,000 times an hour. Better stay out of the water.
If something moves very fast, it becomes smaller and heavier. What a great way to gain weight. Just run like the devil.
If degrees Celsius and degrees Fahrenheit are different, how come minus 40 degrees Celsius is exactly the same temperature as minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit? In any event, it's mighty cold. To prove this just stand outside with a degrees C and a degrees F thermometer, wait for the temperature to drop to minus 40 and check your thermometers. Extra sweater suggested.
If cold water is closer to freezing than hot water, how come hot water freezes faster than cold water? Next time you want a hot bath, just remember this. And yes a rock can float in water, so long as it is pumice. Somehow I don't think I want my next boat to be made of pumice.
Better get to Mexico City fast because it is sinking at the rate of 18 inches every year. Yikes!
Better cross the North Atlantic now before it gets too long. It gets an inch wider every year. It will harder and harder to beat the transatlantic speed crossing record.
Want to lose weight in a hurry, stand directly under the moon. Due to the gravitational effect you weigh slightly less when the moon is directly overhead. How about a science experiment on this subject.
Hawaii is moving toward Japan 4 inches every year. If you wait a zillion years, air fares and boat fares should go way down.
Diamonds are the hardest known substance. It is also very hard to buy diamonds unless you have a lot of money.Most gemstones contain several elements, except diamond which is all carbon. I do not understand why diamonds are so expensive if all it is composed of is carbon. Must be good public relations.
When glass breaks, the cracks move at speeds of more than 3,000 miles. If you could ride a glass crack from New York to Los Angeles, you could be there in an hour.
If you could throw a snowball fast enough, it would totally vaporize when it hit a brick wall. If you can throw a snowball that fast, you should be a major league pitcher.
On a clear day, a beam of sunlight can be reflected off a mirror and seen up to 25 miles away. I do believe that Native Americans used this fact to good advantage way back when.
At the ocean's deepest point, due to immense pressure, an iron ball would take more than an hour to sink to the ocean floor. Great balls of fire, why does it take so long.
There is enough fuel in a full tank of a jumbo jet to drive an average car around the world four times. I have many friends and I do not believe that any of them would want to drive their cars around the world four times.
A car traveling at 50 mph uses half its fuel to overcome wind resistance. Some cars use more, some use less, depending on the aerodynamics. Another good idea for a science experiment.
If Mount Everest were placed at the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean, its peak would still be a mile underwater. Before starting your next climb, you should check to make sure that the mountain will not be moved to the deep sea.
If given the same mass, our body would actually be hotter than the sun. If anyone had mass as big as the sun, where would they find clothes to fit?
A solar panel 100 miles by 100 miles in the Mojave Desert (USA) could replace all the fuel now burned to generate electricity in the entire U.S. But then again, how could the big oil companies make billions in profit by overcharging for gas.
If you yelled for 8 years, 7 months and 6 days, you would have produced just enough sound energy to heat up one cup of coffee. I really am prepared to give up the habit rather than take a chance on a sore throat.
The average ice berg weighs 20,000,000 tons. Next time I pass one, I will take it aboard my 28 foot sailboat to ice up the drinks.
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