Friday, 23 September 2016

Mystery Object 1

We have scanned an object using the x-ray machines. See if you can guess what it is.
 

Friday, 16 September 2016

X-ray of moth in fly trap

We now have a image made from our 3D scan of the moth in the fly trap that we scanned many weeks ago (see post What settings should be used on the x-ray machine?). False colours have been used to make the features stand out.


Faintly at the top of the image you can see the moth's wings sticking out of the trap
Below that you can see the edges of the trap where finger like strands have linked together
You can also see the moth's eyes!

And you can make out the veins in the leaf of the moth trap



Friday, 2 September 2016

Magical Growing Rabbit

For Easter my Aunt gave me a present of a 'magical growing rabbit'. You had to make the rabbit out of paper, put it in a dish and then pour a special solution into it. It looked like this.

In the morning it looked like this

The solution that I had poured in the dish had been absorbed by the paper. The chemical in the solution had then reacted with oxygen in the air so that it formed crystals - making the rabbit look very fluffy!

Friday, 26 August 2016

pH test

Yesterday I had red cabbage for dinner. After cooking it, I saved some of the water.


As you can see it's a lovely purple colour. This can be used to test the pH of a material. pH is a numerical scale to measure whether something is acid or alkaline. First I mixed it with vinegar - which is acidic - and washing up liquid - which is alkaline - to find out what colour it would go.


The vinegar went a dark pink colour.

 The washing up when a greeny-blue colour.

So acidic things go dark pink when mixed with cabbage juice and alkali things go greeny-blue. If it stays purple it is neutral - not really acid or alkali. I tested a few other things in my kitchen.


So next time to have to eat red cabbage you can try this yourself. You can also use it to test the pH of the soil in your garden. Some plants grow better in either acid or alkali soils.

Friday, 19 August 2016

What happens when a Venus fly trap dries out

A few weeks ago I was away for a conference. It was very interesting and I have a great time. However, while I was away the friends I had asked to look after the fly trap forgot and it dried out! I have been watering it a lot since I got back and it is beginning to recover.


You can see a lot of the heads have gone black but there are plenty of new green stems growing. Unfortunately the flowers I planted didn't do so well. In the pictures below you can see that just behind the heads of the flowers the stems have gone black. This blackness continued down the length of the whole stem over time.


I pulled one of the flowers out to see if it have grown roots before it died, and it had! In the picture below you can see a few very short roots that have bound to sand grains. So if it hadn't died due to lack of water it would probably have grown into a new plant. I will try again if the Venus fly trap grows any more flowers.


Friday, 12 August 2016

The fly trap got fried

It seems that 3 hours in the x-ray machine was too much for our fly trap. The edges of the trap got burnt and dried up. The head containing the moth is dying. Here is a picture. You can see where the moth's wings are sticking out and where the trap has gone brown and yellow around the outside.

Now we have to start over again! We will have to get another insect, put it in the trap and scan it again. Although this time we will scan it for a much shorter time - we have to learn from our mistakes!

P.S. You may have noticed the unusual background in the picture. This is because I went on holiday and didn't want to leave the flytrap on it's own in case it dried out, so it came with us! Here is a picture of it with some of our luggage in the back of the car. It is now very well travelled as came with us to Leeds and back!


Friday, 5 August 2016

X-raying the fly trap

Sharif put the fly trap in the X-ray machine for three hours to get a good image of the moth in the trap. We had to cut some of the stems and the flowers off so that the trap we wanted to scan was the tallest. We propped it up right using a straw and a piece of carbon rod.

Photos to follow...