1.
There is enough DNA in an average person’s body to stretch from the sun to
Pluto and back — 17 times
2. The average human body carries ten times more bacterial cells than human cells
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It’s
funny how we compulsively wash our hands, spray our countertops and
grimace when someone sneezes near us—in fact, we do everything we can to avoid unnecessary
encounters with the germ world. The truth of the matter is that each and every
one of us is a walking petri dish! All the bacteria living inside you
would fill a half-gallon jug or 10 times more bacterial cells in your body than human
cells,
according to Carolyn Bohach, a microbiologist at the University of Idaho. Don’t
worry, though. Most of these bacteria are helpful; in fact, we couldn’t survive
without them.
For
one thing, bacteria produce chemicals that help us harness energy and nutrients
from our food. Germ-free rodents have to consume nearly a third more calories
than normal rodents to maintain their body weight, and when the same animals
were later given a dose of bacteria, their body fat levels spiked, even if they
didn’t eat any more than they had before. The gut bacteria is also very
important to maintaining immunity.
4.
At over 2000 kilometers long, The Great Barrier Reef is the largest living
structure on Earth
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Coral
reefs consist of huge numbers of individual coral polyps – soft-bodied,
invertebrate animals – linked by tissue. The Great Barrier Reef is an
interlinked system of about 3000 reefs and 900 coral islands, divided by narrow
passages, just beneath the surface of the Coral Sea.Spanning more than 2000 km
and covering an area of some 350 000 sq km, it is the largest living structure
on Earth and the only one visible from space. But this fragile coral colony is
beginning to crumble, battered by the effects of climate change, pollution and
manmade disasters.
5.
There are 8 times as many atoms in a teaspoonful of water as there are
teaspoonfuls of water in the Atlantic ocean
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A teaspoon
of water (about 5 mL) contains 2×1023 water molecules, but each water
molecule is comprised of 3 atoms: two hydrogen and one oxygen. Moreover, if
you’d laid down end to end each water molecule from a teaspoon full you’d end
up with a length of 50 billion km or 10 times the width of our solar system.
The
average moderately active person take aound 7,500 step/day. If you
maintain that daily average and live until 80 years of age, you’ll have walked
about 216,262,500 steps in your lifetime. Doing the math; the average person with the average
stride living until 80 will walk a distance of around 110,000 miles.
Which is the equivalent of walking about 5 times around the Earth, right
on the equator.
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We
all know helium as a gas for blowing up balloons and making people talk like
chipmunks, but what most people don’t know is that it comes in two distinct
liquid states, one of which is borderline creepy. When helium is just a
few degrees below its boiling point of –452 degrees Fahrenheit (–269 degrees
Celsius) it will suddenly be able to do things that other fluids can’t,
like dribble through molecule-thin cracks, climb up and over the sides of a
dish, and remain motionless when its container is spun. No longer a mere
liquid, the helium has become a superfluid—a liquid that flows
without friction.
“If
you set [down] a cup with a liquid circulating around and you come back 10
minutes later, of course it’s stopped moving,” says John Beamish, an
experimental physicist at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. Atoms in the
liquid will collide with one another and slow down. “But if you did that with
helium at low temperature and came back a million years later,” he says, “it
would still be moving.
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Betelgeuse
lies some 430 light-years from Earth. Yet it’s already one of the brightest
stars in Earth’s sky. The reason is that Betelgeuse is a supergiant star – the
largest kind of stars in the Universe. Betelgeuse has a luminosity about 10,000
times that of the Sun and its radius is calculated to be about 370 times that
of the sun. If it were positioned at the center of our sun, its radius would
extend out past the orbit of Mars. Because it’s near the end of its lifetime, Betelgeuse is likely to explode into a supernova.
9. An
individual blood cell takes about 60 seconds to make a complete circuit of the
body
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You
have about 5 litres of blood in your body (at least most people do) and the
average heart pumps about 70 ml of blood out with each beat. Also, a healthy
heart beats around 70 times a minute. So, if you multiply the amount of blood
that the heart can pump by the number of beats in a minute, you actually get
about 4.9 litres of blood, which is almost your whole body’s worth of blood. In
just a minute, the hearts pumps the entire blood volume around your body.
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