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2398) Jacques Monod
Gist:
Work
The biochemical processes that take place within an organism's cells are controlled by the genes found inside DNA molecules. Jacques Monod and François Jacob proved how the genetic information is converted during the formation of proteins by means of a messenger, which proved to the substance we now know as RNA. Different cells work in different ways at different times, however. This too is regulated by genes. In the early 1960s Monod and Jacob mapped the intricate processes that determine how genes are expressed or suppressed in a self-regulating process.
Summary
Jacques Monod (born Feb. 9, 1910, Paris, France—died May 31, 1976, Cannes) was a French biochemist who, with François Jacob, did much to elucidate how genes regulate cell metabolism by directing the biosynthesis of enzymes. The pair shared, along with André Lwoff, the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1965.
In 1961 Jacob and Monod proposed the existence of a messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA), a substance whose base sequence is complementary to that of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in the cell. They postulated that the messenger carries the “information” encoded in the base sequence to ribosomes, the sites of protein synthesis; here the base sequence of the messenger RNA is translated into the amino acid sequence of a proteinaceous enzyme (biological catalyst).
In advancing the concept of gene complexes that they called operons, Jacob and Monod postulated the existence of a class of genes that regulate the function of other genes by affecting the synthesis of messenger RNA. For this work, which has been proved generally correct for bacteria, the two men were awarded a Nobel Prize.
Monod’s book-length essay Le Hasard et la nécessité (1970; Chance and Necessity) argued that the origin of life and the process of evolution are the result of chance. Monod joined the staff of the Pasteur Institute in Paris in 1945 and became its director in 1971.
Details
Jacques Lucien Monod (9 February 1910 – 31 May 1976) was a French biochemist who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1965, sharing it with François Jacob and André Lwoff "for their discoveries concerning genetic control of enzyme and virus synthesis".
Monod and Jacob became famous for their work on the E. coli lac operon, which encodes proteins necessary for the transport and breakdown of the sugar lactose (lac). From their own work and the work of others, they came up with a model for how the levels of some proteins in a cell are controlled. In their model, the manufacture of a set of related proteins, such as the ones encoded within the lac (lactose) operon, is prevented when a repressor protein, encoded by a regulatory gene, binds to its operator, a specific site in the DNA sequence that is close to the genes encoding the proteins. (It is now known that a repressor bound to an operator physically blocks RNA polymerase from binding to the promoter, the site where transcription of the adjacent genes begins.)
Study of the control of expression of genes in the lac operon provided the first example of a system for the regulation of transcription. Monod also suggested the existence of messenger RNA molecules that link the information encoded in DNA and proteins. For these contributions he is widely regarded as one of the founders of molecular biology.

2450) Tunnel
Gist
A tunnel is a passage that runs underground or through something, like a train tunnel that cuts through a mountain. Some theme parks have networks of underground tunnels so that employees can move around out of sight of visitors.
Some tunnels, like New York's Lincoln Tunnel and the Holland Tunnel, which connect New York City to New Jersey, are large and solid enough to drive cars through. Others are much smaller, like the tunnels small animals dig through snow or soil for safety and shelter.
Summary
A tunnel is an underground or undersea passageway. It is dug through surrounding soil, earth or rock, or laid under water, and is usually completely enclosed except for the two portals common at each end, though there may be access and ventilation openings at various points along the length. A pipeline differs significantly from a tunnel, though some recent tunnels have used immersed tube construction techniques rather than traditional tunnel boring methods.
A tunnel may be for foot or vehicular road traffic, for rail traffic, or for a canal. The central portions of a rapid transit network are usually in the tunnel. Some tunnels are used as sewers or aqueducts to supply water for consumption or for hydroelectric stations. Utility tunnels are used for routing steam, chilled water, electrical power or telecommunication cables, as well as connecting buildings for convenient passage of people and equipment.
Secret tunnels are built for military purposes, or by civilians for smuggling of weapons, contraband, or people. Special tunnels, such as wildlife crossings, are built to allow wildlife to cross human-made barriers safely. Tunnels can be connected together in tunnel networks.
A tunnel is relatively long and narrow; the length is often much greater than twice the diameter, although similar shorter excavations can be constructed, such as cross passages between tunnels. The definition of what constitutes a tunnel can vary widely from source to source. For example, in the United Kingdom, a road tunnel is defined as "a subsurface highway structure enclosed for a length of 150 metres (490 ft) or more." In the United States, the NFPA definition of a tunnel is "An underground structure with a design length greater than 23 m (75 ft) and a diameter greater than 1,800 millimetres (5.9 ft)."
Details
Tunnels and underground excavations are horizontal underground passageway produced by excavation or occasionally by nature’s action in dissolving a soluble rock, such as limestone. A vertical opening is usually called a shaft. Tunnels have many uses: for mining ores, for transportation—including road vehicles, trains, subways, and canals—and for conducting water and sewage. Underground chambers, often associated with a complex of connecting tunnels and shafts, increasingly are being used for such things as underground hydroelectric-power plants, ore-processing plants, pumping stations, vehicle parking, storage of oil and water, water-treatment plants, warehouses, and light manufacturing; also command centres and other special military needs.
True tunnels and chambers are excavated from the inside—with the overlying material left in place—and then lined as necessary to support the adjacent ground. A hillside tunnel entrance is called a portal; tunnels may also be started from the bottom of a vertical shaft or from the end of a horizontal tunnel driven principally for construction access and called an adit. So-called cut-and-cover tunnels (more correctly called conduits) are built by excavating from the surface, constructing the structure, and then covering with backfill. Tunnels underwater are now commonly built by the use of an immersed tube: long, prefabricated tube sections are floated to the site, sunk in a prepared trench, and covered with backfill. For all underground work, difficulties increase with the size of the opening and are greatly dependent upon weaknesses of the natural ground and the extent of the water inflow.
History:
Ancient tunnels
It is probable that the first tunneling was done by prehistoric people seeking to enlarge their caves. All major ancient civilizations developed tunneling methods. In Babylonia, tunnels were used extensively for irrigation; and a brick-lined pedestrian passage some 3,000 feet (900 metres) long was built about 2180 to 2160 bce under the Euphrates River to connect the royal palace with the temple. Construction was accomplished by diverting the river during the dry season. The Egyptians developed techniques for cutting soft rocks with copper saws and hollow reed drills, both surrounded by an abrasive, a technique probably used first for quarrying stone blocks and later in excavating temple rooms inside rock cliffs. Abu Simbel Temple on the Nile, for instance, was built in sandstone about 1250 bce for Ramses II (in the 1960s it was cut apart and moved to higher ground for preservation before flooding from the Aswān High Dam). Even more elaborate temples were later excavated within solid rock in Ethiopia and India.
The Greeks and Romans both made extensive use of tunnels: to reclaim marshes by drainage and for water aqueducts, such as the 6th-century-bce Greek water tunnel on the isle of Samos driven some 3,400 feet through limestone with a cross section about 6 feet square. Perhaps the largest tunnel in ancient times was a 4,800-foot-long, 25-foot-wide, 30-foot-high road tunnel (the Pausilippo) between Naples and Pozzuoli, executed in 36 bce. By that time surveying methods (commonly by string line and plumb bobs) had been introduced, and tunnels were advanced from a succession of closely spaced shafts to provide ventilation. To save the need for a lining, most ancient tunnels were located in reasonably strong rock, which was broken off (spalled) by so-called fire quenching, a method involving heating the rock with fire and suddenly cooling it by dousing with water. Ventilation methods were primitive, often limited to waving a canvas at the mouth of the shaft, and most tunnels claimed the lives of hundreds or even thousands of the slaves used as workers. In ad 41 the Romans used some 30,000 men for 10 years to push a 3.5-mile (6-kilometre) tunnel to drain Lacus Fucinus. They worked from shafts 120 feet apart and up to 400 feet deep. Far more attention was paid to ventilation and safety measures when workers were freemen, as shown by archaeological diggings at Hallstatt, Austria, where salt-mine tunnels have been worked since 2500 bce.
From the Middle Ages to the present
Canal and railroad tunnels
Because the limited tunneling in the Middle Ages was principally for mining and military engineering, the next major advance was to meet Europe’s growing transportation needs in the 17th century. The first of many major canal tunnels was the Canal du Midi (also known as Languedoc) tunnel in France, built in 1666–81 by Pierre Riquet as part of the first canal linking the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. With a length of 515 feet and a cross section of 22 by 27 feet, it involved what was probably the first major use of explosives in public-works tunneling, gunpowder placed in holes drilled by handheld iron drills. A notable canal tunnel in England was the Bridgewater Canal Tunnel, built in 1761 by James Brindley to carry coal to Manchester from the Worsley mine. Many more canal tunnels were dug in Europe and North America in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Though the canals fell into disuse with the introduction of railroads about 1830, the new form of transport produced a huge increase in tunneling, which continued for nearly 100 years as railroads expanded over the world. Much pioneer railroad tunneling developed in England. A 3.5-mile tunnel (the Woodhead) of the Manchester-Sheffield Railroad (1839–45) was driven from five shafts up to 600 feet deep. In the United States, the first railroad tunnel was a 701-foot construction on the Allegheny Portage Railroad. Built in 1831–33, it was a combination of canal and railroad systems, carrying canal barges over a summit. Though plans for a transport link from Boston to the Hudson River had first called for a canal tunnel to pass under the Berkshire Mountains, by 1855, when the Hoosac Tunnel was started, railroads had already established their worth, and the plans were changed to a double-track railroad bore 24 by 22 feet and 4.5 miles long. Initial estimates contemplated completion in 3 years; 21 were actually required, partly because the rock proved too hard for either hand drilling or a primitive power saw. When the state of Massachusetts finally took over the project, it completed it in 1876 at five times the originally estimated cost. Despite frustrations, the Hoosac Tunnel contributed notable advances in tunneling, including one of the first uses of dynamite, the first use of electric firing of explosives, and the introduction of power drills, initially steam and later air, from which there ultimately developed a compressed-air industry.
Simultaneously, more spectacular railroad tunnels were being started through the Alps. The first of these, the Mont Cenis Tunnel (also known as Fréjus), required 14 years (1857–71) to complete its 8.5-mile length. Its engineer, Germain Sommeiller, introduced many pioneering techniques, including rail-mounted drill carriages, hydraulic ram air compressors, and construction camps for workers complete with dormitories, family housing, schools, hospitals, a recreation building, and repair shops. Sommeiller also designed an air drill that eventually made it possible to move the tunnel ahead at the rate of 15 feet per day and was used in several later European tunnels until replaced by more durable drills developed in the United States by Simon Ingersoll and others on the Hoosac Tunnel. As this long tunnel was driven from two headings separated by 7.5 miles of mountainous terrain, surveying techniques had to be refined. Ventilation became a major problem, which was solved by the use of forced air from water-powered fans and a horizontal diaphragm at mid-height, forming an exhaust duct at top of the tunnel. Mont Cenis was soon followed by other notable Alpine railroad tunnels: the 9-mile St. Gotthard Pass (1872–82), which introduced compressed-air locomotives and suffered major problems with water inflow, weak rock, and bankrupt contractors; the 12-mile Simplon (1898–1906); and the 9-mile Lötschberg (1906–11), on a northern continuation of the Simplon railroad line.
Simplon Tunnel
Nearly 7,000 feet below the mountain crest, Simplon encountered major problems from highly stressed rock flying off the walls in rock bursts; high pressure in weak schists and gypsum, requiring 10-foot-thick masonry lining to resist swelling tendencies in local areas; and from high-temperature water (130° F [54° C]), which was partly treated by spraying from cold springs. Driving Simplon as two parallel tunnels with frequent crosscut connections considerably aided ventilation and drainage.
Lötschberg was the site of a major disaster in 1908. When one heading was passing under the Kander River valley, a sudden inflow of water, gravel, and broken rock filled the tunnel for a length of 4,300 feet, burying the entire crew of 25 men. Though a geologic panel had predicted that the tunnel here would be in solid bedrock far below the bottom of the valley fill, subsequent investigation showed that bedrock lay at a depth of 940 feet, so that at 590 feet the tunnel tapped the Kander River, allowing it and soil of the valley fill to pour into the tunnel, creating a huge depression, or sink, at the surface. After this lesson in the need for improved geologic investigation, the tunnel was rerouted about one mile (1.6 kilometres) upstream, where it successfully crossed the Kander Valley in sound rock.
Most long-distance rock tunnels have encountered problems with water inflows. One of the most notorious was the first Japanese Tanna Tunnel, driven through the Takiji Peak in the 1920s. The engineers and crews had to cope with a long succession of extremely large inflows, the first of which killed 16 men and buried 17 others, who were rescued after seven days of tunneling through the debris. Three years later another major inflow drowned several workers. In the end, Japanese engineers hit on the expedient of digging a parallel drainage tunnel the entire length of the main tunnel. In addition, they resorted to compressed-air tunneling with shield and air lock, a technique almost unheard-of in mountain tunneling.
Subaqueous tunnels
Tunneling under rivers was considered impossible until the protective shield was developed in England by Marc Brunel, a French émigré engineer. The first use of the shield, by Brunel and his son Isambard, was in 1825 on the Wapping-Rotherhithe Tunnel through clay under the Thames River. The tunnel was of horseshoe section 22.25 by 37.5 feet and brick-lined. After several floodings from hitting sand pockets and a seven-year shutdown for refinancing and building a second shield, the Brunels succeeded in completing the world’s first true subaqueous tunnel in 1841, essentially nine years’ work for a 1,200-foot-long tunnel. In 1869 by reducing to a small size (8 feet) and by changing to a circular shield plus a lining of cast-iron segments, Peter W. Barlow and his field engineer, James Henry Greathead, were able to complete a second Thames tunnel in only one year as a pedestrian walkway from Tower Hill. In 1874, Greathead made the subaqueous technique really practical by refinements and mechanization of the Brunel-Barlow shield and by adding compressed air pressure inside the tunnel to hold back the outside water pressure. Compressed air alone was used to hold back the water in 1880 in a first attempt to tunnel under New York’s Hudson River; major difficulties and the loss of 20 lives forced abandonment after only 1,600 feet had been excavated.
The first major application of the shield-plus-compressed-air technique occurred in 1886 on the London subway with an 11-foot bore, where it accomplished the unheard-of record of seven miles of tunneling without a single fatality. So thoroughly did Greathead develop his procedure that it was used successfully for the next 75 years with no significant change. A modern Greathead shield illustrates his original developments: miners working under a hood in individual small pockets that can be quickly closed against inflow; shield propelled forward by jacks; permanent lining segments erected under protection of the shield tail; and the whole tunnel pressurized to resist water inflow.
Once subaqueous tunneling became practical, many railroad and subway crossings were constructed with the Greathead shield, and the technique later proved adaptable for the much larger tunnels required for automobiles. A new problem, noxious gases from internal-combustion engines, was successfully solved by Clifford Holland for the world’s first vehicular tunnel, the Holland Tunnel, completed in 1927 under the Hudson River. Holland and his chief engineer, Ole Singstad, solved the ventilation problem with huge-capacity fans in ventilating buildings at each end, forcing air through a supply duct below the roadway, with an exhaust duct above the ceiling. Such ventilation provisions significantly increased the tunnel size, requiring about a 30-foot diameter for a two-lane vehicular tunnel.
Lincoln Tunnel
Many similar vehicular tunnels were built by shield-and-compressed-air methods—including Lincoln and Queens tunnels in New York City, Sumner and Callahan in Boston, and Mersey in Liverpool. Since 1950, however, most subaqueous tunnelers preferred the immersed-tube method, in which long tube sections are prefabricated, towed to the site, sunk in a previously dredged trench, connected to sections already in place, and then covered with backfill. This basic procedure was first used in its present form on the Detroit River Railroad Tunnel between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario (1906–10). A prime advantage is the avoidance of high costs and the risks of operating a shield under high air pressure, since work inside the sunken tube is at atmospheric pressure (free air).
Seikan Tunnel
Japan’s impressive undersea tunnel, the Seikan Tunnel, is the world’s second longest tunnel (after the Gotthard Base Tunnel in Switzerland) and links the main island of Honshu with the northern neighbouring island of Hokkaido. Much of the tunnel lies under the Tsugaru Strait that separates the two islands. Construction of the tunnel began in 1964 and was completed in 1988. The digging employed as many as 3,000 workers at one time and took 34 lives in all because of cave-ins, flooding, and other mishaps. The tunnel remains one of the most formidable engineering feats of the 20th century.
Machine-mined tunnels
Sporadic attempts to realize the tunnel engineer’s dream of a mechanical rotary excavator culminated in 1954 at Oahe Dam on the Missouri River near Pierre, in South Dakota. With ground conditions being favourable (a readily cuttable clay-shale), success resulted from a team effort: Jerome O. Ackerman as chief engineer, F.K. Mittry as initial contractor, and James S. Robbins as builder of the first machine—the “Mittry Mole.” Later contracts developed three other Oahe-type moles, so that all the various tunnels here were machine-mined—totaling eight miles of 25- to 30-foot diameter. These were the first of the modern moles that since 1960 have been rapidly adopted for many of the world’s tunnels as a means of increasing speeds from the previous range of 25 to 50 feet per day to a range of several hundred feet per day. The Oahe mole was partly inspired by work on a pilot tunnel in chalk started under the English Channel for which an air-powered rotary cutting arm, the Beaumont borer, had been invented. A 1947 coal-mining version followed, and in 1949 a coal saw was used to cut a circumferential slot in chalk for 33-foot-diameter tunnels at Fort Randall Dam in South Dakota. In 1962 a comparable breakthrough for the more difficult excavation of vertical shafts was achieved in the American development of the mechanical raise borer, profiting from earlier trials in Germany.
In 2016 the Gotthard Base Tunnel, the world’s longest and deepest railway tunnel, opened under the Saint-Gotthard Massif in the Lepontine Alps in southern Switzerland. The two tunnels were primarily constructed with four massive tunnel boring machines, Herrenknecht Gripper TBMs; blasting was used for only about 25 percent of the project. An incredible feat of engineering, the tunnel provided a high-speed rail link between northern and southern Europe, forming a mainline rail connection between Rotterdam in the Netherlands and Genoa in Italy.

Electrovalent Bond
Gist
An electrovalent bond, also known as an ionic bond, is a type of chemical bond formed by the transfer of one or more electrons from one atom to another, resulting in the formation of oppositely charged ions that are held together by strong electrostatic attraction. This process typically occurs between a metal and a non-metal, where the metal atom loses electrons to become a positive ion (cation) and the non-metal atom gains electrons to become a negative ion (anion).
There is no difference between ionic and electrovalent bonds; the terms are synonymous and both describe a bond formed by the complete transfer of electrons between atoms, typically a metal and a non-metal. This transfer creates oppositely charged ions (a cation and an anion) that are then held together by a strong electrostatic force of attraction.
Summary
Ionic bonding is a type of chemical bonding that involves the electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions, or between two atoms with sharply different electronegativities, and is the primary interaction occurring in ionic compounds. It is one of the main types of bonding, along with covalent bonding and metallic bonding. Ions are atoms (or groups of atoms) with an electrostatic charge. Atoms that gain electrons make negatively charged ions (called anions). Atoms that lose electrons make positively charged ions (called cations).
Clean ionic bonding – in which one atom or molecule completely transfers an electron to another – cannot exist: all ionic compounds have some degree of covalent bonding or electron sharing. Thus, the term "ionic bonding" is given when the ionic character is greater than the covalent character – that is, a bond in which there is a large difference in electronegativity between the cation and anion, causing the bonding to be more polar (ionic) than in covalent bonding where electrons are shared more equally. Bonds with partially ionic and partially covalent characters are called polar covalent bonds.
Ionic compounds conduct electricity when molten or in solution, typically not when solid. Ionic compounds generally have a high melting point, depending on the charge of the ions they consist of. The higher the charges the stronger the cohesive forces and the higher the melting point. They also tend to be soluble in water; the stronger the cohesive forces, the lower the solubility.
Overview
Atoms that have an almost full or almost empty valence shell tend to be very reactive. Strongly electronegative atoms (such as halogens) often have only one or two empty electron states in their valence shell, and frequently bond with other atoms or gain electrons to form anions. Weakly electronegative atoms (such as alkali metals) have relatively few valence electrons, which can easily be lost to strongly electronegative atoms. As a result, weakly electronegative atoms tend to distort their electron cloud and form cations.
Properties of ionic bonds
* They are considered to be among the strongest of all types of chemical bonds. This often causes ionic compounds to be very stable.
* Ionic bonds have high bond energy. Bond energy is the mean amount of energy required to break the bond in the gaseous state.
* Most ionic compounds exist in the form of a crystal structure, in which the ions occupy the corners of the crystal. Such a structure is called a crystal lattice.
* Ionic compounds lose their crystal lattice structure and break up into ions when dissolved in water or any other polar solvent. This process is called solvation. The presence of these free ions makes aqueous ionic compound solutions good conductors of electricity. The same occurs when the compounds are heated above their melting point in a process known as melting.
Details
Ionic bond is the type of linkage formed from the electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged ions in a chemical compound. Such a bond forms when the valence (outermost) electrons of one atom are transferred permanently to another atom. The atom that loses the electrons becomes a positively charged ion (cation), while the one that gains them becomes a negatively charged ion (anion). A brief treatment of ionic bonds follows. For full treatment, see chemical bonding: The formation of ionic bonds.
Ionic bonding results in compounds known as ionic, or electrovalent, compounds, which are best exemplified by the compounds formed between nonmetals and the alkali and alkaline-earth metals. In ionic crystalline solids of this kind, the electrostatic forces of attraction between opposite charges and repulsion between similar charges orient the ions in such a manner that every positive ion becomes surrounded by negative ions and vice versa. In short, the ions are so arranged that the positive and negative charges alternate and balance one another, the overall charge of the entire substance being zero. The magnitude of the electrostatic forces in ionic crystals is considerable. Accordingly, these substances tend to be hard and nonvolatile.
An ionic bond is actually the extreme case of a polar covalent bond, the latter resulting from unequal sharing of electrons rather than complete electron transfer. Ionic bonds typically form when the difference in the electronegativities of the two atoms is great, while covalent bonds form when the electronegativities are similar.
Additional Information
An electrovalent bond, also known as an ionic bond, is a type of chemical bond that occurs between two atoms when one atom transfers one or more of its electrons to another atom. This transfer of electrons leads to the formation of ions: the atom that loses electrons becomes a positively charged ion (cation), while the atom that gains electrons becomes a negatively charged ion (anion). The electrostatic attraction between these oppositely charged ions results in the formation of the electrovalent bond. Electrovalent bonds typically form between metals and non-metals, such as sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl), where sodium donates an electron to chlorine, resulting in the formation of sodium chloride (NaCl).

Cold Quotes - V
1. In the euphoria after the Cold War, there was a misplaced notion that the UN could solve every problem anywhere. - Atal Bihari Vajpayee
2. You will never have great tennis champions from England because of the cold and dark, but most of all because people only care about the sport for two weeks a year, and then they're on to something else. There's just not a great love of the sport there. - Monica Seles
3. Overcoming the Cold War required courage from the people of Central and Eastern Europe and what was then the German Democratic Republic, but it also required the steadfastness of Western partner over many decades when many had long lost hope of integration of the two Germanys and Europe. - Angela Merkel
4. I mean, I have done scenes with animals, with owls, with bats, with cats, with special effects, with thespians, in the freezing cold, in the pouring rain, boiling hot; I've done press with every syndication, every country; I've done interviews with people dressed up as cows - there's honestly nothing that's gonna intimidate me! - Emma Watson
5. The threat today is not that of the 1930s. It's not big powers going to war with each other. The ravages which fundamentalist political ideology inflicted on the 20th century are memories. The Cold war is over. Europe is at peace, if not always diplomatically. - Tony Blair
6. The politicians always told us that the Cold War stand-off could only change by way of nuclear war. None of them believed that such systemic change was possible. - Lech Walesa
7. Even during the years of the Cold War, the intense confrontation between the Soviet Union and the United States, we always avoided any direct clash between our civilians and, most certainly, between our military. - Vladimir Putin
8. I would prefer to abandon the terminology of the past. 'Superpower' is something which we used during the cold war time. Why use it now? - Vladimir Putin.
Q: What do you get when you cross a hamburger with a computer?
A: A big mac!
* * *
Q: What did Sushi A say to Sushi B?
A: Wasabi!
* * *
Q: My bookish kid asked me why we have to go to B-Dubs for his birthday?
A: I told them it's "Where the Wild Wings Are".
* * *
Q: What did the hamburger say to the pickle?
A: You're dill-icious!
* * *
Q: What are the best days of the week in FastFoodland?
A: Fry-day and Sundae!
* * *
Hi,
#10675. What does the term in Geography Climax community mean?
#10676. What does the term in Geography Coast mean?
Hi,
#5871. What does the adjective centripetal mean?
#5872. What does the adjective cerebral mean?
Hi,
#2530. Where are the Bitot's spots situated?
Hi,
#9810.
Hi,
#6304.
Hi,
2655.
2397) André Michel Lwoff
Gist:
Work
Bacteriophages are viruses that attach themselves to bacteria, emptying their genetic material into them. At times, many new phage are created quickly, while at other times, new phage are formed only several bacterial generations later. In the early 1950s André Lwoff successfully explained how this process, known as lysogeny, works. The bacteriophage's genes are incorporated into the bacteria's genetic material, but remain latent until a trigger factor causes new phage to be formed. Lwoff also showed that ultraviolet light can be one such factor.
Summary
André Lwoff (born May 8, 1902, Ainay-le-Château, France—died Sept. 30, 1994, Paris) was a French biologist who contributed to the understanding of lysogeny, in which a bacterial virus, or bacteriophage, infects bacteria and is transmitted to subsequent bacterial generations solely through the cell division of its host. Lwoff’s discoveries brought him (with François Jacob and Jacques Monod) the Nobel Prize for Medicine or Physiology in 1965.
Lwoff, born of Russian-Polish parents, was educated at the University of Paris. He spent most of his research career at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, serving on the board of directors from 1966 to 1972. From 1959 to 1968 he was also a professor of microbiology at the Sorbonne in Paris. When he retired from the Pasteur Institute in 1968, he served as director of the Cancer Research Institute at nearby Villejuif until 1972.
In his prizewinning research, Lwoff showed that, after infection, the virus is passed on to succeeding generations of bacteria in a noninfective form called a prophage. He demonstrated that under certain conditions this prophage gives rise to an infective form that causes lysis, or disintegration, of the bacterial cell; the viruses that are released upon the cell’s destruction are capable of infecting other bacterial hosts. Lwoff also discovered that vitamins serve both as growth factors for microbes and as coenzymes. Among his written works are Problems of Morphogenesis in Ciliates (1950) and Biological Order (1962).
After World War II Lwoff won the Medal of the Resistance for work in the French underground. He was also made an officer of the Legion of Honour.
Details
André Michel Lwoff (8 May 1902 – 30 September 1994) was a French microbiologist and Nobel laureate.
Education, early life and career
Lwoff was born in Ainay-le-Château, Allier, in Auvergne, France, into a Jewish family of Russian-Polish origin, the son of Marie (Siminovitch), an artist, and Solomon Lwoff, a psychiatrist. He joined the Institute Pasteur in Paris when he was 19 years old. In 1932, he finished his PhD and, with the help of a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, moved with his wife and co-researcher Marguerite Lwoff to the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research of Heidelberg to Otto Meyerhof, where he did research on the development of flagellates. Another Rockefeller grant allowed him go to the University of Cambridge in 1937. In 1938, he was appointed departmental head at the Institut Pasteur, where he did groundbreaking research on bacteriophages, microbiota and on the poliovirus.
Awards and honors
He was awarded numerous prizes from the French Académie des Sciences, the Grand Prix Charles-Leopold Mayer, the Leeuwenhoek Medal of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1960 and the Keilin Medal of the British Biochemical Society in 1964. He was awarded a Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1965 for the discovery of the mechanism that some viruses (which he named proviruses) use to infect bacteria. He was an elected member of the United States National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society. Throughout his career he partnered with his wife Marguerite Lwoff although he gained considerably more recognition. Lwoff was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society in 1958. Lwoff was also president of the FEMS for a term of two years from 1974. The FEMS-Lwoff Award in microbiology is named in his honour.
Personal life
Lwoff was married to the microbiologist and virologist Marguerite Lwoff with whom he published many works. He was also a humanist against capital punishment.

Cold Quotes - IV
1. Living indoors without fresh air quickly poisons the blood and makes people feel tired and seedy when they don't know why. For myself, I sleep out of doors in winter as well as summer. I only feel tired or seedy when I have been indoors a lot. I only catch cold when I sleep in a room. - Robert Baden-Powell
2. Here at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, we have genetically rearranged various viruses and bacteria as part of our medical research. In fact, we have been able to create entirely new types of DNA molecules by splicing together the genetic information from different organisms - recombinant DNA. - James D. Watson
3. If a patient is cold, if a patient is feverish, if a patient is faint, if he is sick after taking food, if he has a bed-sore, it is generally the fault not of the disease, but of the nursing. - Florence Nightingale
4. A small cold and cough can actually stop you from going where you are. - P. V. Sindhu
5. I can see that, without being excited, mathematics can look pointless and cold. - Maryam Mirzakhani
6. The smartest thing I did was to stop going online. I'm the sort of person who will just look for the negative - Michael really can't understand it, but that's just the way I am. And with my bipolar thing, that's poison. So I just stopped. Cold turkey. And it's so liberating. - Catherine Zeta-Jones
7. I get cold really quickly, but I don't care. I like weather. I never understand why people move someplace so that they can avoid weather. - Holly Hunter
8. Would not the child's heart break in despair when the first cold storm of the world sweeps over it, if the warm sunlight of love from the eyes of mother and father did not shine upon him like the soft reflection of divine light and love? - Max Muller.
2449) Benzene Hexachloride
Gist
Benzene hexachloride (BHC) was historically used as a broad-spectrum insecticide in agriculture and public health, but its use has been banned or heavily restricted in many countries due to its environmental persistence and health concerns. Its gamma isomer, lindane, was used in pharmaceuticals to treat parasitic infections like lice and scabies, and in veterinary medicine for parasites. Other limited uses have included seed treatment and as a bird repellent.
BHC (Benzene Hexachloride) is formed through a photochlorination reaction where benzene combines with chlorine under sunlight or UV light. This free-radical addition reaction breaks the double bonds in the benzene ring, and six chlorine atoms add to the carbon atoms, resulting in a mixture of stereoisomers of 1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachlorocyclohexane.
Summary
Lindane, also known as gamma-hexachlorocyclohexane (γ-HCH), gammaxene, Gammallin and benzene hexachloride (BHC), is an organochlorine chemical and an isomer of hexachlorocyclohexane that has been used both as an agricultural insecticide and as a pharmaceutical treatment for lice and scabies.
Lindane is a neurotoxin that interferes with GABA neurotransmitter function by interacting with the GABAA receptor-chloride channel complex at the picrotoxin binding site. In humans, lindane affects the nervous system, liver, and kidneys, and may well be a carcinogen. Whether lindane is an endocrine disruptor is unclear.
The World Health Organization classifies lindane as "moderately hazardous", and its international trade is restricted and regulated under the Rotterdam Convention on Prior Informed Consent. In 2009, the production and agricultural use of lindane was banned under the Stockholm Convention on persistent organic pollutants. A specific exemption to that ban allows it to continue to be used as a second-line pharmaceutical treatment for lice and scabies.
(GABA: GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid, γ-aminobutyric acid) is the chief inhibitory neurotransmitter in the developmentally mature mammalian central nervous system. Its principal role is reducing neuronal excitability throughout the nervous system.)
Details
Benzene hexachloride (BHC), any of several stereoisomers of 1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachlorocyclohexane formed by the light-induced addition of chlorine to benzene. One of these isomers is an insecticide called lindane, or Gammexane.
Benzene hexachloride was first prepared in 1825; the insecticidal properties were identified in 1944 with the γ-isomer (gamma-isomer), which is about 1,000 times more toxic than any of the other diastereomers formed in the reaction. The structural differences between these individuals are in the orientations of the chlorine atoms with respect to the ring of carbon atoms.
The chemical addition of chlorine to benzene produces a mixture of several stereoisomers of 1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachlorocyclohexane. The γ-isomer, which makes up 20–25 percent of this mixture, is more soluble than the other isomers in certain solvents and can be separated from them. More volatile than DDT, BHC has a faster but less protracted action upon insects.
Lindane has been shown to accumulate in the food chain. This occurs because animals, including humans, eat foods grown in lindane-contaminated soils, and fishes and other marine life are exposed to lindane-contaminated waters. In fishes and mammals, exposure to high levels of lindane may cause acute poisoning, which is evidenced by nervous system dysfunction. Chronic exposure may adversely affect liver function in humans. Lindane’s use indoors in smoke fumigators is no longer permitted, and its use as an insecticide has been banned in many countries. Topical use in lotions to combat lice is permitted.
Additional Information
Benzene hexachloride (BHC), also known as hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH), is a colorless, crystalline solid with a musty odor. It is a chlorinated hydrocarbon that was once widely used as an insecticide. However, due to its persistence in the environment and its potential to cause health problems, BHC is now banned or restricted in many countries.
Health Effects of Benzene Hexachloride
BHC can cause a variety of health problems, including:
Acute effects: BHC can cause acute health effects such as skin irritation, eye irritation, respiratory problems, and nausea.
Chronic effects: BHC can cause chronic health effects such as liver damage, kidney damage, and cancer.
Developmental effects: BHC can cause developmental effects such as birth defects and learning disabilities.
Environmental Effects of Benzene Hexachloride
BHC is persistent in the environment and can accumulate in the food chain. It can also contaminate soil and water. BHC can be harmful to wildlife, including fish, birds, and mammals.
Regulations on Benzene Hexachloride
BHC is now banned or restricted in many countries due to its potential to cause health and environmental problems. In the United States, BHC is registered for use only as a termiticide.
Benzene hexachloride is a dangerous chemical that can cause a variety of health and environmental problems. It is important to be aware of the risks associated with BHC and to take steps to avoid exposure to this chemical.

Thermal Power
Gist
Thermal power is electricity generated by converting heat energy into mechanical and then electrical energy, typically by burning a fuel to boil water into steam. The steam spins a turbine, which is connected to a generator that produces electricity. Sources for this heat can include coal, natural gas, oil, and geothermal or biomass energy.
Thermal power is electricity generated by converting heat energy into mechanical energy, which then drives a generator. The process typically involves heating a fluid like water to create steam, which spins a turbine. This steam is then condensed back into water and reused.
Summary
Thermal power refers to the energy that is generated by converting heat into electricity. It is the process of producing electricity from a primary source of heat by using a steam turbine, which drives an electrical generator.
The primary source of heat can be obtained from various sources, including burning fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas, or through nuclear fission.
The heat energy is used to produce steam, which is then directed towards the turbine.
The steam expands as it passes through the turbine blades, causing them to spin and generating electricity.
The electricity is then transmitted to the power grid for distribution to homes and businesses.
Thermal power is a widely used method of generating electricity due to the abundance and accessibility of fossil fuels.
However, it is also a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions and environmental pollution.
Efforts are being made to reduce the environmental impact of thermal power by developing more efficient and cleaner energy technologies such as solar, wind, and geothermal power.
Details
A thermal power station, also known as a thermal power plant, is a type of power station in which the heat energy generated from various fuel sources (e.g., coal, natural gas, nuclear fuel, etc.) is converted to electrical energy. The heat from the source is converted into mechanical energy using a thermodynamic power cycle (such as a Diesel cycle, Rankine cycle, Brayton cycle, etc.). The most common cycle involves a working fluid (often water) heated and boiled under high pressure in a pressure vessel to produce high-pressure steam. This high pressure-steam is then directed to a turbine, where it rotates the turbine's blades. The rotating turbine is mechanically connected to an electric generator which converts rotary motion into electricity. Fuels such as natural gas or oil can also be burnt directly in gas turbines (internal combustion), skipping the steam generation step. These plants can be of the open cycle or the more efficient combined cycle type.
The majority of the world's thermal power stations are driven by steam turbines, gas turbines, or a combination of the two. The efficiency of a thermal power station is determined by how effectively it converts heat energy into electrical energy, specifically the ratio of saleable electricity to the heating value of the fuel used. Different thermodynamic cycles have varying efficiencies, with the Rankine cycle generally being more efficient than the Otto or Diesel cycles. In the Rankine cycle, the low-pressure exhaust from the turbine enters a steam condenser where it is cooled to produce hot condensate which is recycled to the heating process to generate even more high pressure steam.
The design of thermal power stations depends on the intended energy source. In addition to fossil and nuclear fuel, some stations use geothermal power, solar energy, biofuels, and waste incineration. Certain thermal power stations are also designed to produce heat for industrial purposes, provide district heating, or desalinate water, in addition to generating electrical power. Emerging technologies such as supercritical and ultra-supercritical thermal power stations operate at higher temperatures and pressures for increased efficiency and reduced emissions. Cogeneration or CHP (Combined Heat and Power) technology, the simultaneous production of electricity and useful heat from the same fuel source, improves the overall efficiency by using waste heat for heating purposes. Older, less efficient thermal power stations are being decommissioned or adapted to use cleaner and renewable energy sources.
Thermal power stations produce 70% of the world's electricity. They often provide reliable, stable, and continuous baseload power supply essential for economic growth. They ensure energy security by maintaining grid stability, especially in regions where they complement intermittent renewable energy sources dependent on weather conditions. The operation of thermal power stations contributes to the local economy by creating jobs in construction, maintenance, and fuel extraction industries. On the other hand, burning of fossil fuels releases greenhouse gases (contributing to climate change) and air pollutants such as sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides (leading to acid rain and respiratory diseases). Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology can reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of fossil-fuel-based thermal power stations, however it is expensive and has seldom been implemented. Government regulations and international agreements are being enforced to reduce harmful emissions and promote cleaner power generation.
Types of thermal energy
Almost all coal-fired power stations, petroleum, nuclear, geothermal, solar thermal electric, and waste incineration plants, as well as all natural gas power stations are thermal. Natural gas is frequently burned in gas turbines as well as boilers. The waste heat from a gas turbine, in the form of hot exhaust gas, can be used to raise steam by passing this gas through a heat recovery steam generator (HRSG). The steam is then used to drive a steam turbine in a combined cycle plant that improves overall efficiency. Power stations burning coal, fuel oil, or natural gas are often called fossil fuel power stations. Some biomass-fueled thermal power stations have appeared also. Non-nuclear thermal power stations, particularly fossil-fueled plants, which do not use cogeneration are sometimes referred to as conventional power stations.
Commercial electric utility power stations are usually constructed on a large scale and designed for continuous operation. Virtually all electric power stations use three-phase electrical generators to produce alternating current (AC) electric power at a frequency of 50 Hz or 60 Hz. Large companies or institutions may have their own power stations to supply heating or electricity to their facilities, especially if steam is created anyway for other purposes. Steam-driven power stations have been used to drive most ships in most of the 20th century. Shipboard power stations usually directly couple the turbine to the ship's propellers through gearboxes. Power stations in such ships also provide steam to smaller turbines driving electric generators to supply electricity. Nuclear marine propulsion is, with few exceptions, used only in naval vessels. There have been many turbo-electric ships in which a steam-driven turbine drives an electric generator which powers an electric motor for propulsion.
Cogeneration plants, often called combined heat and power (CHP) facilities, produce both electric power and heat for process heat or space heating, such as steam and hot water.
Additional Information:
What are the key components of a thermal power plant?
The key components of a thermal power plant include:
* Boiler: This is the part of the plant where fuel is burned to produce high-pressure steam.
* Turbine: The steam produced by the boiler is used to power a turbine. The turbine is a machine that converts the kinetic energy of steam into mechanical energy.
* Generator: The mechanical energy produced by the turbine is used to generate electricity. The generator is a machine that converts mechanical energy into electrical energy.
* Condenser: After the steam passes through the turbine, it is cooled and condensed back into water by passing it through a condenser. The condenser transfers the heat from the steam to a cooling medium, typically water or air.
* Cooling tower: The water used in the condenser is typically cooled in a cooling tower before being returned to the condenser.
* Fuel storage and handling system: This is the system that stores and transports the fuel to the boiler. The fuel can be coal, natural gas, or oil.
* Ash handling system: The ash produced during the burning of fuel in the boiler is collected and transported to an ash handling system.
* Control system: The control system monitors and controls the various processes in the power plant, such as the flow of fuel, steam, and water.
Overall, a thermal power plant is a complex system that requires a range of components and processes to work together in a coordinated manner to produce electricity efficiently and reliably.
Who are the largest users of thermal power globally?
The largest users of thermal power globally are countries with large populations and rapidly growing economies, such as China, the United States, India, and Japan.
These countries rely heavily on thermal power to meet their electricity demands due to their large industrial and manufacturing sectors, as well as their growing populations and urbanization.
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), China is the largest producer of thermal power in the world, followed by the United States and India.
In 2020, thermal power accounted for around 68% of the total electricity generated in China, 63% in the United States, and 73% in India.
However, many countries around the world are increasingly shifting away from thermal power towards cleaner and more sustainable sources of energy, such as renewables, to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and combat climate change.
Countries such as Germany, the United Kingdom, and Denmark, for example, have set ambitious targets to phase out thermal power and transition to renewable energy sources in the coming years.
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Q: What did the frog order at McDonald's?
A: French flies and a diet Croak.
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A: You must be squidding!
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A: At a meat ball!
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Covalent Bond
Gist
A covalent bond is a chemical bond where atoms share a pair of electrons to achieve a more stable configuration. This sharing creates an attractive force between the nuclei of the atoms and the shared electrons, holding the atoms together in a molecule. Covalent bonds typically form between nonmetals, and the result is either a small molecule with low melting and boiling points or a giant covalent structure with high melting and boiling points.
A covalent bond is a chemical bond formed when two atoms share a pair of electrons to achieve stability. This sharing allows atoms to fill their outer electron shells, and the bond is the force of attraction between the nuclei of both atoms and the shared electrons. Covalent bonds typically form between two nonmetal atoms.
Summary
A covalent bond is a chemical bond that involves the sharing of electrons to form electron pairs between atoms. These electron pairs are known as shared pairs or bonding pairs. The stable balance of attractive and repulsive forces between atoms, when they share electrons, is known as covalent bonding. For many molecules, the sharing of electrons allows each atom to attain the equivalent of a full valence shell, corresponding to a stable electronic configuration. In organic chemistry, covalent bonding is much more common than ionic bonding.
Covalent bonding also includes many kinds of interactions, including σ-bonding, π-bonding, metal-to-metal bonding, agostic interactions, bent bonds, three-center two-electron bonds and three-center four-electron bonds. The term "covalence" was introduced by Irving Langmuir in 1919, with Nevil Sidgwick using "co-valent link" in the 1920s. Merriam-Webster dates the specific phrase covalent bond to 1939, recognizing its first known use. The prefix co- (jointly, partnered) indicates that "co-valent" bonds involve shared "valence", as detailed in valence bond theory.
In the molecule H2, the hydrogen atoms share the two electrons via covalent bonding. Covalency is greatest between atoms that have similar electronegativities, regardless of whether the elements are the same as each other. Covalent bonding that entails the sharing of electrons over more than two atoms is said to be delocalized.
Details
A covalent bond, in chemistry, is the interatomic linkage that results from the sharing of an electron pair between two atoms. The binding arises from the electrostatic attraction of their nuclei for the same electrons. A covalent bond forms when the bonded atoms have a lower total energy than that of widely separated atoms.
A brief treatment of covalent bonds follows. For full treatment, see chemical bonding: Covalent bonds.
Molecules that have covalent linkages include the inorganic substances hydrogen, nitrogen, chlorine, water, and ammonia (H2, N2, Cl2, H2O, NH3) together with all organic compounds.
A single line indicates a bond between two atoms (i.e., involving one electron pair), double lines (=) indicate a double bond between two atoms (i.e., involving two electron pairs), and triple lines (≡) represent a triple bond, as found, for example, in carbon monoxide (C≡O). Single bonds consist of one sigma (σ) bond, double bonds have one σ and one pi (π) bond, and triple bonds have one σ and two π bonds.
Covalent bonds are directional, meaning that atoms so bonded prefer specific orientations relative to one another; this in turn gives molecules definite shapes, as in the angular (bent) structure of the H2O molecule. Covalent bonds between identical atoms (as in H2) are nonpolar—i.e., electrically uniform—while those between unlike atoms are polar—i.e., one atom is slightly negatively charged and the other is slightly positively charged. This partial ionic character of covalent bonds increases with the difference in the electronegativities of the two atoms. See also ionic bond.
When none of the elements in a compound is a metal, no atoms in the compound have an ionization energy low enough for electron loss to be likely. In such a case, covalence prevails. As a general rule, covalent bonds are formed between elements lying toward the right in the periodic table (i.e., the nonmetals). Molecules of identical atoms, such as H2 and buckminsterfullerene (C60), are also held together by covalent bonds.
Lewis formulation of a covalent bond
The idea that two electrons can be shared between two atoms and serve as the link between them was first introduced in 1916 by the American chemist G.N. Lewis, who described the formation of such bonds as resulting from the tendencies of certain atoms to combine with one another in order for both to have the electronic structure of a corresponding noble-gas atom.
In Lewis terms a covalent bond is a shared electron pair.
In a Lewis structure of a covalent compound, the shared electron pair between the hydrogen and chlorine ions is represented by a line. The electron pair is called a bonding pair; the three other pairs of electrons on the chlorine atom are called lone pairs and play no direct role in holding the two atoms together.
Each atom in the hydrogen chloride molecule attains a closed-shell octet of electrons by sharing and hence achieves a maximum lowering of energy. In general, an incomplete shell means that some attracting power of a nucleus may be wasted, and adding electrons beyond a closed shell would entail the energetic disadvantage of beginning the next shell of the atom concerned. Lewis’s octet rule is again applicable and is seen to represent the extreme means of achieving lower energy rather than being a goal in itself.
A covalent bond forms if the bonded atoms have a lower total energy than the widely separated atoms. The simplest interpretation of the decrease in energy that occurs when electrons are shared is that both electrons lie between two attracting centres (the nuclei of the two atoms linked by the bond) and hence lie lower in energy than when they experience the attraction of a single centre.
Lewis structures of more complex molecules can be constructed quite simply by extending the process that has been described for hydrogen chloride.
In some older formulations of Lewis structures, a distinction was made between bonds formed by electrons that have been supplied by both atoms (as in H―Cl, where one shared electron can be regarded as supplied by the hydrogen atom and the other by the chlorine atom) and covalent bonds formed when both electrons can be regarded as supplied by one atom, as in the formation of OH− from O2− and H+. Such a bond was called a coordinate covalent bond or a dative bond and symbolized O → H−. However, the difficulties encountered in the attempt to keep track of the origin of bonding electrons and the suggestion that a coordinate covalent bond differs somehow from a covalent bond (it does not) have led to this usage falling into disfavour.
Resonance
The blending together of these structures is actually a quantum mechanical phenomenon called resonance. At this stage, resonance can be regarded as a blending process that spreads double-bond character evenly over the atoms that participate in it. In ozone, for instance, each oxygen-oxygen bond is rendered equivalent by resonance, and each one has a mixture of single-bond and double-bond character (as indicated by its length and strength).
Hypervalence
Lewis structures and the octet rule jointly offer a succinct indication of the type of bonding that occurs in molecules and show the pattern of single and multiple bonds between the atoms. There are many compounds, however, that do not conform to the octet rule. The most common exceptions to the octet rule are the so-called hypervalent compounds. These are species in which there are more atoms attached to a central atom than can be accommodated by an octet of electrons.
In Lewis terms, hypervalence requires the expansion of the octet to 10, 12, and even in some cases 16 electrons. Hypervalent compounds are very common and in general are no less stable than compounds that conform to the octet rule.
The existence of hypervalent compounds would appear to deal a severe blow to the validity of the octet rule and Lewis’s approach to covalent bonding if the expansion of the octet could not be rationalized or its occurrence predicted. Fortunately, it can be rationalized, and the occurrence of hypervalence can be anticipated. In simple terms, experience has shown that hypervalence is rare in periods 1 and 2 of the periodic table (through neon) but is common in and after period 3. Thus, the octet rule can be used with confidence for carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine, but hypervalence must be anticipated thereafter. The conventional explanation of this distinction takes note of the fact that in period-3 elements the valence shell has n = 3, and this is the first shell in which d orbitals are available. (These orbitals are occupied after the 4s orbitals have been filled and account for the occurrence of the transition metals in period 4.) It is therefore argued that atoms of this and subsequent periods can use the empty d orbitals to accommodate electrons beyond an octet and hence permit the formation of hypervalent species.
In chemistry, however, it is important not to allow mere correlations to masquerade as explanations. Although it is true that d orbitals are energetically accessible in elements that display hypervalence, it does not follow that they are responsible for it. Indeed, quantum mechanical theories of the chemical bond do not need to invoke d-orbital involvement. These theories suggest that hypervalence is probably no more than a consequence of the greater radii of the atoms of period-3 elements compared with those of period 2, with the result that a central atom can pack more atoms around itself. Thus, hypervalence is more a steric (geometric) problem than an outcome of d-orbital availability.
Additional Information:
Covalent bonding occurs when pairs of electrons are shared by atoms. Atoms will covalently bond with other atoms in order to gain more stability, which is gained by forming a full electron shell. By sharing their outer most (valence) electrons, atoms can fill up their outer electron shell and gain stability. Nonmetals will readily form covalent bonds with other nonmetals in order to obtain stability, and can form anywhere between one to three covalent bonds with other nonmetals depending on how many valence electrons they posses. Although it is said that atoms share electrons when they form covalent bonds, they do not usually share the electrons equally.
Introduction
Only when two atoms of the same element form a covalent bond are the shared electrons actually shared equally between the atoms. When atoms of different elements share electrons through covalent bonding, the electron will be drawn more toward the atom with the higher electronegativity resulting in a polar covalent bond. When compared to ionic compounds, covalent compounds usually have a lower melting and boiling point, and have less of a tendency to dissolve in water. Covalent compounds can be in a gas, liquid, or solid state and do not conduct electricity or heat well. The types of covalent bonds can be distinguished by looking at the Lewis dot structure of the molecule. For each molecule, there are different names for pairs of electrons, depending if it is shared or not. A pair of electrons that is shared between two atoms is called a bond pair. A pair of electrons that is not shared between two atoms is called a lone pair.
Octet Rule
The Octet Rule requires all atoms in a molecule to have 8 valence electrons--either by sharing, losing or gaining electrons--to become stable. For Covalent bonds, atoms tend to share their electrons with each other to satisfy the Octet Rule. It requires 8 electrons because that is the amount of electrons needed to fill a s- and p- orbital (electron configuration); also known as a noble gas configuration. Each atom wants to become as stable as the noble gases that have their outer valence shell filled because noble gases have a charge of 0. Although it is important to remember the "magic number", 8, note that there are many Octet rule exceptions.
Single Bonds
A single bond is when two electrons--one pair of electrons--are shared between two atoms. It is depicted by a single line between the two atoms. Although this form of bond is weaker and has a smaller density than a double bond and a triple bond, it is the most stable because it has a lower level of reactivity meaning less vulnerability in losing electrons to atoms that want to steal electrons.
Double Bonds
A Double bond is when two atoms share two pairs of electrons with each other. It is depicted by two horizontal lines between two atoms in a molecule. This type of bond is much stronger than a single bond, but less stable; this is due to its greater amount of reactivity compared to a single bond.
Triple Bond
A Triple bond is when three pairs of electrons are shared between two atoms in a molecule. It is the least stable out of the three general types of covalent bonds. It is very vulnerable to electron thieves!

2396) François Jacob
Gist:
Work
The biochemical processes that take place within an organism's cells are controlled by the genes found inside DNA molecules. François Jacob and Jacques Monod proved how the genetic information is converted during the formation of proteins by means of a messenger, which proved to the substance we now know as RNA. Different cells work in different ways at different times, however. This too is regulated by genes. In the early 1960s Monod and Jacob mapped the intricate processes that determine how genes are expressed or suppressed in a self-regulating process.
Summary
François Jacob (born June 17, 1920, Nancy, France—died April 19, 2013, Paris) was a French biologist who, together with André Lwoff and Jacques Monod, was awarded the 1965 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for discoveries concerning regulatory activities in bacteria.
Jacob received an M.D. degree (1947) and a doctorate in science (1954) from the University of Paris. Most of the work of Jacob, Lwoff, and Monod was carried out at the Pasteur Institute (Paris), which Jacob joined in 1950 as a research assistant. In 1960 he became head of the department of cellular genetics at the institute, and from 1965 he was also professor of cellular genetics at the Collège de France. In 1977 he became a member of the Academy of Sciences.
With a coworker at the Pasteur Institute, Jacob discovered that the genes of a bacterium are arranged linearly in a ring and that the ring can be broken at almost any point. In 1958 Monod and Jacob began to collaborate on studies of the regulation of bacterial enzyme synthesis. One of their first major contributions was the discovery of regulator genes (operons), so called because they control the activities of structural genes. The latter, in turn, not only transmit hereditary characteristics but also serve in the production of enzymes, other proteins, and ribonucleic acid (RNA).
Jacob and Monod also proposed the existence of an RNA messenger, a partial copy of the gene substance deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), that carries genetic information to other parts of the cell. They also found that in a normal cell the balance between regulator and structural genes enables the cell to adapt to varying conditions. An interruption in this balance, however, can stimulate the production of new enzymes that can prove either beneficial or destructive to the cell. In addition to his research activities, Jacob wrote important books on the history and philosophy of the life sciences, including La Logique du vivant: une histoire de l’hérédité (1970; The Logic of Life: A History of Heredity).
Details
François Jacob (17 June 1920 – 19 April 2013) was a French biologist who, together with Jacques Monod, originated the idea that control of enzyme levels in all cells occurs through regulation of transcription. He shared the 1965 Nobel Prize in Medicine with Jacques Monod and André Lwoff.
Early years
Jacob was born the only child of Simon, a merchant, and Thérèse (Franck) Jacob, in Nancy, France. An inquisitive child, he learned to read at a young age. Albert Franck, Jacob's maternal grandfather, a four-star general, was Jacob's childhood role model. At seven he entered the Lycée Carnot, where he was schooled for the next ten years; in his autobiography, he describes his impression of it: "a cage". He was antagonized by rightist youth at the Lycée Carnot around 1934. He describes his father as a "conformist in religion", while his mother and other family members important in his childhood were secular Jews; shortly after his bar mitzvah, he became an atheist.
Though interested (and talented) in physics and mathematics, Jacob was horrified at the prospect of spending two additional years in "an even more draconian regime" to prepare for higher study at the Polytechnique. Instead, after observing a surgical operation that cemented his "slight interest" in medicine, he entered medical school.
During the German occupation of France—and on the heels of his mother's death—Jacob left France for Great Britain to join the war effort. Jacob, who had only completed his second year of medical studies, joined the medical company of the French 2nd Armored Division in 1940. He was injured in a German air attack in 1944 and returned to now-liberated Paris on 1 August 1944. For his wartime service, he was awarded France's WWII highest decoration for valor, the Cross of Liberation, as well as Légion d'honneur and croix de guerre.
After his recovery, Jacob returned to medical school and began researching tyrothricin and learning the methods of bacteriology in the process. He completed a thesis he described as "replicating American work" on the effectiveness of the antibiotic against local infections, and became a medical doctor in 1947. Though attracted to research as a career, he was discouraged by his own perceived ignorance after attending a microbiology congress that summer. Instead, he took a position at the Cabanel Center, where he had done his thesis research; his new work entailed the manufacture of an antibiotic, tyrothricin. Later, the center was contracted to convert gunpowder factories for penicillin production (though this proved impossible).
Also in this period, he met and began courting his future wife, Lise Bloch. Jacob remarried in 1999 to Geneviève Barrier.
Research
In 1961 Jacob and Monod explored the idea that the control of enzyme expression levels in cells is a result of regulation of transcription of DNA sequences. Their experiments and ideas gave impetus to the emerging field of molecular developmental biology, and of transcriptional regulation in particular.
For many years it had been known that bacterial and other cells could respond to external conditions by regulating levels of their key metabolic enzymes, and/or the activity of these enzymes. For instance, if a bacterium finds itself in a broth containing lactose, rather than the simpler sugar glucose, it must adapt itself to the need to 1) import lactose, 2) cleave lactose to its constituents glucose and galactose, and 3) convert the galactose to glucose. It was known that cells ramp up their production of the enzymes that do these steps when exposed to lactose, rather than wastefully producing these enzymes all the time. Studies of enzyme activity control were progressing through theories of the (allosteric) action of small molecules on the enzyme molecule itself (switching it on or off), but the method of controlling the enzyme production was not well understood at the time.
With the earlier determination of the structure and central importance of DNA, it became clear that all proteins were being produced in some way from its genetic code, and that this step might form a key control point. Jacob and Monod made key experimental and theoretical discoveries that demonstrated that in the case of the lactose system outlined above (in the bacterium E. coli), there are specific proteins that are devoted to repressing the transcription of the DNA to its product (RNA, which in turn is decoded into protein).
This repressor (the lac repressor) is made in all cells, binding directly to DNA at the genes it controls, and physically preventing the transcription apparatus from gaining access to the DNA. In the presence of lactose, some of the lactose is converted to allolactose, which binds to the repressor making it no longer able to bind to DNA, and the transcriptional repression is lifted. In this way, a robust feedback loop is constructed that allows the set of lactose-digesting protein products to be made only when they are needed.
Jacob and Monod extended this repressor model to all genes in all organisms in their initial exuberance. The regulation of gene activity has developed into a very large sub-discipline of molecular biology, and in truth exhibits enormous variety in mechanism and many levels of complexity. Current researchers find regulatory events at every conceivable level of the processes that express genetic information. In the relatively simple genome of baker's yeast, (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), 405 of its 6,419 protein-encoding genes are directly involved in transcriptional control, compared to 1,938 that are enzymes.

2448) Invertor
Gist
An inverter is an electronic device that converts direct current (DC) to alternating current (AC). This conversion is necessary to power standard household appliances and electronics, which run on AC power, from DC sources like solar panels or car batteries. Inverters are essential for applications like backup power systems, off-grid solar setups, and electric vehicles.
An inverter's primary function is to convert direct current (DC) to alternating current (AC). This conversion is crucial for running standard household appliances, which require AC power, from DC sources like car batteries, solar panels, or an inverter's own battery during a power outage. Inverters are essential for making DC power usable for AC systems.
Details
A power inverter, inverter, or invertor is a power electronic device or circuitry that changes direct current (DC) to alternating current (AC). The resulting AC frequency obtained depends on the particular device employed. Inverters do the opposite of rectifiers which were originally large electromechanical devices converting AC to DC.
The input voltage, output voltage and frequency, and overall power handling depend on the design of the specific device or circuitry. The inverter does not produce any power; the power is provided by the DC source.
A power inverter can be entirely electronic or a combination of mechanical effects (such as a rotary apparatus) and electronic circuitry.
Static inverters do not use moving parts in the conversion process.
Power inverters are primarily used in electrical power applications where high currents and voltages are present; circuits that perform the same function for electronic signals, which usually have very low currents and voltages, are called oscillators.
Input and output:
Input voltage
A typical power inverter device or circuit requires a stable DC power source capable of supplying enough current for the intended power demands of the system. The input voltage depends on the design and purpose of the inverter. Examples include:
* 12 V DC, for smaller consumer and commercial inverters that typically run from a rechargeable 12 V lead acid battery or automotive electrical outlet.
* 24, 36, and 48 V DC, which are common standards for home energy systems.
* 200 to 400 V DC, when power is from photovoltaic solar panels.
* 300 to 450 V DC, when power is from electric vehicle battery packs in vehicle-to-grid systems.
* Hundreds of thousands of volts, where the inverter is part of a high-voltage direct current power transmission system.
Output waveform
An inverter may produce a square wave, sine wave, modified sine wave, pulsed sine wave, or near-sine pulse-width modulated wave (PWM) depending on circuit design. Common types of inverters produce square waves or quasi-square waves. One measure of the purity of a sine wave is the total harmonic distortion (THD). Technical standards for commercial power distribution grids require less than 3% THD in the wave shape at the customer's point of connection. IEEE Standard 519 recommends less than 5% THD for systems connecting to a power grid.
There are two basic designs for producing household plug-in voltage from a lower-voltage DC source, the first of which uses a switching boost converter to produce a higher-voltage DC and then converts to AC. The second method converts DC to AC at battery level and uses a line-frequency transformer to create the output voltage.
Square wave
A 50% duty cycle square wave is one of the simplest waveforms an inverter design can produce, but adds ~48.3% THD to its fundamental sine wave. Thus, a square wave output can produce undesired "humming" noises when connected to audio equipment and is better suited to low-sensitivity applications such as lighting and heating.
Sine wave
A power inverter device that produces a multiple step sinusoidal AC waveform is referred to as a sine wave inverter. To more clearly distinguish the inverters with outputs of much less distortion than the modified sine wave (three-step) inverter designs, the manufacturers often use the phrase pure sine wave inverter. Almost all consumer grade inverters that are sold as a "pure sine wave inverter" do not produce a smooth sine wave output at all, just a less choppy output than the square wave (two-step) and modified sine wave (three-step) inverters. However, this is not critical for most electronics as they deal with the output quite well.
Where power inverter devices substitute for standard line power, a sine wave output is desirable because many electrical products are engineered to work best with a sine wave AC power source. The standard electric utility provides a sine wave, typically with minor imperfections but sometimes with significant distortion.
Sine wave inverters with more than three steps in the wave output are more complex and have significantly higher cost than a modified sine wave, with only three steps, or square wave (one step) types of the same power handling. Switched-mode power supply (SMPS) devices, such as personal computers or DVD players, function on modified sine wave power. AC motors directly operated on non-sinusoidal power may produce extra heat, may have different speed-torque characteristics, or may produce more audible noise than when running on sinusoidal power.
Modified sine wave
The modified sine wave is the sum of two square waves, one of which is delayed one-quarter of the period with respect to the other. The result is a repeated voltage step sequence of zero, peak positive, zero, peak negative, and again zero. The resultant voltage waveform better approximates the shape of a sinusoidal voltage waveform than a single square wave. Most inexpensive consumer power inverters produce a modified sine wave rather than a pure sine wave.
If the waveform is chosen to have its peak voltage values for half of the cycle time, the peak voltage to RMS voltage ratio is the same as for a sine wave. The DC bus voltage may be actively regulated, or the "on" and "off" times can be modified to maintain the same RMS value output up to the DC bus voltage to compensate for DC bus voltage variations. By changing the pulse width, the harmonic spectrum can be changed. The lowest THD for a three-step modified sine wave is 30% when the pulses are at 130 degrees width of each electrical cycle. This is slightly lower than for a square wave.
The ratio of on to off time can be adjusted to vary the RMS voltage while maintaining a constant frequency with a technique called pulse-width modulation (PWM). The generated gate pulses are given to each switch in accordance with the developed pattern to obtain the desired output. The harmonic spectrum in the output depends on the width of the pulses and the modulation frequency. It can be shown that the minimum distortion of a three-level waveform is reached when the pulses extend over 130 degrees of the waveform, but the resulting voltage will still have about 30% THD, higher than commercial standards for grid-connected power sources. When operating induction motors, voltage harmonics are usually not of concern; however, harmonic distortion in the current waveform introduces additional heating and can produce pulsating torques.
Numerous items of electric equipment will operate quite well on modified sine wave power inverter devices, especially loads that are resistive in nature such as traditional incandescent light bulbs. Items with a switched-mode power supply operate almost entirely without problems, but if the item has a mains transformer, this can overheat depending on how marginally it is rated.
However, the load may operate less efficiently owing to the harmonics associated with a modified sine wave and produce a humming noise during operation. This also affects the efficiency of the system as a whole, since the manufacturer's nominal conversion efficiency does not account for harmonics. Therefore, pure sine wave inverters may provide significantly higher efficiency than modified sine wave inverters.
Most AC motors will run on MSW inverters with an efficiency reduction of about 20% owing to the harmonic content. However, they may be quite noisy. A series LC filter tuned to the fundamental frequency may help.
A common modified sine wave inverter topology found in consumer power inverters is as follows: An onboard microcontroller rapidly switches on and off power MOSFETs at high frequency like ~50 kHz. The MOSFETs directly pull from a low voltage DC source (such as a battery). This signal then goes through step-up transformers (generally many smaller transformers are placed in parallel to reduce the overall size of the inverter) to produce a higher voltage signal. The output of the step-up transformers then gets filtered by capacitors to produce a high voltage DC supply. Finally, this DC supply is pulsed with additional power MOSFETs by the microcontroller to produce the final modified sine wave signal.
More complex inverters use more than two voltages to form a multiple-stepped approximation to a sine wave. These can further reduce voltage and current harmonics and THD compared to an inverter using only alternating positive and negative pulses; but such inverters require additional switching components, increasing cost.
Near sine wave PWM
An example of PWM voltage modulated as a series of pulses ■. Low pass filtering with series inductors and shunt capacitors is required to suppress the switching frequency. Once filtered, this results in a near sinusoidal waveform ■. The filtering components are smaller and more convenient than those required to smooth a modified sine wave to an equivalent harmonic purity.
Some inverters use PWM to create a waveform that can be low pass filtered to re-create the sine wave. These only require one DC supply, in the manner of the MSN designs, but the switching takes place at a far faster rate, typically many kHz, so that the varying width of the pulses can be smoothed to create the sine wave. If a microprocessor is used to generate the switching timing, the harmonic content and efficiency can be closely controlled.
Output frequency
The AC output frequency of a power inverter device is usually the same as standard power line frequency, 50 or 60 hertz. The exception is in designs for motor driving, where a variable frequency results in a variable speed control.
Also, if the output of the device or circuit is to be further conditioned (for example stepped up) then the frequency may be much higher for good transformer efficiency.
Output voltage
The AC output voltage of a power inverter is often regulated to be the same as the grid line voltage, typically 120 or 240 VAC at the distribution level, even when there are changes in the load that the inverter is driving. This allows the inverter to power numerous devices designed for standard line power.
Some inverters also allow selectable or continuously variable output voltages.
Output power
A power inverter will often have an overall power rating expressed in watts or kilowatts. This describes the power that will be available to the device the inverter is driving and, indirectly, the power that will be needed from the DC source. Smaller popular consumer and commercial devices designed to mimic line power typically range from 150 to 3000 watts.
Not all inverter applications are solely or primarily concerned with power delivery; in some cases the frequency and or waveform properties are used by the follow-on circuit or device.
Additional Information:
What is an inverter?
An inverter is an electronic device that converts direct current (DC) into alternating current (AC). It is commonly used to power household appliances and electronic devices that require AC power when only DC power sources are available, such as in solar power systems or car batteries. Inverters are essential for ensuring compatibility and efficient operation of a wide range of electrical equipment in different settings.
How does an inverter work?
An inverter converts DC power into AC power using electronic circuits. It typically involves switching and modulation techniques to create an AC waveform from a DC input. These circuits can include transistors, transformers, and control systems to manage the conversion process efficiently.
What are the different types of inverters?
There are several types of inverters, including pure sine wave inverters, modified sine wave inverters, and square wave inverters. Pure sine wave inverters produce high-quality AC power, suitable for sensitive electronics. Modified sine wave inverters are more cost-effective and suitable for less sensitive devices, while square wave inverters are the least expensive but may not work with all devices.
What is the difference between an inverter and a generator?
An inverter and a generator are both used to provide power, but they operate in fundamentally different ways and serve distinct purposes. An inverter converts direct current (DC) from sources like batteries or solar panels into alternating current (AC), which is used to power household appliances and electronic devices. It relies on stored or generated DC power and is often used in renewable energy systems or as a backup power solution in conjunction with batteries. In contrast, a generator produces AC power directly by converting mechanical energy into electrical energy through the combustion of fuels such as gasoline, diesel, or natural gas. Generators are typically used for providing power during outages, in remote locations without access to the grid, or for powering heavy-duty equipment. While inverters are quiet, environmentally friendly, and efficient for small to medium loads, generators can provide higher power output and are suitable for more demanding applications but can be noisy and produce emissions.
Can an inverter be used with solar panels?
Yes, inverters are commonly used in solar power systems to convert the DC electricity generated by solar panels into AC power for use in homes and businesses. This conversion is crucial for integrating solar energy into the existing electrical grid and for powering standard household appliances.
What is the efficiency of an inverter?
The efficiency of an inverter varies depending on its design and quality. High-quality inverters can have efficiencies of 90% or higher, meaning they lose only a small percentage of energy during the conversion process. Efficiency is a critical factor, as it affects the overall performance and energy savings of the system.
How do I choose the right inverter for your needs?
To choose the right inverter, consider factors such as the total wattage of the devices you plan to power, the type of waveform required (pure sine wave or modified sine wave), and the inverter's input and output voltage compatibility. Additionally, assess the inverter's capacity, ensuring it can handle peak loads and future expansion.
Can an inverter run continuously?
Yes, many inverters are designed for continuous operation. However, it’s important to ensure that the inverter is properly rated for the load it will be handling and that it has adequate cooling to prevent overheating. Continuous operation also depends on the availability of a reliable power source, such as a well-maintained battery or solar panel array.
What safety features should an inverter have?
Important safety features for inverters include overload protection, short circuit protection, over-voltage and under-voltage protection, and thermal protection to prevent overheating. These features help protect both the inverter and connected devices from damage due to electrical faults or excessive load.
How do I maintain an inverter?
Regular maintenance of an inverter includes keeping it clean and dust-free, ensuring adequate ventilation, checking connections and wiring for wear and tear, and periodically testing the inverter’s performance. Proper maintenance extends the inverter's lifespan and ensures reliable operation.
Can an inverter be used in vehicles?
Yes, inverters are often used in vehicles to power AC devices using the vehicle’s DC battery. This is useful for camping, road trips, or running equipment that requires AC power while on the move. Vehicle inverters come in various sizes and capacities, suitable for different applications.
Can an inverter be used with a battery backup system?
Yes, an inverter can be integrated with a battery backup system to provide power during outages. The battery stores DC power, and the inverter converts it to AC power to run household appliances and electronic devices. This setup ensures continuous operation even when the main power supply is unavailable, making it ideal for critical applications and areas prone to power interruptions.
What size inverter do I need for my home?
The size of the inverter you need depends on the total wattage of the appliances and devices you plan to power. Calculate the combined wattage of all devices and choose an inverter with a capacity slightly higher than the total wattage to ensure efficient operation and to accommodate any additional load. This approach prevents overloading and extends the inverter's lifespan.
How long can an inverter run on battery power?
The runtime of an inverter on battery power depends on the capacity of the battery and the power consumption of the connected devices. Larger batteries with higher amp-hour (Ah) ratings can provide power for a longer duration. Additionally, using energy-efficient devices can help extend the runtime, allowing for more extended periods of use during power outages or off-grid scenarios.
Are there any noise concerns with using an inverter?
Most modern inverters are designed to operate quietly, but some may produce a low-level humming sound due to the internal cooling fans and electronic components. The noise level is usually minimal and should not be disruptive in a typical home environment. For those sensitive to noise, it's advisable to choose inverters specifically marketed as silent or low-noise models. These models ensure a quieter operation, suitable for use in bedrooms, offices, or other noise-sensitive areas.
When should I consider upgrading my inverter?
You might consider upgrading your inverter if you plan to power more demanding devices or multiple devices simultaneously. Additionally, if you experience issues like power fluctuations or insufficient capacity, upgrading to a more powerful or higher-quality inverter could resolve these issues.
