ScienceCasts: Jellyfish Flames on the ISS

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ScienceCasts: Jellyfish Flames on the ISS

Post by bystander » Thu Sep 11, 2014 3:58 pm

Jellyfish Flames on the ISS
Science@NASA | Science Casts | 2014 Sep 10
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Fire is inanimate, yet anyone staring into a flame could be excused for thinking otherwise: Fire dances and swirls. It reproduces, consumes matter, and produces waste. It adapts to its environment. It needs oxygen to survive.

In short, fire is uncannily lifelike.

Nowhere is this more true than onboard a spaceship.

Unlike flames on Earth, which have a tear-drop shape caused by buoyant air rising in a gravitational field, flames in space curl themselves into tiny balls. Untethered by gravity, they flit around as if they have minds of their own. More than one astronaut conducting experiments for researchers on Earth below has been struck by the way flameballs roam their test chambers in a lifelike search for oxygen and fuel.

Biologists confirm that fire is not alive. Nevertheless, on August 21st, astronaut Reid Wiseman on the ISS witnessed some of the best mimicry yet. ...
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
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— Garrison Keillor

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