krovek42
krovek42 t1_j9p541k wrote
Reply to comment by Mental_Cut8290 in ELI5: Why do people wear different types of helmets when skiing and bicycling? by LucasUnited
Plus ski helmets with airflow vents usually have a way to close them with a little sliding switch, so you can get more airflow on a warm day but cut it off on a colder day.
krovek42 t1_j76i273 wrote
Reply to Will the cold reduce the tick population? by [deleted]
Early season snowfall is the thing that will reduce their population over winter. Ticks need to fall onto bare ground after their last blood meal in the Fall. Being covered in snow after that insulated them from the worst of the cold. If they feed and then fall onto early season snowpack they won’t survive.
krovek42 t1_j20ol6e wrote
Reply to ELI5: If astronomers use "light-years" for interstellar distances, why do we use AU for interplanetary distances instead of "light-minutes"? by concorde77
The units someone uses are ultimately going to depend on what they need them for. Someone working sending interplanetary radio signals might find light-minutes most useful, while someone studying orbits may likely use AU’s. If you’re trying to describe the size of orbits, using the orbit of Earth as a reference is really useful because it’s a distance that’s easy to compare to. It’s the same reason you don’t describe your weight in tones, differences of a few pounds are hard to conceptualize using units that are many times larger/smaller than what you can conceive.
krovek42 t1_iya8fle wrote
Reply to ELI5: how effective is bear-safe storage for scented items/food at campsites? by togapartywalkofshame
Another “problem” with bear canisters, is that bears have really great smell. It may not ben that they can smell food through an air-tight container, but the container itself likely has trace amounts of food smell on the outside that got there as you handle it. As u/Volcan_R said, the idea is to make the food too hard to get, so the bear decides to put its effort elsewhere. So wether it’s hung from a tree, in a bear box, or behind an electric fence, (Yes such a product exists) even if the bear can smell it, it will decide it can’t get to it and learn to just move on.
krovek42 t1_jdw0lbf wrote
Reply to comment by Chromotron in ELI5: Why does water boil faster if it is in a covered pot? by AerisLionheart
Probably more accurate to say that steam produced under the lid will tend to condense on the underside of the lid and eventually run down back into the pot. It is transferring some heat to the lid in doing this, but the lid can’t radiate heat away as quickly as steam can take it away when it drifts off.