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Double Helix

Issue 70
Magazine

Looking for seriously fun science, technology, engineering, and maths news for your curious kids or tech-talented teens? We've got you covered! Inside every issue you'll find articles, activities, puzzles, comics, and prizes galore. Perfect reading for enquiring minds, CSIRO's Double Helix magazine is packed with news, features, fun experiments, giveaways and more. Each issue focuses on a different theme, from smells to spaceships and beyond! With clear language and eye-catching design, the content promotes critical thinking, strengthens literacy skills and is the perfect fuel to spark or sustain an interest in STEM. Double Helix is published eight times a year. It is ideal for 8 to 13-year-olds and enjoyed by older readers as well.

Double Helix

HELIX HQ

ON THE DOUBLE

DIAMONDS ARE FOR SENSORS • Quantum sensors use atoms and light to make extremely precise measurements of the world. CSIRO scientists are working on new quantum sensors – made from diamonds!

MAKING A MUMMY • Archaeologists have uncovered the long-lost recipes used by ancient Egyptians to mummify their dead.

CROC-SPEAK • It’s not easy studying the voices of Australian saltwater crocodiles. Sure, they’re dangerous, but it’s also very noisy underwater in the wild. Critters from frogs to fish have their say, and microphones record it all.

QUANTUM IN SPACE • NASA’s Cold Atom Lab arrived at the International Space Station (ISS) in 2018. Now, physicists are using it to study quantum mechanics without the interference of gravity.

NO BRAIN? NO WORRIES! • How do you train jellyfish? They have no brain and they’re 95 per cent water. Turns out they don’t need brains! A team of biologists from Germany and Denmark has shown how Caribbean box jellyfish learn to navigate around obstacles.

BRILLIANTLY DOTTY!

A LIGHT-POWERED QUANTUM BATTERY • One day, quantum batteries could power phones using just the light from their surroundings. CSIRO scientists have created the largest quantum battery to date, and are hard at work developing the physics needed to scale them up.

BY THE NUMBERS: NANO-MUSCLE!

DOES LIGHTNING STRIKE ON VENUS? • Looking at Venus from space, there’s not a lot to see. It’s too hot to land rovers or people, and it’s covered in clouds. So we don’t know that much about what happens on the surface. One surprising question scientists have been debating for 40 years is whether lightning strikes there.

HOW MANY T. REX? • Tyrannosaurus rex was a species of ferocious, feathery dinosaur. Its fossils were first discovered in 1874, and it is now one of the most-studied dinosaur species. T. rex fossils tell us they became extinct 66 million years ago. But how many of these dinosaurs ever lived?

HUMAN DOCTORS BEAT AI • Cancer is a complicated disease, and more and more cancer medicines are being made to help treat it. This is fantastic news for patients! But picking the right medicines for each patient is a lot of work for doctors. Researchers in Germany wondered if artificial intelligence (AI) could help.

SUBSCRIBE

A CAREER IN COTTON • Meet Bernadette Melton. She’s a proud Gamilaroi woman, an award-winning cotton expert, a tireless champion for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander recognition, and an inspiration to local STEM students.

SMALL, weird, PHYSICS STUFF

TWO PATHS TO AI

IS A QUANTUM LAPTOP POSSIBLE? • Big tech companies, such as Microsoft, Google and IBM, are spending bucketloads of money on what could be the future – quantum computing.

QUANTUM COMPUTERS HAVE BOTH UPS AND DOWNS • QUANTUM PHYSICS DESCRIBES THE WEIRD AND WONDERFUL BEHAVIOURS OF THE UNIVERSE’S TINIEST PARTICLES. TWO OF THE STRANGEST BEHAVIOURS – ENTANGLEMENT AND SUPERPOSITION – WILL ALLOW QUANTUM COMPUTERS TO DO BOTH AMAZING AND SCARY THINGS. CSIRO...


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Frequency: Every other month Pages: 40 Publisher: CSIRO Publishing Edition: Issue 70

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: February 29, 2024

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

Languages

English

Looking for seriously fun science, technology, engineering, and maths news for your curious kids or tech-talented teens? We've got you covered! Inside every issue you'll find articles, activities, puzzles, comics, and prizes galore. Perfect reading for enquiring minds, CSIRO's Double Helix magazine is packed with news, features, fun experiments, giveaways and more. Each issue focuses on a different theme, from smells to spaceships and beyond! With clear language and eye-catching design, the content promotes critical thinking, strengthens literacy skills and is the perfect fuel to spark or sustain an interest in STEM. Double Helix is published eight times a year. It is ideal for 8 to 13-year-olds and enjoyed by older readers as well.

Double Helix

HELIX HQ

ON THE DOUBLE

DIAMONDS ARE FOR SENSORS • Quantum sensors use atoms and light to make extremely precise measurements of the world. CSIRO scientists are working on new quantum sensors – made from diamonds!

MAKING A MUMMY • Archaeologists have uncovered the long-lost recipes used by ancient Egyptians to mummify their dead.

CROC-SPEAK • It’s not easy studying the voices of Australian saltwater crocodiles. Sure, they’re dangerous, but it’s also very noisy underwater in the wild. Critters from frogs to fish have their say, and microphones record it all.

QUANTUM IN SPACE • NASA’s Cold Atom Lab arrived at the International Space Station (ISS) in 2018. Now, physicists are using it to study quantum mechanics without the interference of gravity.

NO BRAIN? NO WORRIES! • How do you train jellyfish? They have no brain and they’re 95 per cent water. Turns out they don’t need brains! A team of biologists from Germany and Denmark has shown how Caribbean box jellyfish learn to navigate around obstacles.

BRILLIANTLY DOTTY!

A LIGHT-POWERED QUANTUM BATTERY • One day, quantum batteries could power phones using just the light from their surroundings. CSIRO scientists have created the largest quantum battery to date, and are hard at work developing the physics needed to scale them up.

BY THE NUMBERS: NANO-MUSCLE!

DOES LIGHTNING STRIKE ON VENUS? • Looking at Venus from space, there’s not a lot to see. It’s too hot to land rovers or people, and it’s covered in clouds. So we don’t know that much about what happens on the surface. One surprising question scientists have been debating for 40 years is whether lightning strikes there.

HOW MANY T. REX? • Tyrannosaurus rex was a species of ferocious, feathery dinosaur. Its fossils were first discovered in 1874, and it is now one of the most-studied dinosaur species. T. rex fossils tell us they became extinct 66 million years ago. But how many of these dinosaurs ever lived?

HUMAN DOCTORS BEAT AI • Cancer is a complicated disease, and more and more cancer medicines are being made to help treat it. This is fantastic news for patients! But picking the right medicines for each patient is a lot of work for doctors. Researchers in Germany wondered if artificial intelligence (AI) could help.

SUBSCRIBE

A CAREER IN COTTON • Meet Bernadette Melton. She’s a proud Gamilaroi woman, an award-winning cotton expert, a tireless champion for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander recognition, and an inspiration to local STEM students.

SMALL, weird, PHYSICS STUFF

TWO PATHS TO AI

IS A QUANTUM LAPTOP POSSIBLE? • Big tech companies, such as Microsoft, Google and IBM, are spending bucketloads of money on what could be the future – quantum computing.

QUANTUM COMPUTERS HAVE BOTH UPS AND DOWNS • QUANTUM PHYSICS DESCRIBES THE WEIRD AND WONDERFUL BEHAVIOURS OF THE UNIVERSE’S TINIEST PARTICLES. TWO OF THE STRANGEST BEHAVIOURS – ENTANGLEMENT AND SUPERPOSITION – WILL ALLOW QUANTUM COMPUTERS TO DO BOTH AMAZING AND SCARY THINGS. CSIRO...


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