Click there to ask the Clear Science staff. Your question is never too basic for Clear Science! The basics are the hardest part. Only non-clear scientists would tell you otherwise.
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gabmadrid answered:
Why do traffic signs use Red for Stop, Green for Go, etc? Is there a scientific basis for this?
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ridiculouslylongurlsarequitelong answered:
don’t know if this has been posted before, being a new follower and all, but…electric currents and directions. thanks!
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gointothearts answered:
Hi Clear Science. Why do some people say that evolution is “counterintuitive”? What’s so counterintuitive about it? Thanks.
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boomerangyoudoalwayscomeback answered:
I know that color exists as a wave, but a wave can’t exist inside a vacuum. So how can we see mars as red from earth on a clear sky?
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chloehoney answered:
What is the difference between mitosis and meiosis
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njbrave08 answered:
Hi could you explain to me how a guitar pickup works? I understand it uses electric fields but nothing beyond that, thanks!
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thismachine89 answered:
I was wondering how different cloud types are formed. What causes the variances?
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biognosis liked this
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boxfish0 answered:
I was trying to explain laser cooling to some of my non-sciency friends and couldn’t think of an easy way to do so, any ideas?
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wakinguptooearly answered:
the physics of simple harmonics
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yougottabringyourownsun liked this
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melodies-desires answered:
Neutron Acitvation Analysis pleasssse :) I need to research it for a project, do you know any good sources for it? Thanks :)
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eatgeekstudy answered:
We’re currently doing Mass Spec and IR in my Organic II class… any helpful tips?
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rachelskirts liked this
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tinyhands answered:
How has adhesive tape work?
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virulous answered:
Ferroelectricity and/or ferromagnetism!
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maggieyorkworth answered:
On a winter note, how does salt melt ice exactly?
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maroonflush answered:
Light. Is it in wave form or in particle form? It is also affected by gravity in the form of black holes. By this I think it has mass, too.
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mikerickson answered:
Can you explain the dual nature of light being both a wave and a particle?
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clearscience posted this