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Article #35: One Flu Over the Chicken’s Nest

It is still flu season.  Normally, the major flu season runs from October to March, but this year has been pretty nasty.  There is still a significant amount of influenza being reported in all age groups and the rate of disease, hospitalization, and deaths due to flu has been higher this year than any since […]

Article #34: The Immune Response-Winning the Fight Against Infection (Usually)

A couple of articles ago, I started writing an article on the flu, and it sort of expanded until it got to where it included vaccines and the human immune system, which is way too much stuff for one article.  The immune system is way too cool (and involved) to just jam in between other […]

Article #27: Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus. And He Knows Physics.

Given that this is a science literacy site aimed at the general public, I try to pick subjects that are potentially both interesting and valuable, and, occasionally, timely.  This one, I think, ticks all three boxes.  The world needs more magic, not less, now more than ever.  If you know someone who is a confirmed […]

Article #26: The Moon. Super, Blue or Otherwise

Let’s talk about the Moon.  It’s been particularly spectacular recently and you might have been hearing about “supermoons” and all that in the media.  If nothing else, maybe it will help you answer your grandkids’ questions, one of these days. The Far Side of the Moon. Credit NASA. First of all, I’ve always wondered why […]