No object — whether made by humans or found in nature — is a mathematically perfect sphere. But that’s not to say that we can’t rank natural objects in terms of their sphericity. For many years, the sun held the record as the roundest known natural object ever measured. But then scientists found a star 5,000 light-years away that’s even rounder.
The sun is roughly 865,000 miles in diameter, yet despite its enormous size, it’s almost perfectly round. The difference between its widest and narrowest points (its equatorial and polar diameters, which differ slightly due to the effects of rotation) is only about 6.2 miles. That makes our star a 99.9997% perfect sphere — a staggering achievement of near-perfect cosmic geometry.
But the sun no longer holds the record. In 2016, a team of astronomers from the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research announced they had discovered the roundest object ever observed in nature: Kepler 11145123. That hot, luminous A-type star is more than twice the size of the sun and rotates three times more slowly — which partly explains its remarkable shape, as the slower rotation produces less centrifugal flattening.
A cubic inch of water has 120 times more water molecules than there are stars in the observable universe.
A 1-inch cube of water contains about 600 sextillion molecules (written out, that’s "6" followed by 23 zeros). In comparison, the observable universe contains an estimated 5 sextillion stars.
Other factors that could contribute to the star’s roundness include the possibility of a weak magnetic field surrounding the star’s equator (essentially acting as a giant girdle and keeping the star in trim spherical shape) and differential rotation between its core and surface. In other words, the exterior layers of the star could rotate faster than the core, meaning the star may not be spinning as fast as it appears by looking at it from the outside.
Using asteroseismology — the study of the oscillations of stars — the astronomers were able to measure the star’s shape with extraordinary precision. They found the difference between the equatorial and polar radii of the star is a mere 1.86 miles — an astonishingly small number compared to the star’s mean radius of approximately 932,000 miles. When it comes to roundness, Kepler 11145123 will be very hard to top.
Light takes an average of eight minutes and 20 seconds to reach Earth from the surface of the sun.
It may seem as if light from the sun reaches us here on Earth almost instantly, but it actually takes more than eight minutes on average. Considering nothing in the universe travels faster than light, that may seem like quite a long time. But at any given time, Earth is an average of 93 million miles from the sun — a distance even light takes some time to cover.
Tony Dunnell
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Tony is an English writer of nonfiction and fiction living on the edge of the Amazon jungle.
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Each June, stores roll out their Father’s Day best — sales on ties, watches, and barbecue grills. But when Father’s Day was first created, a much smaller token was given out to dads: roses. Flowers aren’t as heavily advertised for Father’s Day now as they are for mothers in May, yet the link between dads and the delicate blooms comes from the earliest American celebrations of the holiday.
Many flowers were in the running, but only one became the official bloom of the United States: the rose. President Ronald Reagan signed a proclamation certifying the rose as the national flower in 1986, over other suggestions such as marigolds, dogwoods, and columbines.
The first known Father’s Day is tied to the West Virginia mining community of Fairmont. On July 5, 1908, the town held a church service honoring the lives of fathers in their community, many of whom had perished the December before in what is widely considered the worst mining disaster in U.S. history. However, the church event was held just one time, and another city propelled the holiday into national view.
In 1909, Sonora Smart Dodd launched her campaign to honor fathers from her home in Spokane, Washington. As the daughter of a Civil War veteran and widower who had raised six children, Dodd believed fathers deserved recognition for their roles. Within a year, she had drummed up community support, and on June 19, 1910, Washington became the first state to celebrate Father’s Day. Dodd’s first festivities included an exchange of roses; children gave red roses to their fathers and pinned color-coded buds to their shirts — red for living fathers and white roses in honor of the deceased. The activist even rode through the city, handing out flowers and gifts to fathers who couldn’t leave home. Over time, the tradition of giving roses to dads faded away, but the holiday stuck around. After years of rallying, Father’s Day became a federally recognized holiday in 1972.
The Thousand-Year Rose, the world’s oldest rose bush, grows alongside a church in Germany.
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Organizers once tried to merge Mother’s Day and Father’s Day.
Mother’s Day and Father’s Day have long been honored as separate holidays, but in their earliest years, some organizers considered merging the two. A few American activists pushed for a replacement “Parents’ Day” during the 1920s and ’30s, with plans for the festivities to be held on the second Sunday in May (overwriting Mother’s Day). Robert Spero, one of the idea’s most ardent supporters, regularly led Parents’ Day festivities in New York City’s Central Park; in 1931 he argued that separate holidays created a “division of respect and affection” within families that should be replaced with a date that instead served as a “reminder that both parents should be loved and respected together.” However, Spero’s efforts never took hold on a grand scale, in part because of the Great Depression. Retailers capitalized on Father’s Day to generate gift-giving dollars in a tight economy, and with the onset of World War II, the date became a new way to honor men’s contributions to the war effort.
Nicole Garner Meeker
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Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.
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Your brain works hard all day, processing information that comes in at a staggering rate of 1 billion bits per second. It’s no wonder, then, that it needs some downtime to freshen up. Scientists have long theorized that humans and other animals need sleep because it helps maintain the brain, but they’ve also discovered that, during sleep, the brain is literally washed with fluid in a sort of rinse cycle that clears out chemical waste.
Your entire brain is active all the time — when you’re doing math, when you’re watching TV, and even when you’re asleep. The myth that people use only 10% of their brains began before our modern scientific understanding of the brain.
A waste clearance network called the glymphatic system is responsible for this brain rinse, which is thought to happen largely when we’re asleep. Unlike other parts of the body, the brain doesn’t have lymphatic vessels to help it move fluids around. However, it does seem to have developed a work-around: In a study with mice, researchers found that blood volume and cerebrospinal fluid levels varied in response to pulses of norepinephrine, a neurotransmitter found in the brain that regulates alertness and affects your sleep-wake cycle, among other things.
Norepinephrine pulses cause the brain’s blood vessels to clench — and, with the hard wall of the skull creating resistance, that clenching action creates a pumping effect. Cerebrospinal fluid moves in to fill the gap made by the clenching vessels. When the blood vessels relax, the fluid is moved out again, carrying away waste.
Within your digestive system lies the enteric nervous system (ENS), often called the “second brain.” It stretches throughout the gastrointestinal tract from the esophagus all the way down to the rectum. This “little brain” controls digestion, from swallowing your food to breaking it down and absorbing its nutrients. The little brain also talks to the big brain, which may explain why you feel “butterflies” in your stomach when you’re excited or stressed.
Researchers used to think that gut conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome were caused or exacerbated by mental health complaints such as anxiety and depression, but they’ve since found evidence that irritation in the ENS may reroute those mood change signals back to the big brain instead.
Ali Eldridge
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Ali Eldridge is a writer and editor based in Chicago. Currently the editor of "What on Earth! Magazine," she has also contributed extensively to Encyclopaedia Britannica and published several books for children. She spends much of her free time learning new languages and trading puns with her clever kid.
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Roughly 90% of humans are right-handed, including Muppeteers — the puppeteers who control Muppets. Though it may sound counterintuitive, this fact is why most Muppets are left-handed: Muppeteers use their dominant hand to control the heads of Kermit, Miss Piggy, Gonzo, and the rest of Jim Henson’s beloved creations, leaving their left hands to control the characters’ hand motions. This, in turn, translates into primarily using the Muppets’ left arms — otherwise the Muppeteer would need to use their left hand to control their character’s right hand, which would be physically counterintuitive.
Jim Henson was in the first season of “Saturday Night Live.”
A year before “The Muppet Show” debuted, Henson was on the first season of “SNL.” He and the Muppets had a recurring segment called “The Land of Gorch.”
Henson created the Muppets in 1955, more than 20 years before the eponymous TV series premiered in 1976, and his original motley crew was first seen on the show Sam and Friends. The Muppets began appearing on Sesame Street in 1969, made their way to the silver screen for the first time a decade later, and have also starred in such series as Fraggle Rock, The Jim Henson Hour, and Muppets Tonight. Henson received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1991, Kermit got his in 2002, and the Muppets as a whole were honored with theirs in 2012.
Kermit’s eyes were originally made of Ping-Pong balls.
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Left-handedness has long been associated with evil.
Some superstitions are sillier than others: Near the top of the list would have to be the historical association between left-handedness and evil, which can even be found in the origins of the word “sinister.” It’s based on a Latin word meaning “on the left side,” and those who worship the devil were historically said to be on the left-hand path.
The basis for this appears to be pure prejudice stemming from the fact that most people are right-handed and those who aren’t were once seen as outcasts or worse (read: witches). The ancient Celts were one notable exception, as they associated the left side with femininity and the womb — the source of all life, in other words.
Michael Nordine
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Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.
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Wisconsinites are known for their love of cheese, so it’s no surprise that the city of Madison’s official bird is the invariably cheesy plastic flamingo. The lawn bird first “migrated” to town in 1979 as part of a prank on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus. Students awoke one day that September to find the school’s Bascom Hill covered with 1,008 plastic flamingos, which had been placed there by the school government’s Pail & Shovel Party. The group was known for their absurdist stunts, including throwing a 10,000-person toga party and building a replica of the Statue of Liberty emerging from nearby Lake Mendota. Yet it wasn’t until 2009, after a successful lobbying campaign from local newspaper columnist Doug Moe, that the Madison City Council voted 15-4 in favor of designating the plastic flamingo as the official city bird. Councilwoman Marsha Rummel defended the decision against the four dissenters by saying, “If you don’t have a little fun, [life’s] not worth living.”
Also known as a stand, colony, or pod, a collective of flamingos is appropriately described by the colorful term “flamboyance.” Other notable collective terms referring to groups of birds include a murder of crows, a parliament of owls, and an exaltation of larks.
The plastic flamingo may be the lone official bird made of synthetic material, but it’s far from the only one with a feel-good backstory. In 2019, the black-crowned night heron was declared the city bird of Oakland, California, thanks to a multiyear movement begun by a group of third graders who had been helping to rehabilitate local birds after an oil spill. On a statewide level, the California gull is — despite its name — the official bird of Utah, and was designated such to honor the gulls who saved malnourished Mormon pioneers in 1848 by eating the crickets then decimating local crops. In Japan, the green pheasant (kiji) was declared the national bird in 1947 in part because it’s believed that the creatures can detect and warn of impending earthquakes.
The world’s oldest flamingo lived to be 83 years old.
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Flamingos are born a dull gray color and turn pink from their diet.
A flamingo’s defining characteristic is its bright-pink appearance, but that trait is far from hereditary. In fact, flamingo chicks are born a dull gray shade, and develop their pinkish hue as they grow older. The colorful change is due to a flamingo’s diet, which is high in beta-carotene. This red-orange pigment is found in various types of algae and brine shrimp that make up the bulk of a flamingo’s meals. Enzymes in the bird’s digestive system break down these pigments, which are then absorbed into the feathers and skin, turning most flamingos a striking pink hue.
Bennett Kleinman
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Bennett Kleinman is a New York City-based staff writer for Inbox Studio, and previously contributed to television programs such as "Late Show With David Letterman" and "Impractical Jokers." Bennett is also a devoted New York Yankees and New Jersey Devils fan, and thinks plain seltzer is the best drink ever invented.
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There’s a good reason why both main characters in Finding Nemo are male, at least initially. All clownfish are born that way, and it’s only when a group’s dominant female dies or disappears that a male will develop into a female and become the new matriarch. All clownfish have the ability to turn female, and the change is permanent once it occurs. The transformation begins almost immediately after the dominant female leaves, and starts in the brain before manifesting itself in the sex organs. Had the beloved Pixar film been devoted to scientific accuracy, Nemo’s father, Marlin, might not have been just his sole caregiver after tragedy befalls the boy’s mother — he might literally have become his mother.
Along with their equine appearance, seahorses are well known for another unique trait: the fact that males, not females, get pregnant and bear young. The same is true of leafy seadragons and pipefish, fellow members of the Syngnathidae family.
Clownfish aren’t the only reef-dwellers that can change sex. The bluehead wrasse does it as well, only in reverse: When a dominant male leaves its group, the largest female transforms into a male over the course of just 21 days. Researchers have identified no fewer than 500 fish species capable of changing sex; some, like the coral-dwelling species of gobies, can even switch back and forth. The process is believed to have reproductive benefits, as it allows a single fish to reproduce as both sexes throughout its life.
Though the orange-and-white look is the most recognizable, it’s not the only one clownfish can sport. With nearly 30 different species of clownfish, there are other colors, too: Yellow, red, and black are also common, though most also have the characteristic thick white stripes. Despite being known for their bright colors, clownfish aren’t especially friendly when paired with other fish — in fact, they’re downright aggressive.
Michael Nordine
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Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.
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Mentions of radioactivity can send the mind in a dramatic direction, but many ordinary items are technically radioactive — including the humble banana. Radioactivity occurs when elements decay, and for bananas, this radioactivity comes from a potassium isotope called K-40. Although it makes up only 0.012% of the atoms found in potassium, K-40 can spontaneously decay, which releases beta and gamma radiation. That amount of radiation is harmless in one banana, but a truckload of bananas has been known to fool radiation detectors designed to sniff out nuclear weapons. In fact, bananas are so well known for their radioactive properties that there’s even an informal radiation measurement named the Banana Equivalent Dose, or BED.
One of the most ubiquitous facts about bananas is that they’re loaded with potassium. While the berry (yes, a banana is a berry) has a good amount of potassium, many other foods provide more milligrams of the stuff, including lima beans, spinach, potatoes, and avocados.
So does this mean bananas are unhealthy? Well … no. The human body always stores roughly 16 mg of K-40, which technically makes humans 280 times more radioactive than your average banana. Although bananas do introduce more of this radioactive isotope, the body keeps potassium in balance (or homeostasis), and your metabolism excretes any excess potassium. Oh, and in case you were wondering, a person would have to eat many millions of bananas in one sitting to get a lethal dose (at which point you’d likely have lots of other problems). So go ahead and eat that banana cream pie — you can leave the Geiger counter at home.
Scientists have measured the slipperiness of a banana peel.
Slipping on a banana peel is one of the world’s oldest jokes, but it’s also based on some solid physics. In 2011, researchers from Kitasato University in Tokyo analyzed the slipperiness of banana peels compared to orange and apple peels. Without a doubt, bananas were the slipperiest, due to polysaccharide follicular gels that spill out when the peels are crushed (or stepped on). These same chemicals are found in membranes where human bones meet, and further research on them could lead to better prosthetics. Not content with just taking a scientist’s word for it, Twitter users in 2016 created the viral Banana Peel Challenge, which provided even more qualitative data proving the devilish slipperiness of the banana peel.
Darren Orf
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Darren Orf lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes about all things science and climate. You can find his previous work at Popular Mechanics, Inverse, Gizmodo, and Paste, among others.
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Losing a limb would be catastrophic for most animals. But for many lizards, losing a tail isn’t the end of the story — in fact, those tails can keep right on moving by themselves.
Species such as geckos and green anoles can intentionally shed their tails when threatened, a process known as caudal autotomy. It happens quickly, coming off at specialized fracture points along the vertebrae in the tail that allow it to detach cleanly when needed, with minimal harm to the lizard itself.
After it detaches, the tail doesn’t simply go still. For several minutes, it can continue to twitch, wiggle, jump, and flick across the ground. The movement, though a bit unsettling, is an evolved distraction tactic designed to take a predator’s attention away from the escaping animal.
The axolotl, an adorable-looking species of salamander from Mexico, has the ability to regenerate parts of its brain if it suffers an injury.
The movement occurs because the tail contains local neural circuits that can coordinate muscle activity without direct input from the brain. The tail won’t move forever, though. Without ongoing brain involvement, as the tail’s stored energy is used up, the neural signals fade and the muscles stop contracting after a period of minutes.
Most lizards that sacrifice their own tail also eventually regrow a new one, although it isn’t quite the same as the original. Instead of bone, the replacement is typically made of cartilage, and while it restores some function, it often looks different, telling the story of the animal’s great escape.
A chicken once lived without a head for 18 months.
In 1945, a chicken survived for a shocking 18 months after losing most of his head. A Colorado farmer was slaughtering chickens for market, but the axe missed part of one bird’s brainstem, leaving enough intact for basic bodily functions to continue. The next morning, the farmer was shocked to discover that the animal had survived.
Although the chicken could no longer eat normally, he was manually fed liquid food and water through a dropper inserted directly into his esophagus, and managed to live for more than a year, even becoming a national curiosity.
Nicole Villeneuve
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Nicole is a writer, thrift store lover, and group-chat meme spammer based in Ontario, Canada.
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Run your fingers along the edge of a dime and you’ll notice the coin has a crimped edge. If you were to count those tiny grooves and valleys, you’d find 118 ridges, one less than the number found on a quarter. But not all American coins have ridges, and there’s a reason why. Rippled edges on larger-denomination coins have been a part of American currency since the U.S. Mint’s early days, and they were a clever solution to a massive currency conundrum: counterfeiting and fraud. Around the 1700s, coins were an easy target for money-generating schemes, including coin clipping: People would clip or shave off slim portions of a coin’s outer edge, cashing in the scraps of precious silver and gold. In Great Britain, coin clipping was so common that the crown deemed it a form of treason. In early North American settlements, “coining” — the actual production of fake coins — was equally problematic.
Quarters have always been the largest American coin.
Pennies first began circulating in March 1793, though many Americans were disgruntled with their initial design. The supersized coins were larger than today’s quarters, and some believed the Lady Liberty depicted looked inelegant. The coins were soon discontinued.
Knowing this, American coin makers added grooved bands — called reeded edges — to the thin sides of dimes, quarters, and larger coins then made from silver, in order to prevent shaving and make fraud more difficult. (Pennies and nickels remained smooth-sided since they were pressed from less-valuable copper and nickel.) But reeded edges lost some of their utility when the Coinage Act of 1965 changed the composition of dimes and quarters from silver to a copper-nickel blend. Reeded edges remain today as a design choice, and because they help people with visual impairments differentiate among coins.
Collecting and studying coins and other forms of money is called numismatics.
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Coins were once commonly carved into “love tokens.”
Not all coins were saved or spent — in centuries past, some became tiny testaments to love. Love tokens, an idea that likely originated in Great Britain around the 13th century, were crafted by sanding away the faces of coins and using the precious metal as a blank canvas, which was then often engraved with memorable dates, a loved one’s initials, or romantic sentiments. After spreading to North America, love tokens reached peak popularity in the late 1800s, in part because they were used to memorialize family members lost during the Civil War. While they were initially etched by hand, professional carvers were sought out for more intricate designs, and the trend became so popular that crafters even set up booths at the 1893 world’s fair in Chicago. Many surviving love tokens are difficult to appraise or date because of their lack of detail and highly personal meaning, yet their greatest value may be the reminder that love can withstand the test of time.
Nicole Garner Meeker
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Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.
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Goosebumps are typically involuntary — an automatic reflex triggered by cold temperatures, fear, or strong emotional experiences. This response is governed by the sympathetic nervous system, which regulates unconscious bodily functions such as heart rate, pupil dilation, and the tiny muscles at the base of hair follicles that contract during a process called piloerection, creating the visible tiny bumps on the surface of the skin.
Experiencing chills or goosebumps in response to music is known as sonic chills.
The correct term is “frisson,” a French word meaning “to shiver.”
But there is also evidence that goosebumps can be intentionally induced. Some people can reliably trigger the same physiological response by recreating the mental and emotional conditions that normally precede it. This may include vividly recalling emotional memories, listening to specific types of music, engaging deeply with art, or focusing attention on the bodily sensations of goosebumps. In other words, they can cause goosebumps by simply thinking about goosebumps.
Neuroscience research suggests that people who report this ability — called voluntarily generated piloerection — often show heightened sensitivity in brain networks involved in emotion, reward, and sensory integration. Their ability to produce goosebumps may result from their brains being more responsive to the kinds of stimuli that naturally cause the sensation in the first place.
An older term for goosebumps is “hen-flesh,” referring to the skin’s resemblance to plucked poultry.
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Cats get their own version of goosebumps.
Cats are one of the most visibly recognizable examples of piloerection in mammals. When a cat suddenly arches its back and fluffs up its fur, it isn’t doing it on purpose; it’s an automatic response driven by the same biological mechanism that produces goosebumps in humans.
This response is controlled by the fight-or-flight response of the sympathetic nervous system and can be triggered by fear, stress, or heightened arousal, as well as cold temperatures. Tiny muscles at the base of each hair follicle contract without conscious control, lifting the fur across the body within seconds. The result is a noticeably “puffed up” appearance that can make the cat appear larger, which may help deter potential threats or rivals during confrontation.
The same mechanism is found in many other mammals, including dogs, porcupines, rodents, and some primates. In colder conditions, it can help trap a thin layer of air close to the skin, providing some insulation. In emotional or social contexts, it may serve as a visual signal, making the animal appear larger or more imposing to others.
Kristina Wright
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Kristina is a coffee-fueled writer living happily ever after with her family in the suburbs of Richmond, Virginia.
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